Category: Uncategorized

  • Africa Doesn’t Need More Extraction — It Needs Partners. Why I Choose to Build, Not Take. By Anjo De Heus.

    Africa Doesn’t Need More Extraction — It Needs Partners. Why I Choose to Build, Not Take. By Anjo De Heus.

    Over the past months, as I have worked closely with several African nations — from Zambia to the Democratic Republic of the Congo — a question keeps coming up. Ambassadors, ministers, and community leaders ask me:

    Anjo, why do you do this? Why Africa?”

    It’s a fair question. Too many foreign actors come to the continent only when there is something to extract: minerals, oil, land, influence, or political leverage. The world rushes in when there is something profitable beneath the soil, but disappears when there is suffering above it.

    Yet Africa’s future will not be changed by those who take.
    It will be transformed by those who build.

    A Turning Point: Peace Talks and Resource Deals

    Recently, headlines celebrated a U.S.-brokered peace agreement between Rwanda and the DRC. On the surface, this is good news — stability is essential for progress. But beneath the diplomatic language lies a familiar pattern:

    Peace, followed by access to mineral wealth.

    Copper. Cobalt. Rare earth elements. The raw materials that fuel electric vehicles, batteries, and the global transition to clean energy.

    The question is not whether international involvement is good or bad.
    The question is: Who truly benefits?

    Because if peace is negotiated for the sake of mining contracts while the local population continues to face poverty, limited healthcare access, and unstable infrastructure, then the cycle of dependence and underdevelopment continues.

    Africa deserves more than transactional engagement.
    It deserves transformational partnership.

    What I’ve Seen on the Ground

    In Zambia, I met nurses who were fully trained but unemployed because clinics lacked funding. In the DRC, I visited communities where a simple diagnostic test could save a life — yet the nearest functioning laboratory was hundreds of kilometers away.

    These are not failures of the people.

    They are failures of global priorities.

    And they are solvable.

    Why I Choose to Work Differently

    When I founded 360Disruption, I made a simple decision:

    We will not enter a country to extract value.
    We will enter to create it.

    Our work in #Africa is built on three pillars:

    1. Healthcare access that reaches the forgotten

    Through partnerships with Oasis Diagnostics and Oludent, we focus on saliva-based molecular testing — a revolutionary approach requiring:

    • no needles
    • no cold chain
    • no specialized laboratories

    This brings diagnostics to rural populations where people today walk miles just to know what is wrong with them.

    2. Job creation through technology localization

    Local manufacturing of diagnostic kits.
    Training programs for nurses and youth.
    Community-based telehealth hubs.

    Africa does not need foreign companies to deliver finished products.
    It needs partners willing to build industries inside African borders.

    3. FDI that prioritizes human outcomes

    Foreign direct investment must do more than finance infrastructure.
    It must:

    • create jobs
    • transfer knowledge
    • strengthen local systems
    • generate long-term national capability

    Anything less is exploitation dressed as opportunity.

    The Truth About Africa’s Potential

    Africa is not “rising” — Africa has been ready.

    Ready for modern healthcare infrastructure.
    Ready for localized innovation ecosystems.
    Ready for manufacturing.
    Ready to be at the center rather than the periphery of global development.

    The world is beginning to understand Africa’s value — but primarily through the lens of minerals, extraction, and strategic leverage.

    My mission is to help shift that lens.

    What Real Partnership Looks Like

    Real partnership looks like:

    • helping a government create a national diagnostic program
    • training thousands of local health workers
    • building a manufacturing line that stays in the country
    • transferring IP, knowledge, and economic opportunity
    • ensuring rural populations receive the same care as capital cities

    It looks like a future where Africa exports products, not raw materials.
    Where African youth become biomedical engineers, not miners.
    Where data powers health decisions, not guesswork.

    This is the Africa I believe in — the Africa I know is possible.

    A Message to Global Health Innovators

    If you are a U.S., Canadian, or European health-tech innovator reading this:
    Africa is not “too difficult” or “too early.”

    It is the most important market of the next 30 years.

    Not because of what lies beneath the ground —
    but because of the talent, potential, and human capital above it.

    And if your technology can solve a problem at scale,
    Africa is where your innovation will have its greatest human impact.

    I invite you to reach out.
    Let’s build something meaningful.

    My Answer to the Question: “Why Africa?”

    Because I have seen what is possible.
    Because the need is immense and immediate.
    Because impact should not be a slogan — it should be measurable, real, and transformative.

    And because I believe that true leadership means going where others won’t — not to extract, but to build.

    Africa does not need another foreign visitor with a mining contract.
    It needs partners with integrity, courage, and a willingness to invest in the lives of people.

    That is the work I choose.
    That is the future we can create — together.

    Our doors are open, please contact us at africa@360disruption.com or visit 360disruption.com for more info and partnership opportunities.

  • THE ONE TRUTH OF GLOBAL INNOVATION: Why the Future of Health, Diagnostics, and Economic Development Runs Through U.S.–GCC–Africa Collaboration

    THE ONE TRUTH OF GLOBAL INNOVATION: Why the Future of Health, Diagnostics, and Economic Development Runs Through U.S.–GCC–Africa Collaboration

    By Anjo De Heus | U.S.-Based Entrepreneur, Strategist & Ecosystem Builder

    Innovation is no longer shaped by borders — it is shaped by the flow of ideas, capital, and capability. As someone who sits at the intersection of the United States, the Gulf, and Africa, I have learned one truth that remains consistent across every market:

    Innovation only matters when it improves lives — and when people actually have access to it.

    Across healthtech, biotech, diagnostics, and sustainable development, billions of dollars of innovation remain locked in labs, research centers, and startup ecosystems. Meanwhile, entire regions still face preventable suffering simply because solutions never reach them.

    My work through 360Disruption — and the broader One Truth Project — exists to close this gap.

    1. The World’s Innovation Inequality Problem

    The U.S. leads in breakthrough technologies.
    The GCC leads in commercialization speed.
    Africa holds the greatest need — and the greatest potential for scale.

    Yet these regions rarely operate as a unified ecosystem.

    I have seen founders with diagnostic platforms capable of detecting disease early, fail to expand outside the U.S. simply because they lack market entry strategy or government access. I’ve also seen African nations struggle with diagnostics, despite being open, eager, and ready for solutions.

    This is not a technology problem.
    It’s an access problem.
    It’s a strategy problem.
    It’s a partnership problem.

    2. Why the GCC Has Become the World’s Gateway for Innovation

    Over the past decade, the Gulf has transformed itself into a global testbed for innovation.

    • UAE Vision 2031
    • Saudi Vision 2030
    • Qatar’s National Strategy
    • Bahrain’s Economic Plan

    These programs open the doors to healthtech, AI, diagnostics, biotech, and sustainability. The GCC is no longer importing innovation — it is actively shaping it.

    From a strategic standpoint, the GCC is the world’s most efficient commercialization hub:

    • Fast regulatory pathways
    • High investment capacity
    • Strong public–private partnerships
    • Regional expansion into Africa and Asia
    • Government-driven incentive ecosystems

    This is where U.S. innovators need to be, but most don’t know how to enter.

    This is where 360Disruption plays a central role:
    bridging U.S. innovation with Gulf adoption and African impact.

    3. Africa: The Continent Where Innovation Makes the Greatest Difference

    Across Africa — especially in nations like Zambia, Ethiopia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo — health systems face three urgent challenges:

    1. Access to diagnostics
    2. Limited specialist availability
    3. High disease burden with delayed detection

    The result: millions of preventable deaths and billions in economic loss.

    But Africa is also where innovation can scale the fastest:

    • Young population
    • Mobile-first adoption
    • Demand for low-cost diagnostics
    • Strong interest in public–private partnerships
    • Government readiness for modernization

    When you introduce accessible diagnostics — especially saliva-based, telehealth-enabled, and lab-light technologies — the impact is immediate and national in scale.

    This is why our partnerships with Oasis Diagnostics and Oludent Health International have such profound relevance.

    4. The New Innovation Bridge: U.S. Science → GCC Commercialization → African Deployment

    Over the past year, I noticed a pattern in the companies that reached out to me from the U.S.:

    • AI diagnostic firms
    • Molecular labs
    • Biotech companies
    • Digital health startups
    • Sustainability innovators
    • Medical device manufacturers

    None came through acquisition pipelines.
    None came through cold outreach.

    They all came through referrals, through people who had seen how 360Disruption executes, builds trust, and transforms market entry into national-scale solutions.

    This validated a truth I’ve always believed:

    People don’t buy innovation — they buy capability, integrity, and certainty.

    Through 360Disruption, companies gain:

    • A clear go-to-market strategy
    • Government access and negotiation
    • Free zone and regulatory pathways
    • Localization and partner development
    • Investment alignment (FDI, PPP, grants)
    • Rapid commercialization
    • Scaling into Africa

    This is how we build health ecosystems — not just market entries.

    5. Diagnostics Is the Frontline of Development

    If a nation can detect disease early, everything else becomes possible:

    • Healthier population
    • Higher productivity
    • Lower treatment costs
    • Better planning
    • Stronger economies

    This is why saliva-based diagnostics, telehealth platforms, mobile lab networks, and decentralized molecular testing matter so much.

    They don’t just test disease —
    they unlock national development.

    6. Why This Work Matters — Personally

    My mission is not transactional.
    It is transformational.

    I work closely with African ambassadors, GCC regulators, U.S. innovators, and impact-driven partners because I truly believe that:

    A single innovation introduced in the right way can change an entire country.

    From screening villages in Zambia to deploying diagnostics in the DRC, to enabling manufacturing footprints in the Gulf — this is not business.
    It is purpose.

    7. The One Truth

    Across every country, every sector, every conversation, I have learned the one truth that guides everything I do:

    Innovation has no value unless it reaches the people who need it most.

    This is why my work continues.
    This is why 360Disruption exists.
    This is why the One Truth Project was created.

    The mission is simple:
    Bridge innovation. Build ecosystems. Create impact.
    And do it with integrity, clarity, and long-term commitment.

    If you are an innovator, policymaker, investor, or global partner ready to build solutions that matter — my door is always open.

    This is how the future is built — together.