English
Date: 30/05/2024

 

 

I&P partner companies AerialMetric (Madagascar, IPAE), Etudesk (Ivory Coast, IPAS), Concree (Senegal, Investment Readiness - I&P Conseil), Keiwa (Ivory Coast, IPAT) and Sayna (Madagascar, IPAT) were present at the 2024 edition of Viva Technology in Paris.

At the end of the four-day event, the organizers reported that VivaTech, Europe's biggest event dedicated to innovation and startups, had attracted over 165,000 visitors at this 2024 edition.

 

 

 

Established in Madagascar since 2013, AerialMetric is a company operating aircraft and drones for the delivery of medical goods in landlocked areas of Madagascar, for organic larvicide spraying and for topography. It also has a cargo aircraft production and maintenance business, based in Antananarivo. 

Etudesk is a start-up providing online professional training through its interactive platform. The courses offered have a strictly professional orientation and cover a wide range of learning areas: Business, IT, Economics, Competitive Examinations/Preparatory Courses, Civil Engineering, Science, etc. The company defines itself as the university for businesses, and aims to reduce the gap between academic training and the skills sought by companies.

Concree is one of Senegal's most dynamic incubators. In 2022, Concree benefited from Investment Readiness, a 9-month training program stemming from the I&P Accélération au Sahel program, financed by the European Union. 

Keiwa is a simplified accounting, financial management and inventory management app created in 2019 aimed at African SMEs. Thanks to the application, users can record their daily operations, manage their inventories and have access to a clear activity report in real time. Keiwa also enables remote monitoring of these activities and selective sharing of information with selected partners.

Founded in 2018 by Matina Razafimahefa, a talented young Malagasy entrepreneur, Sayna is a startup specializing in training for digital professions and the outsourcing of IT projects, carried out by Malagasy and African developers via a micro-tasking platform.