Microsoft opens first Africa Development Centre in Kenya and Nigeria

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By Microsoft News Center. First published, on 13 May, 2019


Multi-billion dollar American company, Microsoft, will today open its first African Development Center in Nigeria where geniuses will provide software engineering solutions to the world and Africa, in a $100m investment, alongside Kenya. The hub in Lagos will be the first in Africa.

It was almost three decades ago that Microsoft opened its first offices in Africa. In this time, we’ve witnessed incredible growth on the continent – more internet connectivity, more digital capability and more innovation. Africans have expanded the applications of technology, changing the way communities bank, farm and even access healthcare.

At Microsoft, we’re very fortunate to have played a part in realising this potential, building strong partnerships to accelerate digital transformation and create sustained societal impact. A big milestone for this investment came earlier this year, as we opened Africa’s first hyper-scale datacentres in South Africa, promoting business innovation in the cloud.

As the next step on our journey in Africa, and to better understand a continent rapidly adopting technology in the cloud, and at the edge, Microsoft today launched its first Africa Development Centre (ADC). With two initial sites in Nairobi, Kenya and Lagos, Nigeria, the ADC will serve as a premier centre of engineering for Microsoft, where world-class African talent can create solutions for local and global impact.

The ADC will be unlike any other existing investment on the continent. It will help us better listen to our customers, develop locally and scale for global impact. Beyond that, it’s an opportunity to engage further with partners, academia, governments and developers – driving impact in sectors important to the continent, such as FinTech, AgriTech and OffGrid energy.” – Phil Spencer, executive sponsor of the ADC and executive vice president at Microsoft

Local innovation, global impact

Africa is poised for innovation at the intelligent edge. To staff the ADC, we are seeking engineering talent from across the continent to fuel AI, machine learning and mixed reality innovation. Engineers have already started working, and we intend to recruit 100 full-time engineers by the end of the year – expanding to 500 across the two sites by 2023.

Cynthia Wasonga, software engineer, Microsoft

To build our talent pipeline, we’re also partnering with local universities to create a modern intelligent edge and cloud curriculum, totally unique to Africa. Graduates will have access to the ADC to build a relevant and meaningful career in data science, AI, mixed reality, application development and many more.

“Our desire is to recruit exceptional engineering talent across the continent that will build innovative solutions for global impact. This also creates opportunities for engineers to do meaningful work from their home countries and be plugged into a global engineering and development organisation” – Michael Fortin, corporate vice president at Microsoft and the lead in establishing the first ADC engineering team in Nairobi

Innovation at the edge
Microsoft is already empowering many innovations at the edge with partners like InterswitchSunCulture and M-KOPA. Through the ADC, we intend to invest in more cutting-edge solutions suitable for Kenya, Nigeria and the rest of the world.

Our Microsoft Cognition team and Windows team will be kick-starting our ADC efforts, focusing on AI-enabled cloud services, mixed reality experiences and rich applications that power the intelligent edge without disruption.

long-term investment The ADC supports Microsoft’s mission to empower every person and organisation on the planet to achieve more. The ADC is the first Global Development Centre in Africa with a combined expected investment of US $100 million over the first five years of operation.

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Engr. OluKayode Adedayo is an engineer with many years of experience in the information Technology and Telecommunications field though he read electrical engineering and started off with electrical engineering building services design consultancy before focusing on Information and Communication Technology which was his passion. He graduated from the University of Ilorin; Kwara State in 1992/93 He is a Chief Ideas Technocrat and Visionary with great ideas and a solutions consultant in ICT and e-governance. He was a Consultant in the audit of core engineering assets of the Liquidation of Nitel/Mtel He was international startup partner to a top Wireless Service Assurance OEM tool company and a few other companies always trying to bridge the technological gap between developed countries and Nigeria by partnering with cutting edge companies. He was involved in engineering business development between Huawei & MTN. He developed the first Pinging software with MS-DOS 6.22 used in CBCLN bank in 1998. He is a also a certified professional of a UK Project Management Institute. Presently he is researching new solutions that can be developed and used to ease day to day problems from RMS, Man to Machine, V2X, IoT, AI, TeleMed and some few other emerging technologies. He created an ICT Pro-Social Network Blog ( including 3 other blog for 3other sectors) with generating advertising revenue and owns many group for promoting ICT Business and careers and members and visitors are from worldwide on the site and LinkedIn. He is a Corporate Member of the Nigerian Society of Engineers. CNSE He is married and blessed with three children.
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