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Home Entertainment Announcements

Children as Young as 9 Launch Real Businesses in Koa Academy’s Free Virtual Entrepreneurship Challenge

by Mzukona Mantshontsho
April 10, 2026
in Announcements, Club Sports, Community, Editors Pick, Entertainment, Events, Featured, Health, Local Business, Local Heros, Municpality, National, News, People, Politics, Schools, Sports, Sports, Spotlight
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Children as Young as 9 Launch Real Businesses in Koa Academy’s Free Virtual Entrepreneurship Challenge
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A free five-week entrepreneurship challenge is helping children aged 9–16 launch real ventures with guidance from experienced entrepreneurs and investors.

●      South Africa is facing a growing unemployment crisis among its young population. According to Statistics South Africa, the unemployment rate for people aged 18 to 24 climbed to 60% in the first quarter of 2025. This marks a sharp rise from 46% in the same period in 2015.

●      Those who are unemployed without a matric certificate face great challenges, with a rate of 51.6%; however, those who are unemployed with a matric certificate remain at 47.6%.

●      In the same quarter, about 800 to 1 million young people between 18 and 34 were classified as discouraged job seekers, meaning they are no longer actively looking for work. In comparison, 1.5 million discouraged job seekers were between 35 and 64[.

●      Stats SA said this reflects how young people, due to a lack of experience and limited opportunities, are more likely to give up on job hunting.  For many young South Africans, landing a job is more than just a milestone.  It’s a crucial step toward economic independence and inclusion. Yet for millions, this first step remains out of reach.

South Africa is in the grip of a youth unemployment crisis, with around 60% of 18-24-year-olds jobless as of early 2025 according to Statistics South Africa (nearly double the national average). A skills mismatch compounds this, leaving tertiary graduates under- or unemployed due to lacking practical abilities like problem-solving and financial literacy. In a study released by the Department of Higher Education and Training (2023) on employer perceptions of TVET college graduates, foundation skills such as reading, writing, numeracy, speaking, oral and written comprehension, and computer skills were rated as very poor.  Yet amid this stark reality, a bold counter-movement is emerging: children as young as nine are launching real businesses, being taught and required to set their pricing and revenue model correctly, size their market, identify their competition and their unique selling propositions (USPs) before finishing primary school.

The Koa Academy Online Entrepreneurship Challenge offers young South Africans aged 9-16 what most curricula lack: hands-on experience building a real business from scratch. This free, five-week virtual programme guides students through spotting opportunities, refining ideas via weekly live coaching and self-paced coursework, and pitching to industry experts, equipping them with future-proof skills like resilience and creative thinking that for which businesses predict 73% demand growth[5] over the next five years.

With guidance from experienced founders, investors, and business leaders, participants move beyond classroom theory into the exciting reality of entrepreneurship. It’s less about winning a trophy and more about gaining experience that most people don’t get until their twenties, if ever.

“Learning how to build a business and clearly pitch its value transforms a concept into something others can believe in. Giving young people the opportunity to learn and practise these skills early is incredibly powerful, building both confidence and strong public speaking abilities.” says Abena Opeibea Anie-Budu, Venture Partner at MEST Africa and one of the 2026 Entrepreneurship Challenge judges, alongside Pargo Co-Founder Lars Veul and Koa Academy Co-Founder and CEO, Lauren Anderson. “Practical skills and real-world exposure give young people a meaningful advantage – not just in business, but in how they approach opportunities and challenges more broadly.”​

More than theory: how the challenge actually works

A great business doesn’t start with a logo or a pitch deck; it starts with noticing an opportunity for improvement: either a product that doesn’t work for people, a service the community needs, or a frustration no one has solved properly, and thinking, “I could build a solution for that.” That’s exactly the mindset Koa’s Online Entrepreneurship Challenge is designed to develop.​

Over five weeks, students take part in a fully virtual, interactive experience that follows a step-by-step journey to build and launch a real business, from spotting a problem to pitching their idea to a panel of industry experts for feedback. The programme is structured so students aren’t left guessing what to do next: they build, receive feedback, refine, and build again, right up to a final pitch moment that pulls everything together.​

Each week, participants join a 1-hour online session where they receive live group coaching from an experienced entrepreneur, plus time to gain advice from an allocated mentor who stays with them throughout the challenge.

Alongside this, students devote an hour per week to self-paced online coursework that introduces new ideas and tools to help them build their business at a time that fits their schedule. By the end of the challenge, each student will have created a business pitch presentation, presented it to a panel, received professional feedback and advice, and piloted an initial version of their business idea.​

Developing skills to outlast a single project

At its core, Koa’s Online Entrepreneurship Challenge is about youth empowerment and future-ready skill-building. Students practise problem-solving, creativity, resilience, communication, and financial thinking, while learning how to take an idea seriously enough to shape it into a plan and bring it to life. They also build a mindset that serves them whether or not they become entrepreneurs: noticing real problems around them, thinking critically about what’s missing, and designing meaningful solutions.

Previous participants haven’t just completed projects for marks; they’ve created skincare lines, food brands, and sustainable fashion businesses that continue operating long after the challenge ends. Getting this exposure early means students develop a different relationship with failure, money, and creative problem-solving, and those lessons stay with them whether they eventually start companies or pursue completely different paths.​

By involving experienced entrepreneurs and industry experts as judges and guest speakers, the challenge also gives students access to credible role models and real insight into what building a business looks like in practice; access that many would not otherwise have.​

Real students, real businesses

Last year’s finalists showed clearly that when students are guided to build something real and held to real expectations, their growth becomes visible.​

Nia Kinuthi (Kenya) turned her crochet hobby into a sustainable brand, Nani Knits, and credits the challenge with transforming her confidence in pitching and responding to critique, skills she now uses beyond business, including when she put herself forward to represent Kenya in debate.​

Sere Kiteto (Kenya), with her natural skincare brand Solani, moved from struggling to explain her ideas to being able to structure a business plan, calculate costs, and defend her pricing, actively using skills like pricing, profit margins, budgeting, and cost analysis in running her business.​

Anna and Cleopatra Achiambo (South Africa), founders of Snacks by Sissies, discovered that entrepreneurship isn’t just a “grown-ups’ thing” and learned to lead, budget, and pitch beyond their comfort zones while expanding from snacks into other offerings.​

These stories echo a common pattern: students don’t just learn about entrepreneurship; they learn how to communicate clearly, think practically, respond to feedback, and back themselves with confidence.

Judges, speakers and mentors

One of the things that makes this challenge genuinely real-world is the people students get to learn from. Throughout the programme, participants receive guidance and input from industry professionals, helping them sharpen their thinking and raise the quality of their work.​

For 2026, confirmed judges include Lars Veul, Co-Founder of Pargo, Abena Opeibea Anie-Budu, Venture Partner at MEST Africa and Lauren Anderson, Co-Founder and CEO of Koa Academy.  These judges bring deep experience in scaling businesses and investing in high-potential founders, and their feedback is a key part of what makes the challenge truly real-world for participants.

For the live sessions, confirmed guest entrepreneurs include: Kylie Lai King, founder of wellness brand Sanrae; Milan Rendall, founder of The Bowling Club; and Danei Rall, co-founder of Fintr.  These entrepreneurs will speak about their own entrepreneurial journeys and will also form part of the prize package, offering one-on-one mentorship sessions to the winner and runners-up.​

Top projects are recognised with prizes that help students take their business ideas further, awarded across Junior and Senior categories for both Winners and Runners-Up.  Alongside cash prizes, students gain access to mentorship, practical business support and brand-building help, tangibly backing young entrepreneurs and helping them extend their ideas beyond the challenge.​

Registration for the Koa Online Entrepreneurship Challenge opens from 1 April until 10 May. There is no fee to enter, and participants gain access to experienced mentors, feedback from industry judges, and a clear framework to launch something real. The students who’ve already gone through the programme show that the results aren’t abstract; they’re concrete businesses you can support.​

If you’d like to sign up your child for Koa Academy’s Online Entrepreneurship Challenge,  you can read more and register here: https://koaacademy.com/entrepreneurship-challenge/

Mzukona Mantshontsho

Mzukona Mantshontsho

Yo School Magazine, founded to empower schools, helps learners research, write, and publish newsletters, bulletins, and maintain websites. With a mission to promote dialogue on issues affecting young people, the organisation encourages learners to celebrate excellence, embrace growth, and strive for greatness. Yo School Magazine aims to foster better individuals and future South African leaders through positive and productive behaviour.

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Nyakaza Media Solutions, founded to empower schools, helps learners research, write, and publish newsletters, bulletins, and maintain websites. With a mission to promote dialogue on issues affecting young people, the organisation encourages learners to celebrate excellence, embrace growth, and strive for greatness. Nyakaza Media Solutions aims to foster better individuals and future South African leaders through positive and productive behaviour.

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