Strive Masiyiwa is the founder and executive chairman of Econet, an international technology group, and one of the early pioneers of the mobile telecoms industry in Africa.

  • Born (Zimbabwe)

  • Named one of the 10 Most Outstanding Young Leaders in the World by the World Junior Chamber of Commerce

  • Attends the 38th G-8 Summit at the invitation of U.S. President Barack Obama

  • Receives the Freedom Award from the International Rescue Committee

  • Named one of the World's Greatest Leaders by Fortune Magazine

  • Inducted into the Global Business Hall of Fame

Born in 1961 in pre-independence Rhodesia, now known as Zimbabwe, Strive attended primary school in Zambia, where his family moved when he was only seven years old, and then completed secondary school in Scotland. After graduating in 1984 with a degree in electrical and electronic engineering from the University of Wales, Strive worked in electronics in Cambridge before returning to newly independent Zimbabwe in 1986.

After working briefly as a telecom engineer for Zimbabwe’s state-owned telephone company PTC, Strive launched Retrofit, an electrical contracting business that quickly flourished. Seeing the promise of new mobile technologies, Strive founded Econet in 1993, where he first came to international prominence in a five-year constitutional legal battle that led to the dismantling of the state monopoly in Zimbabwe's telecommunications sector. The landmark ruling is regarded as one of the milestones in the opening up of African telecommunications to private capital and investment, which led to rapid growth that expanded and transformed the communications landscape across the continent.

Econet Wireless, first listed on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange in 1998, is now one subsidiary company of Econet Global, a diversified international technology group with operations in 28 African countries, the UK, and UAE. Other subsidiaries include Liquid Telecom, Cassava Fintech, Econet Energy, and Vaya Technologies Africa.


If we tackle corruption, no child would sleep hungry, there would be no injustice, every child would be in school. The most powerful force against corruption is one person saying “no.”
— Strive Masiyiwa

He sits on the UN Global Commission for Adaptation focusing on climate change challenges and was most recently appointed a Special Envoy to the African Union for COVID response, to help coordinate Africa private sector efforts to procure medical supplies to fight the spread of COVID-19. He led a similar initiative to fight Ebola in West Africa in 2014–2015. Strive is the only African member of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Committee on Conscience and served on the jury of the Hilton Humanitarian Prize.

Strive was a co-founder of the Carbon War Room, the Global Business Coalition on Education, and the Micronutrient Initiative. He served as co-chair of Pathways for Prosperity Commission on Technology and Inclusive Development. He also worked with the AU Reform Task Force enabling the African Continental Free-Trade Area. Strive continues to drive continent-wide digital transformation as the only private sector member of the SMART Africa Board. He has served on two key United Nations Commissions, at the invitation of the Secretary-General: One on Financing Global Education Opportunities, and another on Sustainable Energy for All. Other awards and recognitions include:

  • 1990: Zimbabwean Businessman of the Year Award (youngest ever recipient)

  • 1998: Zimbabwean Manager and Entrepreneur of the Year Award

  • 2002: Times Global Business Influential List

  • 2003: CNN/Time Magazine Poll, 15 Global Influential of the Year

  • 2010: Builder of the Modern Africa Awards

  • 2011: Forbes Magazine, 20 Most Powerful Business People in African Business

  • 2011: Times of London, 25 Leaders of Africa's Renaissance Award

  • 2014: Fortune Magazine, World’s 50 Greatest Leaders

  • 2015: Forbes Magazine, 10 Most Powerful Men in Africa

  • 2015: UN Foundation Global Leadership Award for Africa Against Ebola Solidarity Trust

  • 2018: Points of Light Award

  • 2019: Norman E Borlaug World Food Prize Medallion

  • 2019: New African Magazine, 100 Most Influential African

  • 2020: Inducted into the JA Global Business Hall of Fame

An honorary fellow of the African Academy of Sciences, Strive has received honorary doctorates from Morehouse College, Yale University, Nelson Mandela University, and Cardiff University.

A Global Force for Good

Throughout his career, Strive has served on a number of international boards and led initiatives to promote entrepreneurship, education, and social and economic development across Africa.

In 1996, he and his wife, Tsitsi, co-founded in Zimbabwe what is now known as the Higherlife Foundation and, since then, have supported the education of over 350,000 vulnerable and gifted children across Africa, expanding its work to Burundi, Eswatini, Kenya, Lesotho, Rwanda, and South Africa in areas including education, health, disaster relief and preparedness, and rural transformation.

Since 2013, Strive has devoted his time to mentoring the next generation of African entrepreneurs through his Facebook page, which has a following of over 5.2 million young people, and through in-person youth entrepreneurship town halls across Africa and the world. For the past three years, Facebook has identified his platform as having the most engaged following of any business leader in the world.

Strive serves on several international boards including Unilever Plc, National Geographic Society, Asia Society, and the Global Advisory boards of Bank of America, the Council on Foreign Relations (in the US), Stanford University, the Bloomberg New Economy Forum and the Prince of Wales Trust for Africa. A former board member of the Rockefeller Foundation for 15 years, he is Chairman Emeritus of the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA) and co-founder of the Generation Africa GoGettaz Agripreneur Prize.