The next revolution is not empowerment. It’s capital.
- +Wealth proximity: The next season of African women’s networks
- +The question I am asking today is: what comes next?
- +What inspiration built — And what it didn’t
- +The next evolution: Wealth proximity, wealth tables, wealth leadership
- +Radiant collective capital: What a wealth table actually looks like
- +Boots on the ground: East Africa
Fifteen years ago, I founded a small circle of women in Johannesburg.
Fifteen years ago, I founded a small circle of women in Johannesburg.
No infrastructure. No template. No budget is significant enough to matter. Just a conviction that women needed a space to find their language for power, to name what they were building, to see themselves in each other, and to stop doing alone what they could do better together. That circle became iWOW — Inspired Women of Worth. And from that beginning, it grew into the Power Woman Leadership Academy and a movement that exists today as a high-impact leadership mastermind.
What we built over fifteen to twenty years is real. The inspiration and advocacy economy — the collective investment in women believing they can lead, own, build, and occupy every room previously closed to them — has changed what a generation of African women believe about themselves.
The question I am asking today is: what comes next?
What inspiration built — And what it didn’t
The women’s network has done something extraordinary. It convinced women that they belong. That their ambition is legitimate. That the seat at the table is theirs to occupy.
It has done something less well. It has not yet convinced women to do serious business with each other at the scale the moment requires.
Attend any major women’s leadership gathering, and the energy is extraordinary. The speakers are brilliant. The conversations are honest. The connections are warm. And then the event ends. The cards are exchanged. The WhatsApp groups are created. And the collaboration that felt inevitable in the room somehow remains perpetually in the planning stage.
The inspiration was real. The transaction never quite arrived.
Men network to transact. They walk into the room already knowing what they want from it and who they want it from. They compete fiercely and collaborate strategically with the same people, sometimes in the same week. They do business with rivals because the deal is more important than the rivalry. They sponsor each other into rooms, onto boards, and into investments not primarily out of affection but out of strategic mutual interest.
Watch what happens when men gather to support one of their own. The commitments are specific. The amounts are significant. The old boys’ networks and the mixed school networks, where men set the financial tone, consistently raise ten to twenty times more than the equivalent women’s gatherings for the same categories of need.
This is not a generosity gap. It is a strategic gap. Women play smaller roles with money in collective settings, are more careful, more cautious, and more concerned with what others will think of the amount than with what the amount could actually accomplish.
Women’s networks have become territorial. If you are in one, you do not engage with another — out of loyalty; out of the fear of being seen to spread yourself too thin; or out of the quiet competition between organisations that should be natural allies.
No single women’s network has everything. The network excellent at accelerating corporate women’s careers cannot also be the best network for female founders, and the investment collective, and the social circle, and the governance community. These are different rooms for different seasons — and the woman who limits herself to one is choosing a fraction of the architecture available to her.
The next evolution: Wealth proximity, wealth tables, wealth leadership
The women’s network needs a new season. Not a rebrand. A redesign.
From inspiration to infrastructure. From connection to capital. From gathering to governing. From social networking to wealth structuring across borders.
The language of this new season is not empowerment. It is proximity. Wealth proximity, the deliberate positioning of women inside the rooms, the deals, the conversations, and the relationships where wealth is actually created. It is not enough to be inspired by wealth. We must be proximate to it. Present at the table where it is designed, allocated, and compounded.
The wealth table is not a conference. It is not a panel. It is not a networking dinner. It is a room where women are making actual investment decisions, pooling actual capital, and taking actual positions in the future of this continent.
Radiant collective capital: What a wealth table actually looks like
At first glance, Radiant Collective Capital might appear to be 150 African and diaspora women in business collecting modest cheques and co-investing in opportunities. That reading is accurate in its details and entirely wrong in its understanding.
What Radiant is building is a template. A new architecture for what women and wealth can look like across Africa and globally. We are normalising women as investors, as capital allocators, and as significant stakeholders in institutional businesses. We are demonstrating – not theorising – that African women can gather around a wealth table, make collective bets on the future of the continent, and deepen the kind of African collaboration and trade that even the most optimistic government frameworks around the African Continental Free Trade Area are still working toward.
At our Q2 Investment Lounge, we deep-dived into the African Real Estate Wealth Map. Women learnt about investment opportunities across global and African equities. We are looking at banks and fintechs — particularly those serving underserved markets and serving women well — because we understand that women are an economic force whose potential is no longer potential. It is present. It is active. It is allocating.
And beyond the investments, friendships are deepening across borders. Collaborations are forming between women who would never have met outside this collective. The social fabric and the wealth fabric are being woven together deliberately. That is the model.
Boots on the ground: East Africa
I am writing this from East Africa.
Over the past week, I have been moving across Nairobi and Zanzibar — not as a tourist but as an investor. Boots on the ground, meeting Kenyan business leaders over lunch at the beautiful Hemingways property, sitting with women who are excited about what we are collectively building and asking the question that tells me everything about the moment we are in: how do we bring more Kenyan women, more East African women, into this collective?
Kenyan women in our network are now seriously considering investing in Zanzibar — an opportunity that was invisible to them before Radiant put it on the wealth map. They would not have known. They would not have been in the room. And that is precisely the point.
