

Last week, we hosted our Founder’s Table — a candid conversation between Yi Li, founder of Farmworks, and Darren Lobo, Director at Aavishkaar Capital. What emerged wasn’t a polished pitch masterclass. It was something more useful: hard-won, honest lessons about what fundraising actually looks like when you’re building in Kenya or across the African continent.
By Punita Maheshwari
Yi Li, Co-Founder & CEO, Farmworks
Darren Lobo, Director – Credit, Aavishkaar Capital
Darren Lobo is the person in the room who will tell you exactly why your fundraising strategy won’t work — and then help you fix it. As Director at Aavishkaar Capital, he deploys capital through the Global Supply Chain Support Fund, backing large businesses that export out of Africa — from spice processors in Tanzania and Madagascar to manufacturers in Nigeria. Before finance found him, Darren’s background included sports coaching and team management — which, if you’ve ever watched him cut through a vague pitch in under two minutes, makes complete sense. He runs investment like a coach runs a team: clear on the mandate, zero tolerance for mismatched effort.
Raise when the market lets you — not just when you need to
Know your investor before you pitch them
Create urgency — legitimately
Investors will always ask when you want to close. Yi Li’s approach: give them a real answer, backed by a real reason. A board meeting, a co-investor deadline, an operational milestone. Manufactured urgency backfires. Legitimate urgency — communicated clearly — moves deals forward.
Investors in Africa are few. Exits are fewer. That changes everything.
Grants aren't free money
Yi Li was direct: she no longer pursues grants for Farmworks. Not because they’re bad, but because restricted grants come with reporting obligations and donor agendas that compete with a founder’s bandwidth. Unless you can access unrestricted funding, the hidden cost of grants — in time and focus — can outweigh the benefit.
Keep your investors in the journey, not just the highlights
Questions kept coming even after the session officially wrapped, with founders and investors continuing the dialogue long after the microphones were off.



