Seati Moloi | Published 27 minutes ago
For more than a decade, South Africans watched one of the country's most significant intellectual property battles unfold in court.
The story of Nkosana Makate and the "Please Call Me" concept became more than a legal dispute. It became a national lesson about innovation, ownership, recognition, and the value of ideas.
For African young innovators , entrepreneurs, inventors, and technology founders, the Makate story should not simply be viewed as a legal case.
It should be studied as a cautionary tale about a 24 years old young man, who pitched the "Please Call Me" concept to Vodacom in November 2000 as an uniformed, eager mind.
In a continent bursting with creativity and innovation, many young entrepreneurs dedicate years to developing solutions that address uniquely African challenges.
Yet too few understand one of the most important questions in business: What do you actually own?
As South Africa and the broader continent continue to seek solutions to youth unemployment, poverty, inequality, and economic exclusion, we must also have a serious conversation about ownership.
If we aspire to own businesses, create industries, and participate meaningfully in the economy, ownership must begin with the ideas and innovations we create.Innovation without ownership is opportunity without protection.
Africa's innovation economy is growing
Across Africa, young innovators are building solutions in fintech, health technology, education technology, agriculture, artificial intelligence, renewable energy, and consumer electronics.
They are solving problems that global corporations often overlook because they understand the realities of African communities.
Yet many innovators focus almost exclusively on product development, funding, and market access while neglecting the protection of the very intellectual assets that make their businesses valuable.
In today's knowledge economy, intellectual property has become one of the most valuable forms of wealth creation.
The world's most valuable companies derive much of their worth not from physical assets, but from patents, trademarks, copyrights, software code, industrial designs, and proprietary technologies.
African entrepreneurs cannot afford to treat intellectual property as an afterthought.
Understanding intellectual property
Intellectual Property (IP) refers to creations of the mind that can be legally protected and owned. Many entrepreneurs hear the term regularly but are often unclear about the different forms of protection available.
Patents
A patent protects a new invention, process, technology, or technical solution. It grants the inventor exclusive rights to use, manufacture, license, or sell the invention for a specified period.
Patents are particularly important for technology companies because they protect the unique innovations that differentiate them from competitors.
Without patent protection, competitors may replicate an innovation without compensating the inventor who invested time, resources, and expertise in developing it.
Trademarks
A trademark protects brand elements such as names, logos, slogans, symbols, and distinctive identifiers.
A trademark ensures that consumers can distinguish one company's products or services from another's.For growing businesses, trademarks often become some of their most valuable assets because they protect reputation and brand equity.
Copyright
Copyright protects original creative works such as software code, books, music, videos, designs, photographs, and written content.
It grants creators exclusive rights over how their work is reproduced, distributed, and commercialised.
Registered Designs
Registered designs protect the visual appearance of a product, including its shape, configuration, pattern, or ornamentation.
For product innovators and manufacturers, design protection can be as important as patent protection because consumers often buy products based on appearance and user experience.
Why patents matter
Many entrepreneurs mistakenly believe that simply creating an invention automatically protects it.
Unfortunately, innovation alone does not provide legal protection.A patent creates a legal framework that establishes ownership and provides the inventor with enforceable rights.
Patents can also create commercial opportunities that extend far beyond the original invention.
For youth startups seeking investment, a strong intellectual property portfolio often serves as proof of innovation, competitiveness, and long-term value.
Investors are far more likely to support businesses that can demonstrate ownership of their core technologies.
The lessons from the "Please Call Me" saga deeply influenced our approach at Khoi Tech.
As a proudly South African technology company born in Soweto, our mission has always been to create technology solutions that address real African challenges.
However, innovation alone…
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