WATCH | Innovate Africa: Amid global gloom, a Swedish VC sees bright skies over Africa
Hans Otterling, the Swedish venture capitalist who helped usher Spotify into global relevance through its first major funding round, is bringing a rare sense of optimism to global investment. Also a general partner at Northzone, Otterling recently relocated from London to Cape Town, backing his belief in the continent’s potential with action and a $200m investment vehicle.
Alongside Klarna co‑founder Niklas Adalberth, Otterling co‑launched the Norrsken22 Impact Fund in 2022, targeting growth‑stage tech start-ups across Africa. The fund focuses on sectors like fintech, education, health care and logistics, with a team fully based on the continent. “We didn’t want to run this from London or Stockholm. If we believe in Africa, we need to be in Africa,” Otterling told Kieno Kammies for Innovate Africa.
Otterling is no stranger to backing game‑changers. Since joining Northzone in 2006, he was instrumental in attracting international investors to Spotify and Klarna. That instinct for spotting transformative potential now informs his outlook on Africa, where more than 60% of the 1.4-billion population is under 25 and mobile internet adoption is soaring.
The Norrsken22 strategy treats Africa’s well‑documented challenges, such as infrastructure gaps and fragmented regulation, not as red flags but as catalysts for innovation . The fund has backed at least six companies across South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and Egypt so far and aims to support up to 20 by the end of 2025. It supports growth‑stage start-ups with capital and advisory expertise to scale sustainably.
With Cape Town as his new base, Otterling’s bet on Africa is more than financial. It’s personal. “This is the most exciting place to be building the future,” he said. In a world growing more cautious, his optimism offers a fresh and compelling counter‑narrative.