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Iyin Aboyeji’s Gospel of the Trust List: The Fundraising Philosophy Guiding His Next Unicorn Hunt

by Ifeanyi Abraham
July 23, 2025
in African Voices in Tech
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Few African founders have earned the right to be doctrinaire about fundraising. Iyin Aboyeji has, after co-founding Andela and Flutterwave, two of the continent’s dozen unicorns, he now talks about capital in almost spiritual terms as a reward for trust, not a substitute for it. Over the past few months, his LinkedIn essays have turned confessional: raw, unfiltered stories that founders bookmark because they feel like office-hour mentoring. In one post, he remembers closing Moove’s first cheque in seventy-two frantic hours simply by ringing “the list”, investors he had already enriched. Their wire transfers landed because they trusted him, not because they understood every clause of the model. Watching that blend of candour and conviction, you sense a man once criticised for swagger choosing humility as the sharper blade.

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The Trust List Doctrine

Aboyeji distils that Moove episode into three piercing questions:

  • Have you already created wealth for people who will gladly back you again?
  • Do you know believers who would wire funds without hesitation simply because they trust you?
  • Can those believers move quickly when time is painfully tight?

If any answer is no, he warns, start building that list today. Trust is the true currency; capital merely follows.

Why Trust Beats Term-Sheets

Founders often chase reach before relationship. Aboyeji inverts the order. A warm introduction will always travel faster than the slickest deck because:

  • Conviction shortcuts diligence. When backers have already tasted upside with you, deal rooms shrink to WhatsApp messages.
  • Speed compounds opportunity. Start ups live inside narrow timing windows; weeks saved on capital calls can mean a new market or missed milestone.
  • Signal attracts outsiders. A trusted inner circle telegraphs quality to later-stage funds and strategic partners.

Itana: A Virtual City Built on Trust

His newest canvas is Itana, an online free zone aiming to let global companies incorporate in Nigeria without wrestling with red tape. The venture has already lured $2 million in pre-seed backing from LocalGlobe, Amplo, Pronomos Capital, and Future Africa. 

Itana is less a real estate play than a policy hedge: a digital jurisdiction where rule-making keeps pace with software development. By placing compliance inside code, Aboyeji is betting that Africa’s next growth spurt will come from founders who can plug into a trusted legal layer rather than navigate twenty-seven ministries.

Building in the Face of Growing Government Shifts

Aboyeji’s record shows a rare comfort with politics. He once campaigned for Nigeria’s first serious female presidential hopeful, then last year publicly endorsed President Bola Tinubu’s economic mandate, arguing that painful reforms were the price of eventual prosperity. That fluency surfaced again at the US-Nigeria Startup Investment Summit, where investor Emeka Ajene quizzed former minister and TLcom partner Dr Omobola Johnson about regulation. Johnson cautioned that smaller innovators often fly beneath the regulator’s radar until scale makes intervention inevitable, while also bringing the government to the table. She also specifically spoke about recently shut-down startup Okra and how the Government’s decision to play in their space was one of the factors that eventually led to the decision to shut it down

Aboyeji’s answer is to design policy into product from day one. Itana’s free-zone status gives start-ups a single touch-point for tax, visas and banking, sidestepping the multi-agency maze that still slows Nigeria’s payments giants.

Is Iyin Really Looking for Another Unicorn?

Aboyeji insists that valuation is a consequence, never a target, yet the scoreboard says otherwise. Serial unicorn builders are a global breed: Elon Musk (PayPal, Tesla, SpaceX), Jack Dorsey (Twitter, Block) and Parker Conrad (Zenefits, Rippling) all turned repeat credibility into out-sized rounds.

On the investor side, Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank Vision Fund has logged one hundred and twenty-eight active unicorns, proving that a single capital platform can mint herd after herd when conviction pools with cash. 

Aboyeji now straddles both camps. Through Future Africa, he has backed more than eighty early-stage ventures, including Andela, Flutterwave, Moove and Itana itself. The pattern is clear: he builds a trust list, then becomes that list for others.

How Founders Can Build Their Own Trust Flywheel

  1. Deliver a liquidity moment early. Even a modest secondary sale proves you can turn paper into pounds.
  2. Nurture micro LPs. Alumni, former bosses and domain experts write the first five figure cheques that anchor rounds.
  3. Publish the journey. Authentic storytelling, as Aboyeji does on LinkedIn, invites believers long before you need their money.
  4. Keep legal friction low. Offer standard docs, clear cap-tables and swift e-signatures.
  5. Reciprocate. When your own backers raise funds, invest if you can. Networks become nets that catch one another.

Betting on the Builder

Whether Itana becomes the next billion-pound African company or merely the launchpad for one, the safer wager is Aboyeji himself. He has shown that in markets rife with bias and volatility, trust compounds faster than capital. That is why founders follow his Gospel and why cheque-writers still pick up the phone when he calls. Itana or not, many of us are betting on Iyin to find the next frontier – and to bring his list along for the ride.

This article was rewritten with the aid of AI
At Techsoma, we embrace AI and understand our role in providing context, driving narrative and changing culture.

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