Written by: Snider Mugese, Villgro Africa’s Director of Finance and Operations
Villgro Africa recently participated in the International Maternal and Newborn Health Conference (IMNHC) knowledge café, and one uncomfortable truth kept resurfacing:
Most health innovations don’t fail because they’re bad.
They fail because they’re built in isolation.
And in healthcare, isolation is expensive.
Because while we debate innovation pipelines, the reality is this:
We don’t have an innovation problem.
We have an adoption and scale problem.
The myth of the “brilliant solo innovator”
Let’s get this out of the way:
If you’re building health tech like a Silicon Valley app, you’re already in trouble.
Healthcare is not:
It’s a messy, interdependent system of: Patients. Nurses. Doctors. Regulators. Procurement. Biomedical engineers. Governments.
And here’s the catch: each of them has veto power.
Bundling is survival
One of the sharpest insights from the room:
Single solutions don’t solve system problems.
Yet most innovators are still building like this:
Meanwhile, the health system is dealing with:
So your elegant solution? It becomes just another layer of complexity.
What actually works is bundling:
Because here’s the reality:
Health systems don’t buy products. They adopt solutions that reduce friction.
Collaboration is the unfair advantage
A clear pattern from models like Health Tech Hub Africa and Villgro Africa:
Not just acceleration, orchestrated collaboration.
What actually moved the needle:
And here’s the uncomfortable truth:
The winners weren’t the smartest in the room.
They were the most connected to the system they were trying to serve.
Where good ideas go to die
Two groups mapped the innovation journey. Different frameworks, same graveyard.
The breaking point: Deployment. Scaling. Real-world use.
Not ideation. Not prototyping.
The moment you leave your controlled environment, things fall apart.
Why?
And here’s the data behind it:
The real problem: you’re building for the wrong person
One brutal insight:
The person using your product is often not the one choosing or paying for it.
And yet, most products are built like:
There is no phase two.
If your solution adds even 5 extra minutes to a frontline worker’s workflow in an already stretched system, it won’t be used.
Not because it’s bad.
Because it’s impractical.
The adoption gap no one budgets for
Everyone loves prototyping.
No one budgets for behavior change.
And that’s where things fall apart.
What actually kills scale:
And the big one:
Manufacturing cost ≠ market reality
A device that costs $50 to produce but targets a system that can only pay $10 is not innovative.
So what actually works?
Not glamorous. But effective.
Because your product’s life does.
If it doesn’t plug into existing systems (clinical workflows, health information systems), it’s dead on arrival.
Solve the full problem, not your favorite slice of it.
Not “let’s partner” energy. Real alignment:
The uncomfortable conclusion
Most health innovations don’t fail because founders aren’t smart.
They fail because:
If you’re still building solo in healthcare, you’re not scrappy, you’re inefficient.
Africa doesn’t need more pilots.
It needs:
But let’s also be honest about something we don’t say enough:
Even the right solution, at the right time, solving a real need… can still struggle.
Capital doesn’t always flow where logic says it should. Adoption isn’t guaranteed just because the problem is obvious.
So even when you get the product right, you still have to fight for alignment.
Alignment with:
And that’s the real work.
Because building the product is only half the job.
Getting it adopted; that’s the system navigation game.