In Uganda, innovators reached a significant milestone at Makerere University's Innovation and Incubation Centre recently, presenting solutions designed to improve how people living with speech impairments interact with banks, hospitals, and call centres institutions that have long defaulted to communication systems built for standard speech only.
One of the cohort's most candid moments came when a participant acknowledged that mentorship support during the six-month programme had been the deciding factor in moving their work from a local laptop to a production environment.
What the demo day demonstrated, at minimum, is that local talent is engaging with local problems in practical ways. The Makerere Innovation and Incubation Centre has built a track record of supporting early-stage innovators through the difficult transition from idea to working product. Whether this cohort's solutions find routes to scale will depend less on what happened in the presentation room and more on what comes next: funding, partnerships, and market validation.



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