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The Nigerian business strategist powering the global shift to driverless shared mobility
The Nigerian business strategist powering the global shift to driverless shared mobility

Business Insider

time15-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • Business Insider

The Nigerian business strategist powering the global shift to driverless shared mobility

In the emerging architecture of global transportation, few African executives have shaped the conversation, let alone the infrastructure, as profoundly as Tayo Oyegunle. A Yale MBA graduate and former investment analyst, Tayo has become a globally respected mobility strategist, helping transform transportation in high-growth markets through a disciplined combination of technology, financial innovation, and urban systems thinking. Today, as the Head of Global Marketplace Partnerships at Moove, Tayo is core to aiding the next frontier in global mobility: with Moove's recent foray into the deployment of driverless electric vehicles via a recent partnership with Waymo, where it will lead the management infrastructure, Moove is primed to become a leading player in the new mobility world of autonomous vehicle that seeks to eliminate the need for private car ownership while unlocking inclusive access to movement at scale. From Lagos to London, Dubai to Delhi, his work at Moove stretches across nine countries on three continents, positioning him as one of the few Africans in top position at a business shaping how cities will move and grow in the next century. Scaling the Infrastructure for Smart Autonomous Cities Tayo's mandate is as complex as it is ambitious: to design and manage partnership strategies that grow Moove's fleet operations and products across new verticals and geographies. At Moove, he is part of the leadership team driving the company's evolution from a fintech startup to a full-stack infrastructure player capable of supporting post-ownership, frictionless urban transport ecosystems. The model is revolutionary. In the cities Moove is partnering with revolutionzing and democratising is building toward, individuals will no longer need to own vehicles. Instead, fleets of connected, driverless electric cars will circulate continuously, summoned by users when needed and released when done. No parking. No idle assets. No emissions. These systems are designed to optimize vehicle utilization, dramatically reduce congestion, and democratize access to mobility without the financial burden of ownership. 'We're not just financing vehicles. We're architecting how people will move in the world ahead. Access will replace ownership. Intelligence will replace infrastructure. Mobility will be a service layer, shared, clean, and autonomous,' Tayo explains. From Uber to Moove: A Record of Systems-Level Execution Tayo's background uniquely qualifies him for this task. As Uber Nigeria's Country Manager, he led operations across three major cities and launched UberBOAT, the first water-based ride-hailing product in sub-Saharan Africa, in partnership with the Lagos State Waterways Authority. His expansion into Benin City aligned closely with state-level development policy, earning Uber recognition as a key enabler of jobs and mobility infrastructure. He later became Vice President of Global Operations at Kobo360, where he managed the company's supply chain resilience during the COVID-19 crisis. With law enforcement agencies blocking food and medical logistics across the country, Tayo led rapid-response advocacy to unlock movement, stabilize markets, and safeguard public health. His role demonstrated not just logistical command, but high-level coordination with government, private stakeholders, and civil society. Over these period he built operational and leadership muscles to run $100M+ business in the African mobility space and clearly distinguished himself as a thought leader in the scene. Moove: The Strategic Evolution from Fintech to Mobility Infrastructure In 2021, Tayo became Chief Operating Officer at Moove Africa, where he transformed the startup's model from vehicle financing to full-stack urban mobility enablement. He led Moove's expansion in South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya, providing access to financing for over 10,000 mobility entrepreneurs across the African continent and help to also scale the company's bouquet of product offerings, which served as a core of its launch into SouthEast Asia and the Middle East. Supported by Tayo's strategic leadership, Moove is actively piloting the management of autonomous vehicle fleets in urban corridors in the US, building partnerships with EV infrastructure players, and partnering with its platform partners to push toward zero-emission in niche progress cities across the world. Africa as a Platform for Global Urban Strategy Tayo's strategic insight goes beyond deployment. He views Africa not as a lagging consumer of Western mobility trends, but as a launchpad for scalable, sustainable, and inclusive urban systems. 'Africa's transport infrastructure has gaps, but it also has flexibility. We can leapfrog legacy car ownership models and implement shared, electric, and autonomous solutions faster than the West. If we build right, we won't just catch up, we'll lead.' He is currently laying the groundwork for a Pan-African Mobility Infrastructure Fund, a vehicle to finance EV adoption, smart fleet networks, and AI-based traffic coordination platforms. This fund will act as a continental investment arm, unlocking both public-sector alignment and private capital for large-scale infrastructure. At a time when cities are overwhelmed by traffic, pollution, and outdated infrastructure, Tayo Oyegunle is offering a scalable vision grounded in technology, financial innovation, and global coordination. His leadership at Moove positions him as one of the most strategically significant Nigerian executives operating at a global level, not only because of the markets he's shaping, but because of the system-level transformation he is driving. With a rare blend of Wall Street rigor, Silicon Valley vision, and deep African fluency, Tayo Oyegunle is not just building businesses. He is defining how the next billion people will move. He is the Nigerian strategist guiding the world beyond car ownership toward a shared, intelligent, and inclusive mobility future.

Limited edition shirt to raise funds for farmer mental health
Limited edition shirt to raise funds for farmer mental health

Agriland

time28-04-2025

  • Business
  • Agriland

Limited edition shirt to raise funds for farmer mental health

Ballybar Ireland has launched the limited edition 'Moove' shirt, in support of Macra's mental health initiative, Make the Moove. Following the success of last year's 'Take a Break' coffee morning at Coppenagh House Farm, Co. Carlow, which raised over €2,000 for the Make the Moove initiative, Ballybar Ireland launched the shirt. A portion of all sales of the shirt will go directly to support mental health in the agricultural sector. The idea for the coffee morning grew from an observation about the impact the relentless weather last winter had on farmers, and those working in the agricultural sector. Founder of Ballybar Ireland and Coppenagh House Farm, Ciara Stanley felt compelled to create a space where people could take a breath, talk and reconnect. The event offered farmers a calm welcoming space to step away from the pressures of the day-to-day grind, to support their mental health. Building on that spirit, Ballybar Ireland designed the shirt in a rich denim-inspired colour, finished with a smart navy contrast on the collar and cuffs. Mental health Each of the Ballybar Moove shirts sold will help to fund Macra's Make the Moove initiative, which provides mental health supports across the farming community. Stanley said: 'We knew we wanted to do more, and what better way than through something we know and that our customers love and trust, our Ballybar shirts. Running a business can often feel like a series of highs and lows — questioning yourself, worrying about the next step, wondering if you're doing enough. 'It's a reminder that asking for help, or simply reaching out, is not a weakness but a real strength.' 'Through this shirt, we hope to keep that conversation going and remind people that they are never alone, whether in farming, in business, or in life,' she added. The Ballybar Moove shirt is strictly limited edition with no restocks. Macra Earlier this month (April 4) Josephine O'Neill from Callan in Co. Kilkenny, was elected as the next Macra president. O'Neill beat fellow contestant for the role, Conor Murphy, a member of Whitechurch Macra club in Co. Cork with a total of 82 votes to Murphy's 53 votes. There was one spoilt vote. William Clancy, Borrisoleigh Macra, Co. Tipperary was elected as Munter vice-president. Coming from a beef and tillage background, the Kilkenny woman has been a member of Macra for 12 years.

Uber-Backed Startup Moove Buys Brazil's Kovi in Share Deal
Uber-Backed Startup Moove Buys Brazil's Kovi in Share Deal

Yahoo

time29-01-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Uber-Backed Startup Moove Buys Brazil's Kovi in Share Deal

(Bloomberg) -- Uber Technologies Inc.-backed Moove acquired Brazil's Kovi as part of plans to further grow its income and footprint outside of Africa. Trump's Federal Funding Pause Threatens State Financials NYC Subway's Most Dangerous Stations Are on Lexington Ave. Line Housing Aid Uncertain After Trump's Spending Freeze Memo Texas HOA Charged With Discrimination for Banning Section 8 Renters Newsom Enlists Magic Johnson, Guggenheim CEO for LA Rebuilding The equity deal for an undisclosed amount would place the $750 million startup among the world's top three fleet operators and financiers of ridesharing vehicles by revenue, Moove's co-founder Ladi Delano said in an interview. It will also expand the group's fleet to 36,000 vehicles and increase its recurring yearly revenue to $275 million, he said. 'We expect to continue to scale our fleet by adding about 15,000 vehicles on an annual basis,' Delano said. The Kovi deal will also allow the startup to integrate its driver-behavior algorithm and internet of things software into Moove's artificial intelligence strategy to improve safety and efficiency, he said. UK-born Nigerians Delano and Jide Odunsi founded Moove in Lagos in 2020 with 76 vehicles to help would-be ride-hailing drivers access vehicle financing. The startup with operations in Europe, the Middle East and India recently partnered with Waymo LLC to manage and dispatch its autonomous vehicles, starting with Phoenix in the US this year, Delano said. Moove, which counts Blackrock among its other backers, uses a credit-scoring system to enable drivers to access financing to buy new vehicles for ride hailing, logistics and deliveries, and repay it using a percentage of their weekly income. Since starting the business, Moove has raised more than $500 million in equity and debt as it rapidly scales the business. What America's Tech Billionaires Really Bought When They Backed Donald Trump Musk Pitches New Narrative as Tesla Sales Fall Indy Pass, the Anti-Vail Seasonal Ski Ticket, Is Gaining Fans Forget Factories, Small US Towns Want Buc-ee's Gas Stations The CDC Won't Give the Public a Full Picture of Fertility Treatment Risks ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio

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