The Postal and Telecommunications Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe (POTRAZ) has launched a new business training programme designed to equip local innovators and technology entrepreneurs with essential skills to turn their ideas into sustainable businesses.
The initiative aims to bridge the gap between technological innovation and commercial success by providing participants with practical training in business development, financial management, market access, funding strategies, and regulatory compliance.
The programme, officially rolled out recently, targets young innovators, startups, and tech enthusiasts across Zimbabwe. It combines workshops, mentorship sessions, and hands-on modules delivered in partnership with industry experts and successful entrepreneurs. Selected participants will receive support in refining their business models and preparing for investment opportunities.
This move by POTRAZ is significant because Zimbabwe, like many African countries, has a growing pool of talented innovators but struggles with the โcommercialisation gap.โ Many promising ideas die at the prototype stage due to lack of business acumen, poor access to markets, and weak understanding of funding ecosystems.
By focusing on business training rather than just technical skills, POTRAZ is addressing a critical bottleneck in the countryโs innovation ecosystem. The programme signals a maturing approach from regulators shifting from pure infrastructure development to actively supporting the human capital and entrepreneurial capacity needed to build a digital economy.
In the broader context, this reflects increasing recognition across Africa that technology infrastructure alone is not enough. Without strong entrepreneurial skills, innovation rarely translates into job creation, economic growth, or meaningful industry development.
For young Zimbabweans with ideas in fintech, agritech, healthtech, edtech, or other sectors, this programme offers a rare structured pathway from concept to viable business. Many innovators in the country have brilliant technical solutions but lack the tools to price products, build teams, manage cash flow, or pitch to investors.
Participants stand to gain confidence, networks, and practical knowledge that could determine whether their startups survive the critical early years. Successful graduates could create jobs, solve local problems, and contribute to Zimbabweโs digital economy ambitions.
This initiative also sends an encouraging message to the countryโs youth: the regulator is not just policing the sector but actively investing in the next generation of builders and creators.
The success of this programme will ultimately be measured by how many participants go on to launch or scale sustainable businesses. If well executed, it could become a model for other regulators across the region looking to foster genuine innovation-led growth.
POTRAZโs latest intervention is a welcome and strategic step toward building not just a connected Zimbabwe, but a commercially vibrant and entrepreneurially strong one.


