
Group photo of panellists and UNIVEN staff
29 September 2025 – Under the banner of South Africa’s G20 Presidency, the University of Venda (UNIVEN), in partnership with the Startup20 Engagement Group (SU20), the Department of Small Business Development (DSBD), and 22 On Sloane (Country Secretariat), hosted a landmark Startup20 Activation Session at the University’s Sports Hall.
The Group of Twenty (G20) is the premier forum for international economic cooperation, bringing together the world’s largest economies to address pressing global challenges. For the first time, the Startup20 Engagement Group has been formally recognised within the G20 structure to ensure that startups and entrepreneurs are integrated into global policy frameworks. South Africa’s 2025 Presidency has prioritised inclusive growth, innovation, and sustainability, with a special focus on township and rural enterprises.
The UNIVEN Activation Session was one of several nationwide initiatives aimed at ensuring that grassroots voices, particularly those of students, young entrepreneurs, and rural innovators, are incorporated into the Startup20 policy agenda. By doing so, South Africa aims to shape global discussions on entrepreneurship while ensuring local relevance and representation.

Prof Joseph Francis, Acting Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research and Postgraduate Studies at the University of
Venda
Prof Francis highlighted the need for nurturing and sustaining initiatives, encouraging participants to approach the session with curiosity, creativity, and courage, and to harness wisdom from others to drive societal change. By hosting the SU20 activation here, we affirm our commitment to positioning UNIVEN as a hub where research, entrepreneurship, and community needs converge to create tangible impact. This is especially critical given the pressing need to support township and rural enterprises as engines of job creation, poverty alleviation and economic resilience. At UNIVEN, we believe that universities must be catalysts for transformation. Our students are not only learners they are innovators, creators, and problem solvers, Prof. Francis said.

Mr Vuyani Jarana, Chairperson of Startup20
Mr Vuyani Jarana, Chairperson of Startup20, in his keynote address, outlined the organisation’s efforts to promote global entrepreneurship under South Africa’s G20 Presidency, highlighting student entrepreneurship as a key dimension. With themes of solidarity, equality and sustain-ability guiding the presidency, Startup20 has established five task forces. Mr Jarana outlined five task forces that were established to tackle the pressing issues in the global startup eco-system:
- Foundation and alliances: This task force focuses on policy frameworks to enable the foun-dations of entrepreneurship.
- Access to finance and investment: This aims to increase access to funding and investment opportunities for start-ups. The stream is working with investors, venture capitalists, and government agencies to provide financial support.
- Trade and Market Access: This workstream focuses on creating opportunities for start-ups to access local and international markets.
- Inclusion and Sustainability: This workstream will examine how countries can enhance youth participation. This work group examine all the barriers and explores new ideas for addressing barriers to entry.
- Township and rural enterprises: This workstream focuses on strengthening local value chains, improving infrastructure and connectivity, and enhancing access to finance and ecosystem support for townships.
Mr Jarana commended the work that the University of Venda is doing in supporting rural enterprises through the UNIVEN Centre for Entrepreneurship and Rapid Incubation (UCfERI).

Mr Mojalefa Mohoto from the Department of Small Business Development

Panellists

Papi Mothibi, SU20 Township and Rural Entrepreneurship Task Force Member
Papi Mothibi, Deputy Chair of SU20 and member of the SU20 Township and Rural Entrepreneur-ship Task Force, outlined key recommendations to support entrepreneurs, including promoting blended finance, expanding credit scoring through behavioural data, and integrating stokvels. He said, “We want an innovative way of basically looking into how we collaborate with record-keeping, to make sure that we look at how the SMME is performing.” The task force also aims to scale lo-calised entrepreneurship education and capacity building, targeting 20,000 communities by 2028, and invest in digital infrastructure to support SMME growth.

Round table breakout session
During closing remarks, Papi Mothibi expressed gratitude to the panellists and attendees, not-ing that “the success of this country is going to depend on SMMEs.” He encouraged entrepreneurs to persist, highlighting the potential for global connections through the G20, saying, “The G20 affords you, as an entrepreneur, to understand that the only place that needs my product is not only South Africa.”
The ideas, concerns, and proposals surfaced during this Activation Session will not end here. They will be carefully consolidated and presented at the upcoming SU20 Summit, as part of South Africa’s broader G20 engagements. Through that Summit, these grassroots inputs, from students, rural entrepreneurs, and local stakeholders, will influence the official Startup20 policy recommendations tabled at the G20 Leaders’ Summit in Johannesburg on 22–23 November 2025.
Issued by:
Department of Marketing, Branding and Communication
University of Venda
Tel: 082 868 2218 / 082 868 1811