4Sight Holdings says it will push deeper into Africa’s enterprise AI market after strong FY26 results, betting on cloud, automation, and partners.
4Sight Holdings is stepping up its Africa AI expansion plans after publishing strong FY26 results. The South Africa-headquartered, Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed group says it wants to be a bigger player in enterprise AI adoption on the continent.
The company’s CEO, Tertius Zitzke, said demand is rising beyond its home market. He pointed to growing interest from East, West, and North Africa in cloud services, industrial automation, and AI-enabled business systems.
Cloud, in plain terms, means running software and storing data on remote servers instead of on a company’s own machines. Industrial automation means using software and connected equipment to run factory or operations processes with less manual work. Intelligent automation is a broader term for using AI to automate routine tasks, like processing invoices or routing service tickets.
4Sight says it operates through more than 1,000 channel partners across Africa, the Middle East, and Europe. Channel partners are resellers and implementation firms that sell and deploy technology for customers, especially large businesses that need local support.
Zitzke’s message is that AI demand in Africa is no longer only a long-term bet. He also flagged practical constraints such as uneven regulation, inconsistent internet access, and fragmented markets.
Enterprise AI adoption in Africa is increasingly tied to practical business problems like cost control, supply chain visibility, and faster customer service. Firms that combine cloud delivery, automation tooling, and local implementation partners can move faster than vendors that rely only on direct sales.
4Sight’s strategy also reflects where many African buyers are today. They want packaged, deployable systems that work across countries, but still meet local compliance and infrastructure realities.
For founders and operators building in Africa’s AI and enterprise software market, the competitive set is shifting. More public-market and established tech groups are now treating cross-border AI rollout as a near-term growth lever, not just an experiment.
Primary Source: Techcabal
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