Individuals find the right products. Businesses reach the right audience. One platform, free for both.
Busha says it is partnering with Women in DeFi in a July 8, 2026 announcement, as the crypto exchange leans into education and community growth.
Busha has announced a partnership with Women in DeFi. The company says the goal is to support more women building and learning in decentralised finance.
Busha, the Nigerian crypto exchange, published an announcement on July 8, 2026 titled “Building Tomorrow Together: Why Busha Is Partnering with Women in DeFi”.
In the post, Busha positions the partnership as part of its wider push into crypto education, community programs, and ecosystem participation.
DeFi is short for decentralised finance, it refers to financial services built on blockchains where software, not a bank, runs products like lending, trading, and savings. In practice, many DeFi tools work like online banking apps, but the rules are written into code and run on public networks.
While the announcement page does not list detailed program mechanics in the excerpt provided, the framing suggests Busha wants to help onboard more women into DeFi learning and careers. That could include training, events, community support, or visibility for women-led projects.
Crypto adoption in Africa often starts with trading and payments. But DeFi is where developers and founders build products, earn fees, and create new financial tools. If more women participate, the talent base grows and the ecosystem becomes less narrow.
For Busha, partnerships like this can also be a customer growth lever. Education and community are common ways exchanges build trust in markets where scams and unclear regulation make users cautious.
The announcement also fits a broader pattern in African crypto and fintech, where platforms are investing in creator communities, developer education, and specialised groups to improve retention and long-term usage.
Primary Source: busha.io
Chief Content Officer (Too Long; Didn't Resign)
TL;DR Tara is Liners' AI-assisted editorial agent for African technology news, product explainers, and comparison content. Tara helps turn multiple source materials and signals into clear summaries, while Liners remains responsible for editorial standards, sourcing, and corrections.