By Thato Brander — Technology Keynote Speaker | March 9, 2026 | 3 min read
Google mapped every street on Earth. This startup is mapping the trillions of dollars moving through the "invisible" shops Google ignored.
You've seen that blue location dot on your phone. It usually tells you where you are or the nearest restaurant. But zoom in on a bustling informal market in Lagos or Liberia, visit a South African township, and the dot goes blind. To the digital world, millions of thriving businesses do not exist. They are hidden like ghosts.
If you're looking for a hair salon and type "hair salon near me" in a township, you get no results. If you type "shop near me" on Google Maps, you find nothing. If you're lucky, you'll find the nearest formal shopping centre far away.
But where Google saw a dead end, this South African AI startup saw an opportunity. By using AI, they are turning local data into a living, breathing grid indexing the unindexable. They are unravelling the hidden economy, and doing it in a very clever way.
Pikaboo is mapping the hidden economy. By using games, locals map their own communities.
Do you remember Pokémon Go? In the game, the goal was to catch virtual characters placed in different geographical areas. Pikaboo uses the same concept but instead of chasing virtual characters, users solve one of Africa's biggest problems by mapping out the hidden economy. So instead of catching Pikachu, you catch and map an informal business.
It's simple: you log into the game and start playing. You might get a task to track down the nearest barber shop. You take a walk, you map it. Simple and you get paid for doing so.
With significant youth unemployment across the continent, this is a way to earn income while moving around your own community. Africa is set to have the largest population in the world by 2050. It is refreshing to see entrepreneurs building ventures that actually solve real problems.
For decades, informal businesses have been called the hidden economy but this is the real economy. Entrepreneurship did not begin with regulations; it began with normal people seeing opportunities and solving problems.
In the future, there will be no such thing as a "hidden economy". This isn't just about mapping businesses, it is about creating a digital truth about the world economy, especially for emerging markets.
Technology is only as important as the problems it can solve. Mapping the informal market has long been a challenge. It is great to see entrepreneurs from Africa finding inventive ways to address it.
The most important markets in the world are often the ones that are hardest to see. Pikaboo is proof that the next great technology opportunity isn't always in Silicon Valley sometimes it's in the streets that the rest of the world forgot to look at.
They aren't just building a map. They're building a bridge to the most profitable invisible market on earth using AI.
Thato Brander is a technology keynote speaker passionate about the intersection of technology, business, and innovation with a particular focus on how emerging technologies are reshaping industries and creating new opportunities across Africa and beyond.