William Elong: An ICT innovator
William Elong: An ICT innovator
The news wasn¡¯t big enough to excite international media, but it was an exciting development this year in Cameroon when Will&Brothers, a local engineering and consulting company, unveiled the first-ever drone made in Cameroon.
¡°It¡¯s the pride of the country!¡± exclaimed Ms. Minette Libom Li Likeng, the country¡¯s minister of telecommunications and postal services, who attended the unveiling.
Last year, Forbes magazine named Will&Brothers founder William Elong, 25, one of the most promising Africans under 30.
Mr. Elong, who describes himself as a ¡°big dreamer and overachiever,¡± at 20 years was the youngest-ever graduate of the Economic Warfare School in Paris. He is better known in his country for his Drone Africa venture, a commercial imagery service used by the tourism and agricultural industries in Cameroon.
¡°Our countries spend huge sums of money on contracting satellite imagery companies to address their geographical mapping needs,¡± Mr. Elong told Africa Renewal in a phone conversation from Douala, Cameroon¡¯s economic capital. ¡°Using drones is much cheaper, cost effective and more practical,¡± he added.
The company provides services to the local tourism industry, allowing it to access a ¡°different vision of the same reality¡±¡ªaerial images of points of interest.
The company also offers mapping services to farmers and others, making it easier for them to pinpoint the exact dimensions of their arable lands.
¡°In Cameroon, people have lands but often don¡¯t know the borders of their fields. Our service helps determine that,¡± he says. In addition, farmers can use their services in field surveys and targeted in-field crop management.
Since its founding three years ago, when it had four employees and 12 drones, the company has been growing at a good pace: it now has 12 employees, half of whom work in the Douala headquarters, while the rest operate from Germany, France and C?te d¡¯Ivoire.
Following the unveiling of his locally made drones, Mr. Elong is looking at expanding into other countries in Africa, Asia and Europe, and is in the process of raising $2 million for that purpose.
It will not be the first time that Will&Brothers has relied on external and publicly subscribed financing for the drone initiative. Three years ago, the company managed to raise some $200,000 to advance the drone manufacturing project.
¡°It is not just about the hardware,¡± Mr. Elong said. ¡°It is also about software, about coding.¡± While he is eager to locally manufacture cheap drones, the real challenge is to provide tailor-made solutions to socioeconomic development challenges, he said.
So enters Cyclops, Mr. Elong¡¯s next quest, which aims to explore artificial intelligence and with which he wants to equip drones with the ability to ¡°detect people, objects and vehicles and to identify different types of animals at specific sites.¡±
¡°Artificial intelligence is the future of humanity,¡± he says. ¡°I wish more people would take an interest in technology.¡±