Africa: Cloud, AI Dominate Africa’s 2025 Tech Landscape, Cio100 Report

Africa: Cloud, AI Dominate Africa’s 2025 Tech Landscape, Cio100 Report


Nairobi — Cloud computing, artificial intelligence (AI), and cybersecurity have emerged as Africa’s top technology priorities, signaling a shift from digital experimentation to full-scale strategic execution, according to the CIO100 Megatrends 2025 Report by CIO Africa (by dx⁵).

The report, based on insights from organisations across Sub-Saharan Africa, shows cloud computing leads adoption at 61 percent, followed by AI at 55 percent, and both analytics and cybersecurity at 44 percent.

Machine learning, Internet of Things (IoT), and edge computing are also gaining traction, especially in finance, government, education, and manufacturing – sectors driving Africa’s digital transformation.

“African business leaders are no longer asking what’s new — they’re asking what works,” said Harry Hare, Chairman of CIO Africa by dx⁵.


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“The data confirms that Africa’s digital leaders have moved beyond adoption debates into disciplined execution. It’s now about technology that delivers measurable business value.”

Once viewed as a milestone on the road to digital transformation, cloud computing has now become a core operational backbone for many African firms – enabling faster deployment, cost efficiency, and reliability.

Increasingly, companies are adopting multi-cloud environments to balance costs while enhancing continuity and scalability.

AI and machine learning, meanwhile, have evolved from pilot projects into mainstream business tools – driving automation, customer experience, and data-driven decision-making.

Cybersecurity has also transformed from a compliance obligation into a strategic differentiator. Nearly half of all surveyed organisations are implementing advanced security frameworks to protect data and ensure business continuity — a clear sign that digital trust now anchors enterprise resilience.

While IoT and edge computing adoption remains modest, their impact is being felt across agriculture, logistics, and healthcare – helping address Africa’s connectivity gaps and enabling faster, smarter decision-making even in remote areas.

The report further identifies efficiency (85%), customer experience, cost control, and employee productivity as the top strategic priorities for organisations in 2025 – underscoring a shift toward performance-driven innovation.

However, challenges persist, including talent shortages, rising cyber threats, and regulatory hurdles. The report calls for stronger collaboration among policymakers, investors, and educators to sustain digital progress and build an inclusive innovation ecosystem.