In 2020, while the world retreated into isolation, Njeri Muhia was preparing to come home—not just physically, but purposefully. From her flat in London, where she worked in global finance and diaspora investment, something began to stir. A calling louder than spreadsheets. A longing deeper than her passport.
She wasn’t running from anything. She was running toward something.
Back to Kenya…Back to possibility…Back to rewrite a story that for too long had been told by others.
Where Belonging Meets Boldness
Born in Kenya and educated in the UK, Njeri had always existed between two financial realities. In London, she navigated high-stakes portfolios and worked on connecting diaspora capital with investment opportunities back home. She understood both languages: the sharp tempo of global finance and the patient, often-overlooked rhythm of local entrepreneurship.
But something felt off.
She rejected the typical arm’s-length VC approach and told her founders, “Call me when you’re stuck—not just on strategy, but on life.”
Every year, billions of dollars flowed into African tech. Yet on the ground, in Nairobi’s co-working spaces and rural townships, brilliant founders couldn’t access even $50,000 to build. And women? They were barely seen. Despite outperforming their peers, female founders received less than 10% of total venture capital.
To Njeri, this wasn’t just inefficiency. It was injustice.
It was a system where capital spoke in foreign tongues, misunderstood local genius, and mistook extractive investment for empowerment.
So she did the one thing every great founder does: she built what she wished existed.
FrontEnd Ventures: Homegrown Capital, Deep-Rooted Conviction
In 2022, Njeri co-founded FrontEnd Ventures alongside Steven Wamathai—not as a corporate experiment, but as a deeply personal act of reclamation. With a $5 million fund built primarily by Kenyan high-net-worth individuals and institutions, she was flipping the script:
“Why should the people with the least context write the checks that shape our future?” she often asked.
FrontEnd wasn’t just a VC fund. It was a statement.
It funded Kenyan-led, impact-driven startups in agriculture, e-commerce, health tech, and mobility. Sectors that required more than a term sheet—they required understanding. Empathy. Proximity.
And instead of playing power broker, Njeri played partner. She rejected the typical arm’s-length VC approach and told her founders, “Call me when you’re stuck—not just on strategy, but on life.”
In an ecosystem often starved of warmth, she offered humanity.
The Gender Dividend: Investing Where Others Overlooked
Njeri had a clear thesis: investing in women wasn’t a risk—it was a missed opportunity waiting to be corrected. She infused gender lens investing into every layer of FrontEnd’s DNA. Over 40% of the portfolio’s early investments were led by women—not because of quotas, but because she understood a truth the market kept ignoring:
“Women founders in Kenya aren’t asking for favors. They’re asking for fairness.”
She gave it to them. And they delivered.
Beyond the Fund: Building the Infrastructure of Belonging
But Njeri knew one fund wasn’t enough.
So she expanded the ecosystem:
- As Product Owner at Axum, she helped democratize investment access, opening the door for ordinary Kenyans and diaspora members to become angel investors.
- She spoke on stages across Africa, including African Angel Fair and Afrishela, urging local wealth holders to stop waiting for “perfect” deals and start betting on their own people.
- She normalized female participation in finance, not just as recipients, but as decision-makers and builders.
“If we don’t change who holds the pen, we’ll never change the narrative,” she said at a panel with DRK Foundation.
Rooted to Rise: Why Kenya Was Always the Plan
What gave Njeri her edge wasn’t just her resume. It was her roots.
Her understanding of Kenya wasn’t academic. It was lived.
She knew the informal sector wasn’t “chaotic”—it was resilient. She knew that brilliant ideas weren’t just in Nairobi—they were in Eldoret, Kisumu, and Mombasa too. She knew that scaling impact required more than money—it required trust.
Kenya gave her a front-row seat to the challenges. But it also gave her unmatched access: to networks, to regulation, and to belief.
And slowly, the world noticed.
FrontEnd was named one of only two funds backed by the Mastercard Foundation Africa Growth Fund, catapulting its reach across the continent. Their portfolio now spanned 11 companies in 40+ markets.
And Njeri? She was named one of Africa’s 42 Most Influential Female VCs, not just for her investments—but for what she represented.
Legacy in Motion: The Belonging Blueprint
Njeri isn’t chasing unicorns.
She’s building a system that works for the people who need it most, from the founders pitching their first $10K to the women rewriting their financial destinies. Through her work, she’s making two things indisputable:
- Local capital can power global innovation
- Gender equity isn’t charity—it’s strategy
As a mentor at Safaricom’s Spark Accelerator, she doesn’t just preach scale. She preaches sustainability:
“If your business isn’t profitable on one customer, it won’t be on a million.”
She’s not in this for press. She’s in this to prove a point—that Africa doesn’t need to be saved. It needs to be trusted.
The Return That Changed the Equation
Njeri Muhia’s return wasn’t a retreat from global ambition. It was a recalibration of it. In a continent too often seen through the lens of crisis, she sees creativity. In systems written off as broken, she sees blueprints waiting to be redesigned.
She came home to build.
Not just companies. But confidence. Competence. And community.
Her $5 million fund might have started small. But it has grown into something far bigger—a story of what happens when capital is not only smart, but rooted.
