Johannesburg has always been a city of builders – of infrastructure, of enterprise and of possibility. I like to think that I’m one of them.
My career began not in a start-up hub or a corporate boardroom, but on the floors of Transnet Engineering. There, surrounded by the challenges of local infrastructure and industrial constraints, I learnt one of the most enduring truths of technology: its value lies in solving the problems that matter. From Transnet to Standard Bank and now to Altron, I’ve carried that same philosophy into every role.
At Altron, I’m fortunate to lead the group’s technology and innovation strategy at a time when our company, our country and our continent face complex but exciting challenges and, as we celebrated Altron’s 60th anniversary this year, we found ourselves reflecting on where our story started: Johannesburg, the city that raised us.
It was at this milestone celebration that I heard Michael Charlton describe Joburg not just as a city, but as a “community of hustlers, doers and problem solvers”. He ended with a quote from Margaret Mead that resonated deeply with me: “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world.” That quote sparked an interesting challenge for my colleagues and me: how can we leverage technology and human ingenuity to turn the Joburg we love into the tech-driven African success story we know it can be?
Envisioning Joburg as an African tech city
For me, the ultimate opportunity in technology is not complexity, it’s inclusion. At Altron, we support a diverse ecosystem, but our most powerful insights emerge when we act as a connector, linking the agility of small businesses with the scale of large enterprises.
Consider Lefa Cash Loans, a micro-lender in Soweto that partnered with Altron FinTech to implement the NuPay DebiCheck solution. This empowered the company to serve previously unbanked individuals while reducing default risk and improving operational efficiency. That’s financial inclusion in action.
Or Vodacom, which needed a way to harness internal ideas for innovation. With the help of Altron Digital Business, it launched IdeaTrigger, a crowdsourced platform that has already driven over 500 ideas, with half already implemented. This is what community innovation looks like in a modern enterprise.
Even in transport, our partnership with Putco after a tragic accident led to the installation of Netstar’s fleet management systems. With smart telemetry and in-bus cameras, the company achieved a 70% reduction in accidents and a 36% decrease in insurance claims – real change, driven by real data.

What binds these stories together isn’t just the tech. It’s the community mindset. In Charlton’s words, “If a collection of conditions are met, things don’t just begin to turn in the right direction, they explode into life.” At Altron, we see Johannesburg as that collection: right place, right people, right problems.
Using data and AI to unlock real-world results
Having the right conditions in place is only the beginning. To unlock real impact, we must apply the right tools, starting with data and AI. Because in the real world, rebuilding Joburg means knowing what’s broken, understanding why and predicting how to fix it before it fails again. That insight begins with data. And when we apply AI thoughtfully to that data, guided by the needs of our communities, not just the capabilities of our machines, we won’t just digitise problems. We’ll solve them.
Data is often called “the new gold”, but too often businesses try to monetise it by selling it rather than unlocking its true value. In my opinion, that approach is short-sighted. The real value of data lies in extracting insights that improve operational efficiency, create customer-centric products and build long-term competitive advantage, often through secure, collaborative data ecosystems that respect privacy.
So much of the data we have just lies in data systems, unexplored and unleveraged to its full potential. Why not use it to solve everyday, real-world problems for the greater Joburg, which can help drive investment based on real information?
Data is also the cornerstone of everything we want to achieve with AI. But you can’t build a successful AI strategy on messy, siloed data. The first step is therefore putting the right data governance, structures and access in place to get your data house in order.
Many tools we already use daily, like Microsoft 365, customer service platforms and ERP systems, come embedded with AI capabilities. The next real opportunity with AI, therefore, isn’t to invent from scratch, but to adopt what’s already available and scale it with purpose.
This philosophy informs our AI strategy at Altron. We’re not just building AI solutions; we’re building an AI community. That means enabling access through foundational platforms like our Altron AI initiative, providing education and unlocking practical use cases that empower people in their work and lives, not just data scientists. Our focus is on outcomes over complexity, making AI relevant, usable and impactful across everyday environments, from small businesses and public sector offices to major enterprises.
Right place, right people, right problems
And we’re uniquely positioned to do that. At Altron, we’re not tied to any single cloud provider, OEM or global tech stack. That independence gives us the flexibility to choose the most effective tools, guided by the need, not the brand. In a market often constrained by vendor lock-in, this gives us room to move faster, design with intent and scale where it matters most.
In South Africa, necessity isn’t just a challenge, it’s the reality we design for. And the reality that drives the kind of speed and innovation that makes a real difference.
Johannesburg is our starting point, even though it’s not our limit. It’s a city of warm-hearted hustlers, collaborative doers and fearless problem solvers. So, if we apply the right technologies to the right problems, through the lens of community and inclusion, we won’t just improve systems, we’ll ignite transformation.
Our journey at Altron is rooted in this belief: that innovation must uplift, data must empower and AI must serve. And as we move forward, I invite fellow technologists, business leaders, entrepreneurs and policymakers to join us, not just in rebuilding Joburg, but in reimagining what tech can do for society.

Because the work we do today in Johannesburg can shape the future of South Africa and set a new benchmark for what’s possible for generations to come.
Learn more about Altron’s data and AI solutions.
About Altron
Altron is a proudly South African technology group. We harness the power of data, technology and human ingenuity to solve real-world problems, from the everyday to the epic. A technology industry leader since 1965, we’re partnering with customers across all industries to help them grow, build a thriving economy and transform today into a simpler, safer and smarter tomorrow. Altron operates in seven countries, employs more than 4 700 people and reported revenue of R9.6-billion for the 12-month period ended 28 February 2025.
- The author, Dr Andy Mabaso, is group chief technology officer at Altron
- Read more articles by Altron on TechCentral
- This promoted content was paid for by the party concerned
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