Pat Mahlangu: Youth, Brands & The Future of Africa

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Entrepreneur and founder Pat Mahlangu joins Dr Katlego Letlonkane on SiyaKhula Live during Youth Month for a conversation that reframes youth entrepreneurship as a form of economic activism.

Recorded 50 years after the Soweto Uprising, the discussion moves from the tactical - building sustainable youth-led brands across Africa - into the structural and political. Pat draws a direct line between the youth of 1976, whose fight was political, and the youth of today, whose fight is economic: gaining access to the economy as active participants, not peripheral subjects. She unpacks why young people today are not waiting for handouts but demanding a "hand up" - a fundamental shift in how we understand economic participation and agency.

The conversation centres on the Top 16 Youth-Owned Brands Awards (YOBAs), a platform Pat created to challenge the dominant narrative that young people are unemployed, apathetic, and entitled. Instead, the YOBAs shine a light on young entrepreneurs and creators doing remarkable things - turning ventures into household brands, contributing to continental economies, and redefining African culture. But Pat goes deeper: she traces the systemic barriers that strangle young businesses before they can grow. Financial institutions impose blanket payment terms (90 – 120 days) on youth-owned enterprises with no cash backing, suffocating them indirectly. Large corporates speak boldly about "the youth are the future" whilst refusing tangible investment. The entrepreneurship culture in South Africa - and across Africa - does not favour young people; it demands they succeed without failure, whilst established businesses routinely stumble and carry on unmolested.

Pat argues for a fundamental cultural shift: corporates must not only invest money, but believe in young people enough to let them fail, iterate, and learn. She uses the mathematics teacher analogy - you cannot read math, you must practice it, get it wrong, try again until you get it right. Business is the same. Yet when young entrepreneurs fail, the narrative becomes absolute: they are a failure for life. The conversation circles back to examples like Tyler, a young creator from the East of Johannesburg now dominating global platforms, and to the central insight Pat returns to throughout: opportunities dance with those on the dance floor. You cannot sit at home daydreaming about the book you will write or the business you will start. You must honour your talents now, externalise your ideas, attend events, meet people, engage - and defy the logic that says you need resources before you begin. The closing message, delivered with quiet conviction, is both a challenge and a manifesto: if you don't do anything, you won't get anything. The only alternative is to try, and to understand that young people are not the future - they are the now.

πŸŽ™οΈ Host: Dr Katlego Letlonkane
πŸ‘€ Guest: Pat Mahlangu, Founder – Top 16 Youth-Owned Brands Awards (YOBAs)
πŸ“… Originally aired: Wednesday 3 June 2026 at 12:30
πŸ“» SiyaKhula Live on MFM 92.6
#MFM926 #SiyakhulaLive #YouthMonth #YOBA #YouthEntrepreneurship #EconomicInclusion πŸΏοΈπŸ‡ΏπŸ‡¦
11 Jun English South Africa News · Society & Culture

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