Knowlix AI launched an AI-powered business platform for small companies across 29 African countries and other global markets.
The Munich-based startup said the platform helps businesses manage customer relationships, invoicing, inventory, projects and other back-office tasks. It is launching with support for African markets including Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Zambia and Egypt.
Knowlix AI said the platform includes local tax settings, currencies, accounting standards and legal requirements for supported countries. The company does not yet have customers in Africa, but said businesses in those markets can use the product from launch. Paid plans start at $24.90 a month after a free trial.
Founded in 2021 by Peter Meie and Francesco Wiedemann, Knowlix AI is built on an open-source software foundation. The company said that structure helps it adapt the product to different countries and business rules.
Follow us on WhatsApp | LinkedIn for the latest headlines
The platform includes an AI Teammate that can draft quotes and invoices, convert meeting notes into tasks, prepare inventory reorders and automate routine processes. Business owners keep approval rights over key actions before they are completed. Knowlix AI will compete with business software providers such as Odoo, Zoho, HubSpot and Microsoft, as well as African SME software startups including Moniebook, Orda Africa and Trembi.
Key Takeaways
Knowlix AI's launch shows how AI is being built into everyday business software rather than sold only as a separate tool. Small businesses often struggle with admin work, from invoices and stock control to customer follow-ups and project tracking. Large companies can afford consultants, enterprise software and custom setup, but many small firms cannot. Knowlix AI is betting that automation can close part of that gap by helping small businesses run more structured operations at lower cost. Its Africa launch is notable because the company is starting with localisation for 29 countries instead of treating African markets as a later expansion. That matters because tax rules, currencies and accounting needs differ across markets. The opportunity is large, but adoption will depend on trust, pricing, ease of use and whether the AI assistant can work reliably with local business habits. Competition will also be strong from global software firms and African startups already serving SMEs. If Knowlix AI can make setup simple and reduce admin time, it could find demand among small businesses that want better systems without hiring large back-office teams.