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    New MVNO YOMO Aims to Connect One Million Young South Africans to Affordable Data

    South Africa’s newest telecommunications player, YOMO, has entered the market with a mission that goes beyond connectivity. As the country’s first youth-focused Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO), YOMO is positioning itself as both a disruptive force in the telecoms industry and a national movement to break down barriers that have kept millions of young South Africans disconnected from opportunity.

    The launch took place on 1 September 2025 at the Hector Pieterson Memorial and Museum in Soweto — an iconic venue that embodies resilience, struggle, and the enduring potential of South Africa’s youth. The event brought together youth leaders, the National Youth Development Agency (NYDA), civil society, investors, policymakers, and community voices in a show of collective momentum.

    South Africans continue to pay some of the highest data costs in Africa, and for young people the impact is devastating. For many, buying data often means cutting back on essentials like food, transport, or even electricity. With youth unemployment at record highs, this affordability crisis is a national story that goes beyond technology — it is about survival.

    YOMO seeks to change this reality. At its core, YOMO offers affordable data packages alongside the YOMOverse, a zero-rated digital platform providing access to training programmes, gig opportunities, financial literacy tools, wellness resources, and civic engagement initiatives. With this bold mission, YOMO aims to connect one million young South Africans to pathways that drive personal growth and economic empowerment.

    “Data is not a luxury; it is the lifeline to education, employment, and dignity,” said Jose Andre, CEO of TechNov8. “YOMO was built to remove that barrier. We’re not only giving young people airtime and data – we are giving them access to the tools and platforms that can change their lives. This is about more than connectivity. It is about rewriting the rules of inclusion.”

    From a policy perspective, Ndumiso Kubheka, CEO of NYDA, framed inclusion as both urgent and strategic:

    “By connecting young people to affordable mobile services, YOMO is not only bridging the digital divide, it is building digital bridges to education, employment, entrepreneurship, and civic participation. Our 2025–2030 strategic plan commits to three priorities: mainstreaming youth issues across all sectors of the economy, strengthening ecosystems that identify, train, and place young talent, and expanding access to entrepreneurship. Inclusion is not just a moral obligation; it is an economic strategy.”

    Industry analysts note that South Africa’s MVNO boom is driving innovation and cost reduction across the sector. Globally, MVNOs have shown they can cut customer costs by more than half compared to traditional operators. YOMO is set to take that promise further by linking affordability to tangible outcomes such as completed online courses, secured gig work, and expanded career networks.

    The “Be On” campaign, now rolling out nationally, is the rallying call for this vision. It encourages young South Africans not only to get connected but to stay connected to opportunity, community, and growth. Supported by community activations, media partnerships, and grassroots amplification, the campaign is designed to ensure momentum does not drop after launch.

    YOMO is built on strong foundations. As a subsidiary of TechNov8, under the BLU group, it benefits from robust infrastructure and stakeholder alignment while retaining its unique identity as a youth-driven initiative. The company’s ownership model reflects a deliberate commitment to inclusive growth, leveraging partnerships across public and private sectors to sustain long-term impact.

    The road ahead will focus on measurable outcomes: expanding YOMO’s subscriber base, deepening partnerships with skills and gig providers, and demonstrating how mobile access can be a direct lever for reducing unemployment and inequality.

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