
Across Ghana, a growing number of young entrepreneurs are reimagining the future of agriculture and food through innovation, creativity, and enterprise. What was once seen primarily as a traditional sector is increasingly becoming a space where young people are building modern businesses, creating jobs, and developing solutions that respond to changing consumer needs.
One such business is Maku Foods — a youth-led culinary brand that is transforming local food products into innovative, market-ready culinary solutions while building opportunities within Ghana’s food ecosystem. Maku Foods emerged through the Kosmos Innovation Center AgriTech Challenge Pro, a program designed to support young entrepreneurs with the tools, mentorship, business development support, and ecosystem connections needed to scale innovative agribusiness ventures. Driven by a passion for food innovation and value addition, Maku Foods is creating culinary products that celebrate local ingredients while responding to the growing demand for convenient, high-quality, and locally made food solutions. Through creativity and entrepreneurship, the business is contributing to the expansion of Ghana’s food processing and culinary sector while promoting local value chains.
But the story of Maku Foods goes beyond products — it is a story about the transformation of young people into entrepreneurs and job creators. Like many young graduates and aspiring entrepreneurs, the founders started with ambition, creativity, and a desire to build something meaningful. Through the support and entrepreneurial ecosystem provided by Kosmos Innovation Center, they were able to refine their business idea, strengthen their entrepreneurial mindset, and grow their innovation into a business with the potential for long-term impact.
Today, Maku Foods represents the growing shift in how young people are engaging with agriculture and food systems — moving beyond raw production into food processing, branding, innovation, and manufacturing. Their journey demonstrates how entrepreneurship can unlock opportunities for economic empowerment while contributing to local industry development.
At the individual level, the business reflects the power of entrepreneurship in creating pathways for young people to move from uncertainty into opportunity. Through innovation and enterprise development, the founders are building careers, livelihoods, and leadership while inspiring other young people to see agriculture and food innovation as viable spaces for growth and impact.
At the community level, Maku Foods contributes to local economic activity by supporting food value chains, encouraging the use of local ingredients, and helping create opportunities within Ghana’s growing food processing ecosystem. Businesses like Maku Foods also contribute to changing perceptions about locally produced food products by promoting quality, innovation, and consumer trust.
At the systems level, the business highlights the importance of investing in youth entrepreneurship and food innovation as part of Ghana’s broader economic transformation agenda. As more young entrepreneurs enter the agribusiness and food processing space, they are helping build resilient local industries, supporting value addition, and strengthening food systems through innovation-driven enterprise.
As Kosmos Innovation Center marks 10 years of impact, stories like Maku Foods reflect the organization’s broader mission of empowering young people to create businesses that generate jobs, transform communities, and contribute solutions that strengthen Ghana’s agricultural and food sectors.
Through programs like the AgriTech Challenge Pro, KIC continues to nurture the next generation of entrepreneurs — equipping them not only with technical and business skills, but with the confidence and mindset needed to turn ideas into enterprises and enterprises into lasting impact.
