Funding the ‘Missing Middle’ in South Africa
South Africa has no shortage of entrepreneurial ambition. What it often lacks is a clear path between small-business support and large-scale commercial funding.
In this episode of Meet the Management, we speak to Nadia Rawjee of Uzenzele Holdings about the businesses caught in that gap, the so-called “missing middle.”
These are often promising, growth-stage companies with real commercial potential, but without the balance sheet strength, financial structure, or funding readiness required to unlock larger pools of capital.
This conversation looks at why the issue matters so much in South Africa, particularly for industrial and manufacturing businesses where growth requires more than ambition alone. Scaling in these sectors often demands significant upfront capital, stronger financial architecture, and a level of preparation that many businesses are not supported to reach early enough.

About the guest
Nadia Rawjee is a co-founder and executive leader at Uzenzele Holdings, a boutique advisory firm established in 2010 by Nadia and Zahra Rawjee. Uzenzele focuses on business development, capital raising, and helping companies access funding across a wide range of channels, including government incentives, developmental finance, commercial lending, alternative funding, and private capital. The firm says it works with an extensive network of South African funding sources and specialises in guiding businesses through complex capital-raising processes.
Public profiles for Nadia describe her as a funding and business advisory specialist with more than 15 years of industry leadership and deep experience in capital-raising strategy, business modelling, and developmental funding. One recent speaker profile notes that she co-founded Uzenzele in 2010 and has been involved in raising more than R2.8 billion in capital for mid-tier companies.
Why this conversation matters
The phrase “missing middle” has become increasingly important in South African funding discussions because it describes a structural weakness in the growth pipeline. Smaller businesses may be able to access early support, while large established companies can often raise capital more easily. In between sits a segment of businesses with strong potential, but without the financial maturity or institutional backing needed to move confidently into their next phase.
For industrial businesses especially, this challenge is even more pronounced. These are companies that need machinery, facilities, working capital, supply-chain certainty, and the ability to withstand the pressure of scaling before returns fully materialise. As noted in related commentary around this interview, funders are often looking for robust balance sheets, dependable offtake, and detailed cashflow visibility — all indicators of funding readiness, not just commercial promise.
In this episode
Without turning the conversation into a funding masterclass, this interview offers a clearer look at one of the most consequential bottlenecks in South African business growth.
It is a discussion about what sits between promise and scale, and why capital alone is rarely the full answer.
Watch the full episode to hear Nadia Rawjee unpack the realities, the blind spots, and the deeper strategic questions behind funding South Africa’s “missing middle.”

About Uzenzele Holdings
Uzenzele positions itself as a specialist partner to growing businesses and project owners looking to access funding in a more strategic and structured way. Its offering spans advisory support, capital-raising facilitation, business modelling, and access to grants, incentives, developmental finance, commercial loans, and private funders. That makes the company particularly relevant to businesses that have moved beyond startup stage but still need expert support to become funding-ready.
In the context of this episode, that perspective matters. The “missing middle” is not simply a story about businesses being denied capital. It is also a story about preparedness: how companies present risk, how lenders assess scale, and how many otherwise promising businesses fall short of what funders need to see. Uzenzele’s role in that ecosystem is to help close the gap between business ambition and funding reality.



