It is exactly one and a half months since the Global Entrepreneurship Summit (GES) was held in Nairobi; the first time in Sub Saharan Africa. And it is entirely too early for the loud silence around the US$1 billion-strong worth of initiatives that were launched through various commitments.
I do not only mean that from the standpoint of the institutions that made resource commitments, but also from Kenyans and the larger African continent.