
When I established my blog… this blog [byntha.com]… when I started using social media around the 2010s, one of the things I really wanted was to see more Black, African, Malawian women — people that looked like me — in the spaces that I wanted to get into.
I quickly realized that the representation just wasn’t there… or, at least, it wasn’t too visible.
It is one of the reasons why, through the years, as my work has gotten busier, as I have had less and less time, I have still made time, and I have still committed to being visible because I still remember what it means to the young Black girl in Malawi that needed to see someone occupying the spaces that she hoped she could occupy.
And through the years, this blog came to grow into Ntha Foundation, which later grew and pivoted into the Kwathu Kollective. And now we have pivoted further into deep tech with Q2 Systems. These are the entities, that you continue to award me for, and I am eternally grateful.

Delve into Business and International Development with Nthanda Manduwi
I had reached out to Justin Onwenu to ask how I could support his campaign, as he runs for State Senate. He was amenable, and invited me to join a canvass over the weekend. The team was meeting at Memorial Park in the City of Ecorse, part of Michigan State Senate District 1.
I had shared that I do not drive in Detroit, and when I spoke with his campaign manager, Cal, he was more than happy to pick me up and bring me to Ecorse. It was a small logistical detail, but a make or break one, for me. In conversation with him as he dropped me back home later that day, Cal joked that there is roughly a 50% flake rate in volunteer organizing, which made him even more committed to making sure as many people as possible were able to participate.
Campaigns are often narrated through the visible things: the candidate, the speeches, the endorsements, the policy platform, the fundraising numbers, the election results. But the day-to-day running of a campaign depends on the people doing the practical work on the ground: organizing volunteers, moving people, assigning turf, answering questions, solving problems, and making sure others are able to show up.
For me, that was my entry point into the day. That was how the day started.
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Through my journey with entrepreneurship, I’ve seen myself go from being a basic content creator, to working with some of the biggest hotel chains in Malawi, to establishing a nonprofit that has trained thousands of young people in Malawi and beyond, to establishing companies and systems that continue to serve millions of people across continents.
And now, having done my MBA and completed my MSc in Entrepreneurship, I see the world as much deeper, I understand that we need to create even more essential technologies for the people that need them the most.
For a long time, as I grew, my limitations mentally were still around what entrepreneurship as a woman was supposed to look like. I was just a social media content creator. I built non-profits [first]. In my mind, that was somehow, still, what a woman could do.
And now I find myself pushing into spaces of engineering: managing teams of incredible scientists, building systems, and stepping into rooms I never even imagined I would belong in.
I read an article that a friend had shared with me a few months ago by Rizine Mzikamanda, talking about imposter syndrome, and he, in his own wonderful words referred to me as some shape or form of 𝘧𝘦𝘢𝘳𝘭𝘦𝘴𝘴. I paused for a while… shocked really, when I read it, because he had placed my name in context with Michael Jordan, Lionel Messi, and Steve Jobs.
This award hits different because:
1. it finds me newly finding my footing in Detroit. Q2 Systems as a company is just 1.5 years old;
2. We are [still] pre-product [albeit piloting some good MVPs] and prerevenue. DeepTech is HARD!;
3. We are building Q2 in extremely male-dominated fields, and it is never lost on me when I am the only woman in the room [we are continuously fixing that through the Kwathu Kollective]; and
4. It is my first time building businesses in foreign lands and I am, contrary to what I may show, still VERY scared.
I think it is important for me to word that in this moment: that I am scared. Very scared.
Entrepreneurship is a journey of endless fear. It is ever my joy, to do the scary stuff, and it is an even greater joy, to have the slight chance at sharing some of those fears with you.
And I hope that the girls and boys that come after us, by seeing us, know that they can go further.
Thank you so much for voting for me as the Most Inspiring Business Female Leader at the 2026 Consumer Choice Awards.
I dedicate this award to my late mother: I am all that I am today because I was born of her: Africa’s first inland female marine captain.
I grew up in her light, and it was through seeing her visible to me and everyone around us that I understood that I could be and do anything. She inspired me enough, to be able to inspire an entire nation.
This award, to me, is for every little Black… Africa… Malawian girl… and boy… that has dreams, that wants to achieve everything, that wants to be more than the world that they see.
I hope that by sharing my little light, you draw just a little bit of inspiration to be light, too.
If you’d like to go deeper into my journey — from Malawi, through the United Nations to Microsoft, you can find it in my books.
P.S. for 2026, you can get any of my books via Kindle for only $2.99.
This offer is valid till the end of the year.
Links to purchase are as below: