
Sometimes, all it takes is one viral post.
For Sulaiman Adewale, that moment came when he shared a demo of his AI startup, Xara, online. Within days, the product had not only captured attention, it had caught the eye of Elon Musk’s xAI.
The result: a job offer.
But the bigger story isn’t the offer. It’s what it says about where AI innovation is coming from and where it’s going.
Xara started as something deeply personal. Adewale, who describes himself as short-sighted, initially built the tool to “see” better using AI to interpret the world through a phone camera. Over time, that idea evolved into something far more ambitious: a conversational banking assistant that can actually execute financial transactions.
Today, Xara can scan an account number, initiate transfers, and even act as a kind of financial analyst answering questions like who you’ve sent money to most frequently or automating recurring payments.
And crucially, it does all of this inside WhatsApp.
That decision wasn’t accidental.
In a market like Nigeria, where WhatsApp is already deeply embedded in daily life, building on top of an existing platform removes friction. Users don’t need to download a new app or learn a new interface, they just start chatting.
It’s simple.
And increasingly, that simplicity is becoming the defining feature of the next wave of AI products.
Behind the scenes, though, the product is anything but simple.
Adewale says one of the biggest challenges was stabilizing large language models enough to handle financial transactions reliably. “They’re unstable and unpredictable,” he notes, describing the process of anticipating every possible failure point before it happens.
That’s a level of engineering depth many AI demos never reach and it’s likely part of what made Xara stand out.
Because while plenty of startups are building AI interfaces, far fewer are building systems that can actually do things in the real world, especially in regulated environments like finance.
The traction is real.
In under a year, Xara has grown to more than 45,000 users, operating through partnerships with fintech players for wallet infrastructure and payments.
But the ambition goes further.
Adewale isn’t just building a tool—he’s positioning Xara as a financial layer that sits on top of existing banking systems, with plans that could eventually push it toward becoming a fully licensed AI-powered neobank.
That’s a bold vision.
And it’s one that aligns with a broader shift happening globally.
Because what Xara represents is bigger than one startup.
It’s part of a new class of AI products that don’t just assist, they act.
Instead of opening a banking app, navigating menus, and entering details manually, users can simply tell an AI what they want done. The interface disappears. The conversation becomes the product.
That’s the future companies like xAI, OpenAI, and Google are all chasing.
Which makes the offer to Adewale feel less like a coincidence and more like a signal.
For years, the narrative around AI has been centred on Silicon Valley.
But stories like this suggest something else is happening.
Innovation is becoming more distributed. Founders in markets like Nigeria aren’t just adopting AI—they’re adapting it, reshaping it around local needs, and in some cases, pushing it in entirely new directions.
And sometimes, all it takes is one product going viral for the rest of the world to notice.
The real question now isn’t whether Xara can scale.
It’s whether more founders like Adewale will follow and whether the next wave of AI breakthroughs might come from places the industry hasn’t traditionally looked.
Source: Techpoint Africa
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