“Africa doesn’t lack ideas. It lacks systems that nurture them into movements.” – Oscar Manduku-Habeenzu
Oscar Manduku-Habeenzu was born in Lusaka, Zambia. Yet his impact has transcended borders, timelines, and traditional business models. He is the quiet force behind Cabanga Media Group, and the founding visionary of Ganizo Magazine, a platform born not just to publish but to propel. Since its first issue in August 2019, Ganizo has stood as a digital monument to Zambian entrepreneurship, continental visibility, and legacy thinking.
This is more than a profile. It is a blueprint.
From Lusaka to Legacy
Born in, and later reconnected with Zambia, Oscar immersed him in a world of conversations that mattered – in markets, homes, and boardrooms. He came to understand that entrepreneurship in Africa is not about startups alone; it is about survival, reinvention, and generational ambition.
That understanding shaped his desire to build something larger than a business. He sought to build a system for visibility. And so, while he appeared to be working quietly in the background as a freelancer or strategist, Oscar was actually laying the foundation for a continental platform.
Ganizo was his nod to Zambia. Not just to where he was born, but to what he believes Zambia can teach the world: vision, endurance, and silent strength.
The Power Behind the Name
Ganizo – a word that signifies thinking, vision and foresight. Oscar chose the name deliberately, believing that Zambia needed a business media platform that did not merely report success but cultivated it.
Launched in August 2019, Ganizo Magazine became Cabanga Media Group’s second flagship brand. Its mission was precise: profile entrepreneurs who are building, not boasting.
Ganizo became a place where Zambian SMEs could finally be seen – not for celebrity, but for substance. It was designed to make Zambian entrepreneurs visible to one another, to investors, and to the wider region.
A Framework for Growth
Oscar’s contribution to Zambian and African entrepreneurship is not theoretical. It is technical. His proprietary systems – from the Visibility Matrix to Emotional Banking and the Wildebeest Theory – are real tools now used by hundreds of entrepreneurs through the Cabanga Digital Navigator course.
These frameworks answer a simple yet powerful question: How can African businesses grow without burning out?
For Oscar, growth is not just about capital. It is about clarity. It is about knowing who you are, where your audience lives, and how to lead them without chasing them. Ganizo reflects that thinking in every issue.
Media as Infrastructure
Oscar believes that publishing is not PR. It is economic infrastructure.
Every profile published in Ganizo is a digital asset – a trust anchor. It builds reputation capital. It gets indexed on search engines. It serves as a credibility boost for funding, partnerships, and customer trust. This is how Ganizo helps drive economic development in Zambia: by transforming local business stories into global visibility assets.
Mentorship Through Publishing
Behind every article is a coaching moment. Oscar uses media as a mentorship tool. Through Ganizo, he has given hundreds of Zambian entrepreneurs a stage to refine their story, rethink their value proposition, and position themselves for bigger opportunities.
For many, their first appearance in Ganizo became their first step toward business confidence.
A Call to Zambian Entrepreneurs
Oscar’s message to his fellow Zambians is simple:
“Do not underestimate the power of being seen. Visibility changes how people respond to you, partner with you, and invest in you.”
He invites entrepreneurs to publish, collaborate, and participate in the ecosystem of platforms like Ganizo. Because when one story is told well, it pulls others forward.
Closing Reflection
“Being born in Lusaka taught me that stories are power. Now I help others write theirs.” – Oscar Manduku-Habeenzu
Ganizo Magazine is more than a digital publication. It is a Zambian seed planted across Africa. And Oscar, its quiet Sower, continues to shape the narrative of what African entrepreneurship truly looks like.
Not loud. But lasting.
Ganizo. See further. Build deeper. Lead boldly.







