Raindolf Owusu is a software developer and entrepreneur who founded Bisa (“ask” in Twi), a mobile health platform connecting patients with medical practitioners remotely. It serves vulnerable populations including those with critical illnesses, pregnant women, and the elderly. Bisa launched in Senegal in 2019 with the Ministry of Health, supported COVID-19 response efforts with Ghana Health Service and GIZ, and was recognized as a UN Digital Public Good in 2021.
As Managing Director of Wow Logbook, he leads a facial recognition and QR code-based attendance system that has powered major conferences across Ghana, the UK, and Canada.
He also founded the Black Orbit Foundation, a nonprofit inspiring Ghanaian youth aged 7–15 to explore AI, space exploration, and entrepreneurship, helping equip the next generation of African innovators to lead on the global stage.
Passionate about technology-driven solutions, Raindolf views AI, space exploration, and rocket technology as transformative forces for solving global challenges, with a consistent focus on building innovations that serve underserved communities.
Raindolf has been recognized as a Mandela Washington Fellow, featured in Forbes Africa’s “30 Under 30” (2015), named among New African Magazine’s 100 Most Influential Africans (2015), and awarded the ITU Young Innovator Award (2016). He has consulted for GIZ, the World Food Programme’s Innovation Accelerator, IBM, WHO AFRO and ThoughtWorks.
Raindolf Owusu is a software developer and entrepreneur who founded Bisa (“ask” in Twi), a mobile health platform connecting patients with medical practitioners remotely. It serves vulnerable populations including those with critical illnesses, pregnant women, and the elderly. Bisa launched in Senegal in 2019 with the Ministry of Health, supported COVID-19 response efforts with Ghana Health Service and GIZ, and was recognized as a UN Digital Public Good in 2021.
As Managing Director of Wow Logbook, he leads a facial recognition and QR code-based attendance system that has powered major conferences across Ghana, the UK, and Canada.
He also founded the Black Orbit Foundation, a nonprofit inspiring Ghanaian youth aged 7–15 to explore AI, space exploration, and entrepreneurship, helping equip the next generation of African innovators to lead on the global stage.
Passionate about technology-driven solutions, Raindolf views AI, space exploration, and rocket technology as transformative forces for solving global challenges, with a consistent focus on building innovations that serve underserved communities.
Raindolf has been recognized as a Mandela Washington Fellow, featured in Forbes Africa’s “30 Under 30” (2015), named among New African Magazine’s 100 Most Influential Africans (2015), and awarded the ITU Young Innovator Award (2016). He has consulted for GIZ, the World Food Programme’s Innovation Accelerator, IBM, WHO AFRO and ThoughtWorks.