Ghana’s Akua Aboah Featured in Forbes Africa Magazine

Akua Aboabea Aboah, Managing Director of Sambus Geospatial Limited, has been featured in the October/November 2025 edition of Forbes Africa, highlighting her transformation of West African geospatial intelligence. The recognition follows her September 2025 feature in Her Network, marking growing international attention to her work mapping Africa’s development.

Lady Akua took over the leadership of Sambus in 2013 after the death of her father, Samuel Kenneth Aboah, who founded the company in May 1987. She initially joined as a young lawyer with degrees from Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology and the University of Birmingham, expecting only a temporary role. Instead, she recognized untapped potential and separated the geospatial division into an independent entity.

The Forbes Africa profile details how Sambus now operates across seven West African countries including Ghana, Nigeria, Gabon, Gambia, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Equatorial Guinea. Under her leadership, the company has grown from 20 employees to over 80 staff members, with fully staffed offices in Accra, Abuja and Lagos and plans to establish additional offices in other African countries in the coming years.

Sambus processes over 500 million geospatial data points annually  from multiple sectors including telecommunications, oil and gas, utilities, healthcare, agriculture, and government.

Lady Akua’s leadership style has earned her the internal nickname “the pressure woman” for combining relentless excellence with strict ethical standards. She told Her Network the company values including Commitment, Honesty, Respect, Integrity, and Trust serve as benchmarks for all decisions. Any opportunity failing to align with these principles was never truly lucrative, she maintained.

Sambus serves as sole distributor for Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) geospatial software, Trimble handheld devices, and L3Harris products across it’s operational countries. The company has donated geospatial software and tools to academic institutions throughout Ghana and Nigeria, prioritizing student capacity building.

She leverages a global network of over 70 geospatial Chief Executives to tackle uniquely African challenges ranging from mapping cocoa and oil palm farms for agribusiness clients in Ghana to detecting underwater gas leaks from pipelines in the Niger Delta.

Lady Aboah continues professional development through short courses at the University of Cambridge and Harvard University, covering leadership, communication, corporate governance, negotiation, resilience, and strategic thinking.

Sambus hosted the ESRI User Conference West Africa 2025 in Lagos with the theme “Geospatial Synergy: Mapping the Future Together.” The event facilitated networking, knowledge exchange, and collaboration across the geospatial domain. She stressed that proper African development requires first mapping all locations onto digital systems, enabling coordinated planning and decision making.

Geospatial technology has evolved from luxury to necessity, with every sector being reshaped by location data. She encourages African leaders and businesses not to watch from the sidelines as this transformation accelerates.

 

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