Jehpte Ioudom, a Cameroonian engineer and founder of Foubslabs, has transitioned from a formative internship at Ericsson Cameroon to leading a consulting practice that delivers data platforms and AI solutions across two continents. Since registering his firm in 2021, Ioudom has consulted for the World Bank and various private sector giants, focusing on cloud systems and analytics that modernise industrial operations. His career reflects a broader trend of African technologists bridging the gap between legacy processes and automated, data-driven environments.
Ioudom grew up in Douala, Cameroon, where his path into the technology sector began with access to a computer at home. While still a student, he secured an internship at Ericsson Cameroon that fundamentally changed his perspective on digital tools. Tasked with investigating internal challenges in corporate travel management, he found that employees were still manually reporting receipts and expenses, a slow and error-prone process. This problem provided the perfect testing ground for digital intervention.
To solve the bottleneck, Ioudom deployed Google Forms and Google Sheets to create a structured survey for engineers. This simple but effective use of technology allowed him to gather and analyse information at scale, demonstrating how digital tools could simplify complex corporate workflows. The experience convinced him that organised data could directly influence business decisions, steering his career toward the intersection of data engineering and cloud transformation.
Scaling expertise through AI startups and global consulting
Following his time at Ericsson, Ioudom expanded his technical range with an internship at Define AI. At this startup, he worked on crowdsourcing datasets, a critical component for companies building and training modern AI systems. This role provided him with a ground-level view of how raw information is transformed into the high-quality assets required for machine learning.
His professional trajectory reached a new level when he joined Accenture during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. This period saw a massive rush as companies throughout Europe scrambled to migrate their operations to the cloud. At Accenture, Ioudom worked on enterprise data projects and technology consulting, witnessing first-hand how various sectors were forced to adapt to a digital-first reality.
This exposure to diverse industries confirmed Ioudom’s desire to solve problems across different sectors rather than staying within a single corporate vertical. He participated in large-scale data transformations that highlighted the importance of foundational infrastructure. For many regions, this remains a challenge, as Africa digital payments must shift focus to infrastructure reliability to support the next wave of high-density data processing.
Foubslabs and the deployment of industrial AI
In 2021, Ioudom officially registered Foubslabs to provide specialised consulting in data platforms, analytics, and cloud systems. The practice serves a wide range of capital-intensive industries, including manufacturing, energy, pharmaceuticals, and financial services. By helping these organisations transition to modern data environments, Foubslabs enables more efficient process control and predictive capabilities.
One of the firm’s most significant engagements was a project with the World Bank in the Republic of Benin. Ioudom worked on a pilot initiative specifically designed for mathematics teachers, using AI-focused tools to assist in educational delivery. This project demonstrated that AI solutions are not restricted to heavy industry but can be applied to public institutions to solve specific social challenges. These applications often require creative approaches, much like how Jesutomiwa Salam uses scarcity as a blueprint for AI systems to drive efficiency in resource-constrained settings.
Beyond the public sector, Ioudom’s work helps industrial firms move away from siloed data. In the manufacturing and energy sectors, Foubslabs focuses on building platforms that allow for real-time analytics. This shift is essential for companies looking to optimise production lines or manage complex supply chains in a global market that increasingly demands rapid responses to data inputs.
Future directions for African cloud infrastructure
Ioudom’s work highlights a critical need for robust digital foundations to support advanced technology. While AI often dominates headlines, its success depends entirely on the quality of the underlying cloud and data architecture. This mirrors the physical requirements of industry; just as software needs servers, factories need consistent power, which is why the FG upgrades power infrastructure in Ebonyi and Enugu to enable broader economic activity.
Currently operating between Europe and Africa, Ioudom views his role as a bridge for organisations navigating complex migrations. He advocates for a 50/50 collaboration model between human expertise and AI assistance to improve productivity. By focusing on the structural components of data, Foubslabs is helping firms build the resilience needed to compete in a landscape where information is the primary industrial asset. His journey from Douala to the World Bank underscores the growing capacity of African engineers to lead global technical transformations.
