KFC Add Hope Hackathon Winning Team: ./PHOTO Courtesy
Ahead of World Food Day, South Africa’s hunger crisis just met its next wave of disruption.
Sixty of the country’s smartest Gen Z innovators spent a week tackling one of the nation’s most pressing problems: child hunger. They emerged with breakthrough, tech-powered ideas that could change how food insecurity is tackled.
Artificial intelligence, blockchain, data visualisation, and community-driven platforms were among the technologies harnessed during The Biggest Hunger Hack, a challenge hosted by KFC Africa.
The event invited young digital natives to re-engineer the brand’s Add Hope open-source blueprint.
Add Hope, powered by millions of R2 donations from KFC customers, already fuels 3,300+ feeding centres across the country, reaching over 154,000 children last year.
But Gen Z just showed how the recipe can get a digital boost. Potential seed funding of up to R1 million could be allocated to the development of the winning solution.
Stand-out solutions
The overall winning team. Ctrl-Alt-Del-Hunger turned South Africa’s food waste crisis into a social impact opportunity.
Their Misfits Mzansi app rescues ‘ugly’ fruit and veg that would normally be trashed on farms and delivers it to food-insecure families.
The platform also hosts short-form cooking challenges, edutainment content, and ad-driven donations so users literally feed families by engaging with content.

“You become a philanthropist just by watching a video,” said the team.
Streetwise scripters built a social-media-first donation ecosystem.
Their concept includes a real-time donor dashboard, a donation hotspot map, and a KFC loyalty rewards integration where good deeds unlock free meals.
Plus, they proposed @ KFCAddHopeSA, a TikTok-to-Till campaign for digital storytelling that keeps donors looped in.
The Biggest Hunger Hack showed what happens when young digital natives use tech for good
Bit Coders’ chatbot ecosystem makes donations inclusive and transparent, even for non-KFC customers.
It features AI-driven donor insights, rewards, and tax certification downloads for big donations, using the MTN MoMo API for seamless payments.
Hack 4 Hope’s solution showcased a WhatsApp chatbot that allows customers to scan a QR code from their KFC till slip to instantly donate.
Built on blockchain, the system provides proof of every R2’s journey, from donor to meal served, creating full transparency and reinforcing trust.
The platform’s “HopeCoins’ reward repeat donors and gamify giving.
The ultimate ingredient: collaboration
“The Biggest Hunger Hack showed what happens when young digital natives use tech for good,” said Andra Nel, KFC Africa’s Head of Brand Purpose and ESG.
“They understand hunger because many have lived it, and they understand technology because they were born into it. That’s the sweet spot for innovation with purpose.”
Stakeholders from business, government, and civil society joined the event in Johannesburg to see the hackers pitch live and explore ways to scale their ideas nationally.

Nel says the next step is to co-develop pilot programmes with Add Hope partners, aiming to showcase results by the time the National Convention on Child Hunger convenes early next year.
“Collaboration is our key ingredient, from customers dropping R2 at the till, to partners like McCormick, Tiger Brands, Foodserv, CBH, Nature’s Garden, Digistics, and Coca-Cola Beverages South Africa, all rallying behind the Add Hope recipe,” she said.
“Opening up Add Hope as an open-source blueprint has unleashed an outpouring of ubuntu that’s turning this fight into a movement, one that South Africa, and the world, can learn from.”
“These Gen Z hackers showed how tech can supercharge reach and transparency. Now the goal is to turn their best concepts into live pilots with our 128 feeding partners.” Nel said.
About KFC Add Hope
Launched in 2009, KFC’s Add Hope initiative is one of South Africa’s most recognized social purpose programmes, dedicated to tackling childhood hunger and supporting youth development.
The campaign invites customers to add R2 to their meal purchases, with every contribution going directly towards providing nutritious meals to children across the country.
Over the past 16 years, KFC and its customers have collectively raised more than R1.2 billion, including over R400 million contributed by the company itself.
These funds have supported millions of children through over 30 million meals served annually at thousands of feeding centres and partner non-profit organisations nationwide.
Beyond addressing food insecurity, Add Hope also invests in children’s long-term growth and potential through initiatives such as Mini Cricket, Ikusasa Lethu high school scholarships, and the Streetwise Academy, which provides skills and career development opportunities.
