Izyo Group, Top Link Digital launch Rwanda-built apps for sports management, event planning, e-signatures
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Launched on May 8, the suite debuts with three products: Zamo Sport, Duhuze RSVP, and Dusinye eSign.

In a notable step for Rwanda’s growing software industry, Izyo Group and Toplink Digital Ltd have launched Izyo Digital suite, a self-service digital suite designed to solve everyday coordination headaches faced by companies, schools, communities, event organisers, and individuals across the country.

Launched on May 8, the suite debuts with three products: Zamo Sport, Duhuze RSVP, and Dusinye eSign. With more already in development. These targets three persistent friction points in Rwanda: organising sports competitions, managing event attendance and payments, and signing documents without physical paperwork.

Together, they represent a shift from imported tools that often lack local support, toward Rwandan-built software tailored for Rwandan realities.

Zamo Sport: bringing structure to community and corporate sports leagues and teams

Kelly Elvin Nzima, the Marketing Director at Toplink, during a presentation.

Zamo Sport gives organisers a central system to run football, basketball, volleyball and other competition with the discipline of a professional league. Fixtures, results, standings, top performers, can be tracked in one place

In Zamo sport teams are also given a dashboard to run internal affairs. Player attendance, training schedules, performance in different leagues they are part of, and even team contributions for equipment or monthly memberships can be tracked in one place.

The platform is built for the reality of Rwandans: people with full-time jobs who still run company leagues, school tournaments, or community competitions and need a simple way to coordinate everything without spreadsheets, WhatsApp groups, and paper lists.

Duhuze RSVP: invitations, confirmations, contributions, tickets

Yvan Niyonshuti, the lead developer, during a presentation.

Duhuze RSVP modernises how events are planned, whether private events like staff parties, compony gatherings, reunions, birthdays, graduations, meetings where organisers can create events and set details such as the venue, time, and guest list, then send invitations to attendees who then confirm whether they will attend or not.

If participants are required to contribute money, the platform also allows organisers to collect payments in advance, helping them accurately plan based on the number of confirmed and paid attendees.

On Duhuze RSVP users can also organise public events like game nights, concerts, conferences and other large gatherings. For public events, it supports digital ticket sales and reservation tracking, removing guesswork and enabling accurate planning.

Dusinye eSign: paperless digital signing in seconds

Dusinye eSign allows users to sign documents electronically without the need for printing physical copies.

Dusinye eSign allows users to sign documents electronically without the need for printing physical copies.

Users can upload documents, add the people required to sign them, and the platform then sends the files directly to their email addresses. Recipients can immediately sign the documents electronically using a mouse or by uploading their own signature.

The platform also supports multi-person signing, allowing users to arrange signatories in a specific order. This means a document can only proceed to the next signatory after the preceding person has completed their signature, making it suitable for documents requiring a hierarchical approval process.

The CEO of Toplink Digital Ltd, Isengwe Aime Emmanuel, explained that these solutions address common challenges in Rwanda, particularly the time-consuming process of physically signing documents.

He noted that with Dusinye eSign, a document can now be signed in as little as 30 seconds, eliminating the need to travel or physically exchange papers.

Built in Rwanda, supported in Rwanda

Fulgence Bucyibaruta, the Director of Operations at Izyo Group emphasised a core difference: local accountability.

He noted that while similar tools exist internationally, users often struggle with support, payments, or reliability when issues arise.

These platforms are designed, built, and supported in Rwanda, with plans underway to make them available in Kinyarwanda to increase accessibility.

Fulgence Bucyibaruta, the director of operations at Izyo Digital.

A signal of where Rwandan software is heading

This launch marks the beginning of a broader vision: a growing suite of self-service digital tools made in Rwanda to simplify everyday life for organisations and individuals without depending on platforms that weren’t built for the local context.

It reflects a broader trend: Rwandan companies building practical, dependable digital infrastructure for everyday coordination

For many, this signals a shift: Rwanda is no longer just consuming digital tools. It’s building its own.

TopLink team of software developers.
Izyo Group team.