Decide targets workplaces with enterprise AI rollout through CafeOne

Decide, the Nigerian AI startup that lets users analyse data in spreadsheets using prompts, has launched Decide for Work, an enterprise deployment arm to distribute its spreadsheet AI agent through universities, co-working spaces, and other professional communities.

As part of the launch, Decide has entered its first major deployment partnership with CafeOne, a co-working network with over 30 locations across Nigeria. Through the partnership, CafeOne members with an active subscription will receive premium access to Decide as part of their membership, providing AI tools for spreadsheet analysis and research.

The launch comes as African businesses and workplaces increase adoption of AI in their everyday work. By the end of 2025, 64% of African workers reported using AI at work over the previous year, ahead of the global average of 54%, according to a PwC survey. A separate KPMG report noted that 65% of West African CEOs expect AI to drive efficiency improvements in 2026. 

“AI agents are improving rapidly, but their adoption and integration into everyday work have not caught up,” Abiodun Adetona, founder of Decide AI, said in a public post. “We want Decide to be embedded wherever work happens online, inside spreadsheets, inboxes, and existing business tools, and physically, through the companies, co-working spaces, universities, and communities where people work and learn every day.” 

Decide for Work will use the same AI agent currently available to individual users, but package it for organisational deployments, Adetona noted. Instead of signing up individual employees, Decide will work directly with organisations to provide access, onboard users, and integrate the software into existing workflows. Adetona said pricing will vary based on deployment size, number of users, support requirements, and any custom integrations.

Launched in 2025 by Adetona, a former Flutterwave software engineer, Decide helps users analyse spreadsheets and business data using natural language prompts instead of formulas. 

The startup said it has completed more than 41,000 analysis runs and helped users create and analyse over 21,000 spreadsheets since its launch. It said it is used by professionals across more than 10 countries and has achieved 82.5% verified accuracy on SpreadsheetBench, a benchmark for AI spreadsheet agents, placing it alongside models from leading AI companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic.

CafeOne is the first major rollout under Decide for Work. The co-working company will make Decide available to eligible members across its subscription tiers, ranging from  ₦8,525 ($6.15) daily to  ₦109,950 ($79.36) monthly. Adetona said eligible CafeOne members will receive premium credits that unlock Decide’s products, with access lasting as long as those credits remain available based on individual usage.

“CafeOne has built a nationwide community of professionals, founders, freelancers, operators, analysts, and growing teams,” he said. “Many of them work with spreadsheets, reports, research, and business data every day. It was a natural fit because their members closely match the people Decide was built for.” 

He noted that CafeOne would send members instructions on how to activate their Decide access, and they could also request activation directly from staff at any CafeOne location. 

Adetona said the CafeOne rollout is only the first step for Decide for Work, with discussions already underway with additional co-working spaces, universities, professional communities, and companies interested in deploying AI tools across their teams.

“Our goal is to make Decide available wherever knowledge workers spend their day working with spreadsheets, reports, and business data,” he added. 

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