Harare Institute of Technology

Harare Institute of Technology Harare Institute of Technology (HIT)

Innovation and Technopreneurial University

Harare Institute of Technology is the hub of technology development and delivery of quality technology programmes at undergraduate and postgraduate level. HIT is Zimbabwe’s most energetic and responsive institute offering unparalleled educational opportunities for those seeking highest quality undergraduate, postgraduate and continuous professional development. It is at the forefront of growing Zimbabwe’s industrial base and natural resources beneficiation.

HIT's IME Industrial Relations Team Equips Final Year Students for Professional Life Final-year Industrial Manufacturing...
12/05/2026

HIT's IME Industrial Relations Team Equips Final Year Students for Professional Life

Final-year Industrial Manufacturing and Engineering students heard from industry giants and HIT alumni on why the journey from student to leader starts with humility, purpose, and a technopreneurial mindset.

There is a moment, somewhere between the last examination and the first handshake of a professional career, when a student must redefine what time means to them. At the Harare Institute of Technology (HIT), that moment was deliberately engineered during a powerful Careers Guidance Day organised by the Industrial Manufacturing and Engineering (IME) Department's Industrial Relations Team, an event that reminded final-year students that they are not simply graduating into jobs. They are graduating into a mandate.

Time Redefined: From Knowledge to Value

The premise of the day was deceptively simple yet profoundly transformative. In the academic world, time is knowledge; every hour invested in a lecture hall, a laboratory, workshop or a late-night study session compounds into understanding. But in the professional world, time is money. Every delayed decision, every wasted process, every uninspired output carries a cost.

The IME department’s Industrial Relations Team designed this Careers Guidance Day precisely to bridge that mental shift, to prepare graduates not just with technical knowledge, but with the professional consciousness that transforms engineers into leaders. It is the kind of institutional investment that reflects the Education 5.0 philosophy: that a university's obligation does not end at graduation.

Engineering Excellence Meets Real-World Wisdom

Two distinguished engineers graced the occasion. The first, Eng. S. Jabangwe is no ordinary guest speaker. He is the Managing Director of James North, one of Zimbabwe's foremost PPE manufacturing companies, the current COTTCO Chairperson, Chair of the Zimbabwe-Japan Friendship Association, and former Chairperson of the Zimbabwe Confederation of Industries. His presence alone signalled to students what is possible when technical education is matched with vision, leadership, and civic commitment.

The second guest, Eng. Sithole, Managing Director of TORA Construction, brought something even more intimate to the conversation; he is an HIT IME alumnus. His presence was not merely motivational; it was testimonial. Here stood proof that the HIT journey, when pursued with determination and the right values, leads to extraordinary professional outcomes.

Both engineers conveyed a message that is central to HIT's philosophy: begin with the basics. Start by understanding the plant floor before you design the blueprint. Understand the foundation before you manage the project. It is this holistic, ground-up approach that builds not just competent engineers, but complete professionals capable of driving productive innovation across entire organisations.

Eng. Sithole demonstrated his point by his own professional background, which started as a low-level worker from university, to Managing Director of his own construction company.

The Technopreneurship Mandate: HIT’s Living Legacy

Perhaps the most resonant theme of the day was Eng Sithole’s call for graduates to carry the HIT mantle of Technopreneurship. This is not merely a buzzword at HIT; it is the institution’s foundational identity. HIT exists to produce graduates who do not simply wait for jobs, but who create value, build enterprises, and solve Zimbabwe’s most pressing industrial and economic challenges.

Eng Sithole’s career arc, from a fresh HIT graduate taking on entry-level responsibilities to the founding and steering of a thriving construction company, is the technopreneurial arc made flesh. His story is HIT’s story. And it is the story that every graduating student now carries the responsibility to continue.

This is what sets HIT apart. Aligned with Zimbabwe’s Vision 2030 and the transformative philosophy of Education 5.0, HIT prepares graduates not merely to serve the economy, but to build it.

Through centres like the Technopreneurship Development Centre, EMRECC, Technology Centre, Centre for Artificial Intelligence, and the Technology Transfer, Licensing and Commercialisation Centre, HIT’s mandate is to develop, incubate, transfer and commercialise technology for Zimbabwe’s rapid industrialisation.

Graduates as Ambassadors: The Obligation beyond the Degree

The Careers Guidance Day was described as a large eye-opener by those who attended. But it was more than that. It was a commissioning. Every student who walked out of that hall left not just better informed about the professional world, but also with a clearer sense of who they represent.

HIT graduates do not merely carry a degree. They carry a reputation, one built over decades by the university, its staff, and the generations of alumni who came before them. Every project delivered, every innovation implemented, every enterprise launched by an HIT graduate adds another layer to that reputation. Every act of professional excellence in the workplace is an act of institutional advocacy.

Eng Sithole’s presence at this event is itself an illustration of what alumni ambassadorship looks like. Having achieved success, he returned. He gave his time, his story, and his encouragement to the next generation of HIT engineers. That is the culture HIT aspires to nurture, a community of graduates who remain connected to the institution that shaped them, and who actively invest in shaping those who follow.

To the Class of 2026 and every cohort that follows: you are HIT. The buildings, the faculty, the centres of excellence, these are the institution’s infrastructure. But you are its voice, its reach, and its proof. Wherever your engineering career takes you, whether into a corporate plant, a construction site, a government ministry, or your own enterprise, carry the HIT standard. Innovate. Build. Lead. And one day, come back and light the way for someone else.

Non-Destructive Testing CoursesMagnetic Particle Inspection Level 2:15-29 June 2026($650)Liquid Penetrant Inspection Lev...
12/05/2026

Non-Destructive Testing Courses

Magnetic Particle Inspection Level 2:15-29 June 2026($650)

Liquid Penetrant Inspection Level 2: 22-26 June 2026 ($650)

Ultrasonic Testing Methods (Level 2): 29 June - 3 July 2026 ($650)

Contact 0718 792 518 or 0714 263 268

From Paywalls to Pathways: HIT Research Fellow Champions Open Access at ZAMREN Week 2026When Joshua Simuka stepped onto ...
11/05/2026

From Paywalls to Pathways: HIT Research Fellow Champions Open Access at ZAMREN Week 2026

When Joshua Simuka stepped onto the podium at ZAMREN Week 2026 in Zambia, he carried with him more than a research paper. He carried a challenge, one directed at universities across Africa to fundamentally rethink the role of Open Access in driving economic transformation.

Simuka, a Research Fellow in the Postgraduate Unit of Strategy and Innovation at Harare Institute of Technology (HIT), presented a strategic paper titled 'Open Access as a Driver of Knowledge Commercialisation and Societal Impact' at the high-level regional conference held from 4 to 8 May 2026, under the theme 'Growing Together.'

A Conference at the Cutting Edge

ZAMREN Week 2026 brought together Vice Chancellors, policymakers, researchers, librarians, innovation leaders, National Research and Education Networks (NRENs), ICT specialists, and industry stakeholders from across the African continent. The agenda was ambitious — deliberating on the future of higher education, open science, cybersecurity, digital transformation, research visibility, and commercialisation.

It was precisely the kind of platform where bold ideas are tested, and Simuka's paper did not disappoint.

Repositioning Open Access

At the heart of the presentation was a compelling repositioning of Open Access — moving it far beyond its traditional framing as a publishing tool. Rather than viewing Open Access merely as a mechanism for making academic papers freely available, the paper argued for its recognition as a strategic driver of innovation diffusion, industrial engagement, entrepreneurship, commercialisation, and societal transformation.

The paper demonstrated that when research outputs remain locked behind paywalls, the consequences are far-reaching: reduced opportunities for the uptake of innovation, limited industrial application, constrained startup development, and diminished societal utilisation of university-generated knowledge.

Perhaps most provocatively, the paper challenged the widely-held belief that Open Access weakens intellectual property protection and undermines commercialisation. Instead, Simuka argued that Open Access and commercialisation are not in tension; they can and should work together, provided institutions build robust systems for IP management, technology transfer, embargo management, and commercialisation readiness.

The Case for Institutional Transformation

The paper drew considerable interest from regional universities and innovation stakeholders, resonating particularly with those grappling with questions of research relevance and impact. Its findings pointed clearly to the need for institutional transformation, away from traditional knowledge generators and toward active, impact-driven innovation ecosystems.

"The future of universities lies not only in generating knowledge, but in transforming that knowledge into industrial solutions, start-ups, policy influence, technopreneurial opportunities, and measurable societal impact. Research that remains inaccessible cannot fully transform economies or societies. Open Access, when strategically aligned with intellectual property protection and commercialisation systems, becomes a powerful driver of innovation diffusion, industrialisation, collaborative development, and national transformation. Universities must therefore position themselves as active innovation ecosystems capable of converting research into technologies, enterprises, and impactful solutions that improve lives and accelerate development," said Joshua Simuka,

Aligned with HIT's Mandate

The participation is a natural extension of HIT's core institutional mandate — developing, incubating, transferring, and commercialising technology for the rapid industrialisation of Zimbabwe and beyond. Simuka's paper made explicit the links between open knowledge systems and the kind of technology-driven economic development that HIT champions through its technopreneurial and innovation programmes.

Beyond the formal presentation, ZAMREN Week 2026 offered important opportunities for strategic networking, collaborative research partnerships, and institutional benchmarking against emerging global best practices in Open Science, commercialisation, and innovation management — all areas where HIT continues to develop its institutional capabilities.

Building Regional Visibility

HIT's participation at ZAMREN Week 2026 adds to a growing portfolio of high-level regional and international engagements that are cementing the institution's reputation as a leading innovation-driven and technopreneurial university in the region. As universities across the world increasingly prioritise research visibility, societal impact, entrepreneurship, and commercialisation, HIT is steadily building an integrated innovation ecosystem positioned to contribute meaningfully toward industrialisation, technological advancement, and sustainable national development.

The message from Zambia is clear: the walls that once separated knowledge from application, research from industry, and academia from society are coming down, and HIT is helping to tear them down.

CAB3 Public Lecture Series is coming to HIT!The Ministry of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services brings the ...
09/05/2026

CAB3 Public Lecture Series is coming to HIT!

The Ministry of Information, Publicity and Broadcasting Services brings the Public Lecture Series to the Harare Institute of Technology's Innovation Hub on 11 May 2026 at 10:30am.

Featured Speaker: Godwine Mureriwa - Political Scientist
📅 Date: 11 May 2026
🕥 Time: 10:30am
📍 Venue: HIT Innovation Hub

08/05/2026
Ready to turn data into decisions? HIT's Centre for Artificial Intelligence (CAI) is launching the Professional Certific...
08/05/2026

Ready to turn data into decisions? HIT's Centre for Artificial Intelligence (CAI) is launching the Professional Certificate in Applied Data Science and Machine Learning, and it's a game-changer!

Starting 1 June 2026 | 12 Weeks | 100% Online | $800

Here's what you'll walk away with:
🔹 Data Science Foundations using Python
🔹 Hands-on Machine Learning model building
🔹 Data Visualisation & Storytelling
🔹 Decision Intelligence for business & policy
🔹 A Capstone Project, a real-world solution, built by YOU

Whether you're a professional ready to upskill, a developer looking to pivot into AI, or a decision-maker who wants data working for your organisation, this course is built for you.

📧 [email protected]
📞 +263 775 018 409 | +263 774 341 854
🌐 www.hit.ac.zw
👉 Scan the QR code on the flier to register. Seats are limited, don't miss out!

Classroom Meets the Boardroom: HIT and IIA Zimbabwe Unite for a Landmark Public LectureThere's a quiet revolution happen...
08/05/2026

Classroom Meets the Boardroom: HIT and IIA Zimbabwe Unite for a Landmark Public Lecture

There's a quiet revolution happening in audit and governance, and on 7 May 2026, the Harare Institute of Technology (HIT) put itself right at the centre of it.

The Department of Forensic Accounting & Auditing, nestled within HIT's School of Business and Management Sciences, brought the professional world directly into the lecture room by co-hosting a Joint Public Lecture with the Institute of Internal Auditors Zimbabwe (IIA Zimbabwe). The venue was the HIT Innovation Hub, and the energy in the room matched the name.

May is no ordinary month for the auditing profession. Observed globally as International Internal Audit Awareness Month, it's a time to shine a light on the critical and often underappreciated role that internal auditors play in keeping organisations accountable, ethical, and future-ready. HIT chose to mark the occasion not with ceremony, but with substance.

The Dean of the School of Business and Management Sciences, Mr Tafadzwa Zimucha, opened proceedings with welcome remarks that set the tone beautifully. He spoke to HIT's broader mandate and, crucially, made a compelling case for why academia and professional bodies must do more than coexist; they must co-create. His challenge to both institutions was direct: How do we move beyond good intentions and build partnerships that actually generate ideas, opportunities, and impact? It was a question that lingered productively throughout the day.

Mr Masiiwa from IIA Zimbabwe then took the floor, delivering a presentation on the Global Internal Audit Standards, a topic that's reshaping how the profession operates worldwide. Beyond standards, he mapped out the career pathways, professional support structures, and membership benefits available to aspiring auditors. For students in the room, it was a window into a world they'd been studying from the outside, now suddenly within reach.

What made the afternoon genuinely memorable was the energy from the students themselves. The Q&A wasn't polite and perfunctory; it was lively, curious, and substantive. A quiz on the presentation's key concepts added a healthy competitive spirit, with standout participants walking away with well-earned rewards.

Student representative Tanaka Mushangwe delivered closing remarks that reflected the room's mood: grateful, inspired, and hungry for more. Staff from the Department of Forensic Accounting & Auditing presented gifts to the IIA Zimbabwe guests, a warm gesture that underscored the spirit of genuine partnership rather than a one-off transaction.

By 12:30, as networking and refreshments wrapped up the session, something important had happened. Students left not just with notes on audit standards, but with connections, context, and a clearer sense of the profession they are stepping into. And two institutions left with a stronger foundation for the collaboration ahead.

This is what it looks like when HIT lives its values, technology, innovation, leadership and technopreneurship, not as slogans, but as practice.

Indian Ambassador Visits HIT to Advance the IndoZim Tool and Die Workshop Upgrade The Harare Institute of Technology (HI...
07/05/2026

Indian Ambassador Visits HIT to Advance the IndoZim Tool and Die Workshop Upgrade

The Harare Institute of Technology (HIT) on 7 May 2026 welcomed H.E. Bramha Kumar, Indian Ambassador to Zimbabwe, and a delegation from the Ministry of Higher and Tertiary Education, Innovation, Science and Technology Development (MHEISTD), for a substantive engagement on the future of Zimbabwe's IndoZim Project.

The visit centred on HIT's Tool and Die Workshop, one of 25 IndoZim Centres across Zimbabwe established through a bilateral development partnership between India and Zimbabwe. These centres give small and medium enterprises (SMEs) access to state-of-the-art machinery and equipment, enabling them to manufacture quality products, grow their businesses, and create employment.

A warm welcome from HIT leadership

HIT's Pro Vice Chancellor for Research, Innovation and Commercialisation, Prof Jeff Gwamuri, received the delegation warmly, expressing the university's appreciation for India's enduring support of Zimbabwe's industrial development.

"HIT is honoured to have the Indian Ambassador on campus. The university greatly appreciates the assistance from India, which has made a tangible difference to our capacity to support industry and enterprise in Zimbabwe, "Prof Gwamuri said.

The PVC also put forward a bold new proposal for the IndoZim programme, which is to extend it to support Zimbabwe's artisanal miners with equipment to help them add value to the country's mineral resources. This vision would reposition IndoZim as not only a manufacturing support initiative but a driver of mineral beneficiation at the grassroots level, aligning with national resource-value-addition goals.

"A shining example of cooperation"

During a tour of the Tool and Die Workshop, Ambassador Kumar witnessed firsthand the impact of the India–Zimbabwe partnership. His assessment was enthusiastic and unambiguous.

"This workshop is a shining example of the cooperation between India and Zimbabwe. I am happy and proud that these machines and equipment are helping Zimbabwean SMEs to produce products for their clients, boosting their businesses, and creating employment," H.E. Bramha Kumar said.

Ambassador Kumar also engaged directly with some SME representatives who use the workshop, hearing their experiences firsthand. Business owners expressed genuine gratitude for the support and assistance the Tool and Die Workshop provides, crediting it with helping them fulfil client orders and stay competitive in the market.

Maintaining, upgrading, and expanding

Mr David Nyakonda, Director for Business Development, Innovations Hubs and Incubation Centres at MHEISTD, outlined a clear strategic agenda for the programme's next phase.

"There is a need to maintain and upgrade the tool and die machines, bring in new machines and equipment, as well as expanding and moving into other trades such as metal fabrication, carpentry, tie and dye, and polymer engineering," Mr David Nyakonda, MHEISTD

These are not peripheral trades. Metal fabrication anchors construction and infrastructure. Carpentry feeds the housing and furniture sectors. Tie and dye links to Zimbabwe's growing creative and textile economy. Polymer engineering supports packaging and components manufacturing. Expanding into these areas would sharply widen the programme's reach and economic contribution across all 25 IndoZim Centres.

HIT is at the heart of Zimbabwe's industrialisation

That this engagement took place at HIT reflects the institution's standing as a hub for technological excellence, international partnerships, and enterprise development. HIT's Tool and Die Workshop has long demonstrated what the IndoZim model can achieve when infrastructure, skills, and industry access are brought together purposefully.

As the conversation between HIT, MHEISTD, and the Indian High Commission continues, the commitment from all parties is evident: the IndoZim Project will be sustained, strengthened, and expanded, so that more Zimbabweans, more SMEs, and more sectors of the economy can benefit from this enduring partnership between Zimbabwe and India.




📢 Attention Auditors, Finance Professionals, Governance Champions and Students!The Forensic Accounting & Auditing Depart...
05/05/2026

📢 Attention Auditors, Finance Professionals, Governance Champions and Students!

The Forensic Accounting & Auditing Department at Harare Institute of Technology (HIT), in partnership with The Institute of Internal Auditors Zimbabwe, invites you to a Professional Development Seminar.

🎯 What you’ll gain:

Insider knowledge on internal auditing best practices

Career-boosting skills

Connections with industry experts

Tools to drive organisational excellence

📅 Date: 07 May 2026
⏰ Time: 10:00 – 13:00 HRS
📍 Venue: HIT Innovation Hub

External stakeholders: Please RSVP via email to [email protected]

Spaces may be limited – secure your spot early. Share this with your network! 👥

HIT Makes Its Mark on the African Library Stage!We are proud to announce that Mr Macdonald Nhakura, the  Harare Institut...
05/05/2026

HIT Makes Its Mark on the African Library Stage!

We are proud to announce that Mr Macdonald Nhakura, the Harare Institute of Technology's (HIT) Librarian, has been appointed as a Board Member for the Standing Conference of Eastern, Central and Southern African Library and Information Associations (SCECSAL) at the XXVII SCECSAL 2026 Conference, held at the prestigious Avanni venue in Livingstone, Zambia.

SCECSAL is one of Africa's premier regional forums for library and information professionals, bringing together associations from 26 nations across the continent.

Mr Nhakura's appointment is a proud moment for HIT and a recognition of Zimbabwe's continued contribution to the advancement of library and information science across Africa. His participation at this continental level reflects HIT's commitment to academic excellence, professional development, and regional collaboration.

Congratulations, Mr Nhakura! 🇿🇼📚

01/05/2026

Address

Ganges Road, Belvedere
Harare
263

Opening Hours

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Wednesday 08:00 - 16:30
Thursday 08:00 - 16:30
Friday 08:00 - 16:00

Telephone

+263242741422

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