Structure

A practical structure for capital, operations, and local execution

RORO Holdings Inc. sits at the top of the group. RORO Technology LLC operates. Local partners and joint ventures execute in market.

Group Hierarchy

How the entities work together

Each layer has a defined role. Strategy and capital sit at the parent. Operations sit with the operating company. Market access sits with local partners.

Parent Company

RORO Holdings Inc.

Delaware C-Corporation

Group Parent

Capital, governance, IP ownership, strategic partnerships, investor relations, and African JV stakes.

  • Owns equity and intellectual property
  • Raises institutional capital
  • Signs strategic partnership agreements
  • Centralizes group governance

Operating Company

RORO Technology LLC

U.S. Operating Entity

Technology development, service delivery, hiring, customer contracts, and project implementation.

  • Builds and delivers technology
  • Signs customer and vendor contracts
  • Hires employees and contractors
  • Manages day-to-day operations

Local Partners

African Partner Companies and JVs

In-Country Entities

Market access, regulatory coordination, sales, distribution, and on-the-ground operations.

  • Local market access and distribution
  • Regulatory and institutional interface
  • On-the-ground sales and operations
  • Government and partner relationships
StrategyExecutionLocal Markets

IP and Licensing

Example licensing structure

The holding company can own platform IP and license it to the operating company with documented, arm's-length pricing.

  1. 1

    RORO Holdings Inc. owns the platform and intellectual property

  2. 2

    RORO Holdings Inc. licenses technology and trademarks to RORO Technology LLC

  3. 3

    RORO Technology LLC performs development, sales, implementation, and operations

  4. 4

    The operating company pays license fees or royalties to the holding company

Related-party pricing should be reasonable and documented, especially when international entities are involved.

Governance

Corporate formalities that protect the structure

Asset separation is useful only when each entity maintains its own accounts, books, and documented agreements.

Separate bank accounts and books for each entity

Written intercompany agreements for all fund transfers

Board or member approvals for major transactions

Arm's-length pricing for related-party transactions

Clear contract attribution to the correct legal entity

Documented IP licensing and management fee arrangements

Explore our operating company

For technology, services, and implementation, visit RORO Technology LLC.