In profile: Sheops, TEDdict and WonderTree – the three Pakistani start-ups who made it to the GES this year.
This year, as they have done consistently
since 2010/11, a number of Pakistani start-ups will participate in the
Global Entrepreneurship Summit (GES) to be held in Silicon Valley. They
will also be able to pitch to investors at the Global Innovation through
Science and Technology (GIST) event. Doing so is nowhere as easy as it
sounds; GES and GIST are highly prestigious tech events and hard to get
into; only 1,000 participants from all over the world may attend and a
mere 15 are invited to pitch.
I met three of the
entries from Pakistan, and only one somewhat resembled the entrepreneur
stereotype of 20-something males with messenger bags slung across their
chest. The others? Well, nothing says ‘Pakistani tech entrepreneur’
better than a 38-year-old mother of two, right? Or a trio of CEOs who
have never been to school, and of whom, only one can sign legal papers
because the other two are underage. No doubt about it, this is one
eclectic bunch.
Sheops
This women-only marketplace happened as a result of a stolen
mobile phone. “I went on an online classifieds space to buy a temporary
replacement phone and the usual began to happen: crank calls,
‘frandship’ requests, solicitations. It was so irritating because this
was such a minor purchase – surely I should not have to ask my husband
to handle it for me?” questions founder Nadia Gangjee. That was when she
decided to create a harassment-free environment where women could buy
and sell from each other. She started with a WhatsApp group of friends
who put up perfumes they weren’t using, clothes made for exhibitions,
even their kids’ ‘pre-loved’ furniture. In a week the group hit its
limit; in 12 days she was running three groups.
To handle the rapidly increasing membership, Gangjee
moved the groups to a closed community on Facebook where only women were
allowed, but as before, the group grew too big, too fast and issues
began creeping up. “People would cheat or not honour orders so I decided
to make a web platform that I could control.”
Her
first attempt was a disaster because she was scammed out of ownership of
domains and source code for her custom-coded website by her
then-business partner. However, with the support of The Nest I/O she
rebuilt her community of women and started a new site. After incubation
she was introduced to Arpatech, which signed on to invest after a single
45-minute meeting.
How it works:
Unlike regular marketplaces, Sheops is limited to women. “She operates,
she shops, she opts, Sheops,” says Gangjee. Prospective members are
vetted to ensure they are not men or using fake accounts, because apart
from the harassment issue, in certain cases women don’t want to buy from
men, or have men involved in the transaction. “We offer public stores,
which can be viewed by anyone, and private stores which are restricted
to members.”
Sheops offers integrated logistics and
payment systems to streamline the shopping process. When someone puts in
a purchase request for the first time, Sheops representatives call to
verify that it is a genuine buyer. A Sheops delivery person picks up the
product from the seller, takes it to the buyer and brings the payment
to the office. Every two weeks Sheops transfers payment to the seller.
“We pick, ship and deliver,” says Gangjee. “The seller has to do
nothing.”
Having only recently launched, the start-up is
not earning anything other than commissions on sales, which are kept to
either a percentage or a cap if the percentage value exceeds Rs 2,000,
but Gangjee is positive ad revenue will start coming in soon.
Why Sheops is going to GES:
One might wonder what is so special about a shopping portal that it
would get a place at GES. In Gangjee’s view it is “because it is not
about becoming a billion-dollar business; it is about giving women who
cook, craft and create an outlet to sell because they can’t go and ask
the local shopkeeper to stock their products. Sheops is going because
Sheops is empowering.”
TEDdict
Excitable siblings who chat at the speed of a runaway train,
Ayesha Babur, 19, Abdullah Babur, 17, and Asadullah Babur, 15, have
been homeschooled all their lives. “We didn’t follow a curriculum. We
read books, went to expos and played sports. If a problem needed to be
solved, we figured it out ourselves,” says Ayesha, pointing out that all
three recently sat for O Level exams.
Homeschooling
meant they paid more attention to conceptual learning compared to peers
who studied in regimented classrooms. “We analysed how the brain
learns,” says Abdullah. “We did a lot of research on international
education systems, emailed professors, and investigated different
education models.”
“And because we wanted to make learning addictive,” says
Asadullah, “we came up with TEDdict, for the technology, entertainment,
design addict.”
How it works: “Most
learning websites focus on teacher-to-student interaction,” says Ayesha,
noting that in real life, kids often get together for group studies to
learn from each other rather than from a teacher.
Being a
gamified environment, there is also an element of competition, which
Asadullah says is the reason games like Farmville are so successful. “We
use the coin system,” he explains. Every month members receive a
certain number of coins which can be exchanged for lessons, meaning
exchange isn’t strictly reciprocal.
“I will teach you
maths, you teach him physics, he teaches me English,” says Ayesha.
“TEDdies don’t barter, they trade lessons for coins. The more help you
give, the more coins you get.”
An additional gaming
aspect is the use of leaderboards to show ratings. “When you help
someone your ratings on the public leaderboard rise,” says Ayesha.
“That’s motivation to do more.”
Revenue is generated
by issuing progress reports. “Parents and teachers like knowing how
well their kids are learning or where they need more help,” says
Abdullah. “For between one and three dollars, they can get a detailed
analytics report that shows exactly where their child stands.”
Why TEDdict is going to GES:
Because “there are hardly any peer-to-peer learning portals,” says
Abdullah. Ayesha adds that “meta-learning, or learning about learning is
still in experimental stages. Edmodo and Google Plus are kind-of,
sort-of the closest you can get to TEDdict.”
WonderTree
As young men who put off finding jobs in order to develop a
start-up, two of them faced quite a few challenges from their families.
Yet, it was a family challenge that generated the idea in the first
place.
“My older brother is a special-needs person,”
says Muhammad Usman, 23, Chief Technical Officer, WonderTree. “One day I
saw him playing a car game on the console and he was better at it than I
was – so I figured why not turn it into a therapy aid.”
The
idea won the Karachi Grand Innovation Challenge held by Pakistan
Innovation Foundation, Alif Ailaan and I Am Karachi. Soon after Usman
and the original developing team graduated from university; two went
their separate ways while Usman and Ahmed Bukhari, 24, Chief of Research
& Development and Analytics, WonderTree, came to The Nest I/O.
Usman’s neighbour, Muhammad Waqas, 28, came on board as
Chief of Marketing and Strategy. “I had my own digital marketing agency
and I planned to carry on with that as well; but one month in I closed
shop and turned all my attention to WonderTree.”
How it works:
As a therapy aid, WonderTree games help players develop hand-eye
coordination, physical movement, reflexes, mirroring, attention
retention and decision making. To play, users must download the game for
a monthly subscription fee and have a laptop, television and kinect
device.
The team works with a panel of physiotherapists,
the Institute of Professional Psychology (IPP), Karachi Vocational
Trust (KVT), and Network of Organizations Working with People with
Disabilities, Pakistan (NOWPDP) to develop the games. “Initially we were
quite haphazard,” says Waqas. “Then one of our mentors, Adil Moosajee,
advised us to set up a board that we could consult regularly. That
really helped.”
In an environment where most games are
available for free, WonderTree is confident their subscription model
will work. “A package costs $25 a month,” says Waqas. “For Pakistan,
that’s 50% less than what you would pay to a therapist annually. From an
international perspective, research shows a special-needs child
requires $10,000 to 30,000 a year. On our platform the top cap is
$1,000.”
Why WonderTree is going to GIST:
To qualify for GIST a start-up must be able to impact a whole economy
and be globally implementable. On that basis (and because according to
their research there are only two other companies in the world that
provide a similar product) WonderTree made it through the first round
against 1,074 entries. In the second round they had to come up with as
many votes as possible to make it to the top 15.
“At
first we shared posts to get the word out. We garnered 500 votes. The
other start-ups were at 5,000 and 10,000 votes. So we changed tactics;
we set up teams in several universities and instead of asking people to
vote for us, we asked permission to use their email address so we could
vote on their behalf.” Several days of intense voting later they landed
in the top 10 and were subsequently invited to present to Silicon Valley
investors for funding.
As each start-up team speaks
about their experiences with The Nest I/O, it becomes clear that the
most valued support received was not the (admittedly important) free
space and free internet; it was the mentors, the guidance and the
wholehearted sharing of knowledge.
“A lot of people
dissed Usman’s idea at first,” says Waqas. “But here we found selfless
encouragement from people who had nothing to gain in return from us.”
Gangjee
points out that she only discovered her ex-business partner’s scam
after she came to The Nest I/O and began to understand how websites
worked.
As for the TEDdict kids, through The Nest I/O
they went to Sri Lanka and won silver at the Asia Pacific ICT Alliance
(APICTA) Awards. Now they are going to the heart and soul of tech
development in Silicon Valley. With unabashed enthusiasm only teens are
capable of, they cheer, “It’s like we hit the lottery!”
UPDATE:
The winners of GIST Tech-1 Pitch, Start-up Stage, were announced on
June 23 and 24, 2016. WonderTree placed third to win $3,000. First place
was won by Monkey Junior, Vietnam, for an interactive reading
application. Second place went to HiGi Energy, Malaysia, for converting
invasive water hyacinth and agricultural waste into an environmentally
friendly, smoke free cooking fuel.
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