Gulf News

Fetchr braces for second round of funding

THE DUBAI-CREATED DELIVERY APP RAISED THE MIDDLE EAST’S LARGEST EVER SERIES A FINANCING IN 2015

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ubai-based delivery app Fetchr, considered by many to be one of the Middle East’s most promising start-ups, expects to close its Series B funding in the next two months, according to Idriss Al Rifai, co-founder and chief executive, speaking in an interview with Gulf News on Tuesday.

Whilst declining to specify an amount, in June 2015 Fetchr received the largest ever Series A funding in the Middle East, at $11 million.

“We are expecting to close our next round in the first quarter, although you never know until the money is in the bank, and even then things can go wrong,” Al Rifai said.

“We want to be the next desert unicorn,” added Joy Ajlouny, fellow co-founder and creative director, referring to the localised version of a technology start-up valued at $1 billion.

Founded in 2012, the logistics company is aimed at tackling the issue of physical addresses, a big challenge for e-commerce companies in developing countries.

This is done through GPS tracking on the customer’s phone, increasing both the accuracy and speed of delivery, in a part of the world where having something delivered can be a frustratin­g experience.

Mutual frustratio­n

“I came from the e-commerce side, whilst Idriss came from the logistics side,” said Ajlouny.

“Nowadays, logistics is ecommerce and e-commerce is logistics. We met at the right place at the right time, and we both had something in common: we struggled to get things delivered in the Middle East. I was used to America where every location has an address.”

After a chance meeting in Silicon Valley, the pair partnered and managed to raise their first round of funding from New Enterprise Associates, the largest venture capital (VC) company in the world, and an outfit notoriousl­y shy of investment­s in the Middle East.

Since its inception four years ago, Fetchr has grown to over 1,000 employees across the UAE, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Egypt.

“We never thought we’d get the number one VC in the world to invest in us. But they saw not just a regional solution, but a global one. They don’t have addresses in Brazil, or China, or Russia, for example,” said Ajlouny, who is Palestinia­n-American.

“Half the world’s population has no address,” she added.

Immediate gratificat­ion

In the developed world, most online transactio­ns are completed at the laptop. In many other places, however, purchases are completed at the door, with cash on delivery.

“If someone hasn’t paid for something, every day you delay a delivery is another day the customer has to change their mind.”

According to Al Rifai, Fetchr does two things differentl­y.

“Firstly, the faster you can get a product in to a customer’s hands, the lower the return rate, and the better the customer experience will be,” said Al Rifai.

“We are competing with traditiona­l retail in this sense for immediate gratificat­ion.”

“The second is the issue of “There is a mispercept­ion that people have, that it is better for start-ups in this region because there are no taxes,” said Joy Ajlouny, co-founder and creative director of Fetchr, in an interview with

“But guess what,” she added, “entreprene­urs don’t make money for the first five years! So start-ups in America don’t need to pay taxes anyway!”

“The big difference, however, is that in the States I can start a company in my Mum’s garage, and pay $200 for a licence online.”

Here, she said, she is required to pay $25,000 for a licence whether you make money or lose money, then taxed on every delivery, and required to pay $1,300 every time they hire someone, and obligated to pay to send them home when they fire them.

“All of that is taxing me before I make a single dollar. It’s harder for me to make money here than it is in the States. The regulation­s are choking the money out of entreprene­urs here.” Ajlouny insisted these regulation­s must be changed. Al Rifai agrees on the point about recruitmen­t: “in the start-up world, there’s a lot of hiring and firing. To have to pay every time you bring someone on board and every time you lose someone, is really hard.” no addresses. Uber and Careem don’t ask you where you live. It’s crazy that the delivery sector is still working on a traditiona­l address system. It doesn’t make sense,” continued Al Rifai.

Saudi bump

Since starting the company, Al Rifai and Ajlouny have also launched Fetchr Now. The service allows people to courier goods of any size between locations, such as a laptop from their apartment to their office, or plane tickets from home to the airport, something that has actually happened, according to Al Rifai.

“There is definitely a need for people wanting to send things to each other immediatel­y, point-to-point on your smartphone,” he said.

“There’s nothing like it the UAE,” added Ajlouny.

Fetchr Now has rolled out to Dubai, with Egypt next in line, according to Al Rifai. in

“We expect to introduce in Egypt this month.”

Saudi Arabia has been a tougher market to introduce the concept in, however, with the company running in to regulatory issues.

“We need to fine-tune some of the agreements with the minsters in the kingdom before we are able to operate there,” said Al Rifai.

According to the chief executive, the government there is worried about people sending illegal items to each other.

Despite the challenges to introducin­g Fetchr Now, the original delivery app has been thriving in Saudi Arabia, with the start-up opening offices in Riyadh, Jeddah, and Dammam, and the service available in 37 cities across the country.

Asked how closely tied the delivery app’s success is to the rise of e-commerce in the region, Al Rifai responded that the former was very closely linked to the latter.

“It’s purely tied to the success of e-commerce. It’s in our DNA.”

Fortunatel­y for the pair, e-commerce is growing. Most analysts expect 40 to 50 per cent compound annual growth rate (CAGR) over the next five years.

The biggest news concerning it e-commerce in this region in recent months was the announceme­nt of Noon.com, a heavily-backed online shopping site.

“For Noon, it’s a big shoe to fill. It takes time to grow, and time to get clients. Majid Al Futtaim is building an e-commerce site, as is the Al Tayer Group,” said Ajlouny.

“[Noon.com] has a lot of backing, but there are others already in this space who have a lot of backing too.”

For Al Rifai, it’s good for the industry as a whole.

“It’s nice to see people investing billions in e-commerce, because then people understand it’s the next big thing. With that said, I think Noon underestim­ates how difficult it will be to break into this market, although there is always the chance for them to have the second-mover advantage,” he said.

What they both agreed on however, was that as a deliver app perfectly poised to capitalise on a growing e-commerce sector, it was good for Fetchr.

And what about competitio­n? Neither Ajlouny nor Al Rifai seemed at all concerned about what3words, a Britishcre­ated app that serves as a universal addressing system.

The technology, which assigns three-word addresses to every space on the entire planet, secured $8.5 million Series B funding in July 2015, with $2.94 million from regional logistics company Aramex.

“It’s like speaking a language no one understand­s,” exclaimed Ajlouny. “Unless everyone speaks the same language, you can’t communicat­e! It needs to be universal to be effective.”

“The competitio­n is good for us, but we’re not concerned at all,” added Al Rifai.

 ?? Courtesy: Fetchr ?? Idriss Al Rifai and Joy Ajlouny with the Fetchr crew. Founded in 2012, the logistics company is aimed at tackling the issue of physical addresses, a big challenge for e-commerce companies in developing countries.
Courtesy: Fetchr Idriss Al Rifai and Joy Ajlouny with the Fetchr crew. Founded in 2012, the logistics company is aimed at tackling the issue of physical addresses, a big challenge for e-commerce companies in developing countries.

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