Category: Startups

  • 5 Link Building Tactics to Boost Your Online Presence

    5 Link Building Tactics to Boost Your Online Presence

    Using SEO to build an online presence is an essential need these days. Apart from putting your brand in the top position in the search results it also helps you to increase the ease with which customers can establish a bond with you. Link building or getting backlinks for your website becomes an integral part of this entire scenario. Here we share with you 5 link building tactics that would help in boosting your online presence.

    Guest posting

    One interesting way to start is to guest post about your area of expertise. You just have to look for a reputed website where you can provide your inputs over topics related to your niche. However, you must take care that the website you choose is a high authority and attracts enough traffic. Once your content is published you can add your links asking them to trust your brand by reaching your website. You could also use link building services to simplify this process for you. SEOOutreachers looks for the best places to put your links thus garnering increasing visibility for the brand.

    Changing mentions to links

    You may have found mentions on other websites something you are not aware of till now. To use this concept for your benefit first google search your name and look for your name. If there are any such websites that have purposely mentioned about you there is a good chance you can get exposure here. Just ask them to add your link as part of their blog and if possible add your inputs too.

    Broken link building

    Often there are links that are non -existent or have expired over a period of time. These links may be irrelevant but you can still use them. Just find out all such links and request the owners to replace them with genuine and correct links from your website. Doing that you will give your brand the much-needed backlinks and that too without any extra effort on your part. Most of these pages are a burden to the website owner as well so your effort would be gladly accepted by them.

    Targeting the resource pages from websites

    A lot of websites have their own resource pages where you can find any kind of content. You may contact the owners if they can let you be a part of these pages in the form of backlinks. However, to do so you first need to have something useful to offer to them. It could be a how-to article or a guide on something that the customers need. Have a look at the website first before proceeding with this trick. If the website has just added random resources without any major common interests it is better to stay away from it.

    Online directories

    Another place where you may get some useful help is online directories. They are like modern yellow pages and some of the most credible ones are being used regularly by the customers. You may understand though that this tactic is focused more on getting local customers to notice you. This is probably because these websites are focused on region-based divisions and the customers also search as per their area requirements.

    Conclusion

    Link building is done in the correct manner can really prove to be fruitful for your brand’s growth. However, success is also dependent on the kind of strategies used and the above tips are some of the most effective ones. In case of any confusion, you may take the help of SEOOutreachers. They know just the right tactics that are needed to help you explore the growth of your brand and would successfully guide you in achieving the same.

  • Cairo-based Fintech Startup MoneyFellows Raises US $4M in Series-A

    Cairo-based Fintech Startup MoneyFellows Raises US $4M in Series-A

    Egyptian fintech startup MoneyFellows has raised US $4 million in a Series-A investment round from venture capital (VC) firms Partech and Sawari Ventures.

    What is MoneyFellows?

    MoneyFellows helps users manage money circles by digitizing the informal traditional rotating savings and credit association model.

    The platform’s features include salary automated deductions, fixed payout dates as well as a smart scoring system

    The startup claims it has over 150,000 active users that are verified by a user assessment algorithm.

    It said the investment will be used to expand the company’s operations further across Egypt as well as into the continent. The company also plans to launch a slew of new products in the coming months.

    Wadi said Partech’s support from the investor’s African fund will help the startup to expand into other countries in the continent with “hands-on global expertise”.

    Sawari Ventures managing partner Hany Al Sonbaty said in the same statement that in enabling people to save beyond their immediate circles, the startup is helping larger numbers of people as they become more financially aware.

    The latest round follows a US $1 million round that the startup raised from 500 Startups, Dubai Angel Investors, and Phoenician Funds along with other undisclosed individual investors participated in the round.

  • Demand for Arabic chatbots surges in H1-2020 amid COVID-19, WideBot data shows

    Demand for Arabic chatbots surges in H1-2020 amid COVID-19, WideBot data shows

    Egyptian chatbot startup WideBot witnessed a surge of Arabic chatbot building requests during the first half of 2020, amounting to a 100% increase, compared to the whole year of 2019, as businesses are looking for quick solutions to move to digital interaction with customers.

    • Q1-20 saw over 30% increase in requests from e-services and delivery
    • WideBot rolls out new branding and features

    During the first quarter of the year, WideBot-powered chatbots increased from 1,200 to more than 2,500 in more than 40 countries, mainly serving customers in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt.

    Demand for Arabic chatbots surges in H1-2020 amid COVID-19, WideBot data showsWideBot empowers businesses with AI-powered bots that chat like human beings, so they can build strong relationships with their customers and maximize their outcomes through a seamless personalized experience.

    “COVID-19 was a major reason for the increased demand as people are staying home and businesses are limiting human interaction,” CEO of WideBot Mohammed Nabil said. “Turning to online, automated solutions, especially with the current economic climate, also helps optimize operational costs.”

    The heightened demand was mainly visible in the e-services and delivery sectors, with industries like food and beverages, restaurants, government services, banking, and healthcare taking the lead. Chatbots are more accessible than most means of communication and feel more natural to use as social media penetration reaches 75% in the Middle East and North Africa.

    Over the past few years, WideBot has grown and evolved to be a leading Arabic AI conversational platform in the Middle East. Recently, the company has rebranded and added more features to make it easier for their clients to build human-like chatbots. Commenting on the company’s rebranding, Head of Product Marketing at WideBot Nour Eldin Ebrahim said: “Our offerings evolved, our portfolio expanded, and we have worked with companies, enterprises, SMEs, scaleups, and governments in over 40 countries to deliver highly complex and of top-notch quality bots used by more than 3 million users.”

    With WideBot’s newly implemented chatbot templates, businesses can easily pick a template that fits their needed use case to have an almost complete chatbot that needs only a few tweaks to be ready to publish. The template library contains 15 ready-to-use templates with cases like restaurants, COVID-19 awareness, NGOs, E-commerce, news and publications, and more.

    Additionally, WideBot added WhatsApp chatbots, given that MENA alone has over 155 million WhatsApp subscribers that send 65 billion messages daily. The WideBot update also allows sending broadcast messages to user segments that have interacted with businesses.

    “Following the international trend, we expect demand to keep growing by 4-5 times year-on-year by the end of 2020,” Ebrahim explained.

  • Fintech giant ‘Brex’ lays off 62 of staff despite raising $150M

    Fintech giant ‘Brex’ lays off 62 of staff despite raising $150M

    Brex founders Pedro Franceschi and Henrique Dubugras wrote in a blog post published yesterday that 62 people would be let go. The corporate credit cards for startups company will be prioritizing building overgrowing this next year.

    “Three months in, it’s clear that the impact of COVID-19 won’t be short-lived. We know that the pace of growth won’t be what we expected for the foreseeable future,” the CEOs wrote. “This unique situation created the space for us to think about the future of Brex, and how we could use this time to accelerate our mission — to reimagine financial systems so every growing company can realize their full potential.”

    The layoffs are a bit surprising, given that the company announced just last week it raised $150 million.

    Brex will be taking another look at investments that don’t make sense, and some teams will be reduced, along with changing roles and some people being asked to switch teams.

    Brex said it would be using the money to invest in engineering, product, and design. It also planned to “use a combination of organic efforts as well as small acquisitions to supplement its hiring and product development efforts.”

  • Tribal Credit Joins Visa’s Fintech Fast Track to Bridge Equity Gap for MENA Startups

    Tribal Credit Joins Visa’s Fintech Fast Track to Bridge Equity Gap for MENA Startups

    US-based startup Tribal Credit, which raised $9.1 million in a series of seed rounds, announced that it had joined Visa’s Fintech Fast Track Program, adding it to an elite group of fintech and accelerating its integration with Visa’s global payment network.

    A corporate card designed to help emerging market startups break free from local financial barriers, Tribal Credit, uses a proprietary AI-driven approval process to provide small and medium companies with access to payments.

    tribal credit cards
    tribal credit cards

    Tribal Credit is a privately held company founded by serial entrepreneurs, data scientists, and fintech execs who have built and led startups in both emerging markets and Silicon Valley, the startup aspires to bridge the business financial inclusion gap between the two.

    Tribal Credit is backed by BECO Capital, Global Ventures, Silicon Valley Bank, Endure Capital, 500 Startups, Off The Grid Ventures, Rising Tide Fund, and Tribe Capital.

    “The Visa Fintech Fast Track Program is a critical enabler for us as we quickly scale our business to ensure global reach. Through direct engagement and integration with Visa’s global network, we can make our services available to new markets in weeks instead of months,” said Duane Good, President of Tribal Credit.

    Around 200 million small and medium-sized businesses in emerging economies lack access to formal savings and credit, hindering their growth and ability to scale. Strict banking regulations make it difficult for startups in those markets to open business bank accounts, obtain charge cards, and manage cross-border payments.

    Globally, there are ~1 billion potential new card credentials and more than 65 million merchants coming from fintech, neobanks, and wallets, according to Visa’s 2020 Investor Day Report, which described its Fintech Fast Track program as key to unlocking this opportunity.

    “By joining Visa’s Fast Track program, exciting Fintechs like Tribal Credit gain unprecedented access to Visa experts, technology, and resources,” said Terry Angelos, SVP and Global Head of Fintech, Visa. “Fast Track lets us provide new resources that rapidly growing companies need to scale efficiently.”

    “Visa’s Fintech Fast Track will help us meet our goal of reaching over 500,000 corporate cardholders in emerging markets by 2024,” said Amr Shady, CEO of Tribal Credit.

    After launching its waitlist in December, Tribal Credit has seen demand from startups in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Mexico who struggle to access traditional financial services like opening bank accounts, issuing business credit cards, and making cross-border payments.

    “We effectively just tapped into a friendship with over 60 years of dedicated experience in international payments and partners,” Good added.

  • Online Learning Platform Abwaab Raises 2.4M in Seed Funding

    Online Learning Platform Abwaab Raises 2.4M in Seed Funding

    Abwaab, MENA’s latest online learning platform, today announces the closing of its $2.4M pre-seed funding round.

    The round was kicked off by Adam Tech Ventures and joined by Endure Capital, Equitrust, the World Bank-backed Innovative Startups SMEs Fund (“ISSF”), a London-based investment fund, a number of former and current executives from Uber and Netflix, among others.

    The startup plans to use this funding to develop its product and grow its team.

    What’s Abwaab?

    Abwaab is a Jordan-based online learning platform, allows secondary school students to learn at their own pace, test themselves and get ahead with our expert tutors anytime and anywhere. By offering concept-based video lessons, visualized learning journeys, continuous assessment, and performance-tracking features, we are changing the way students learn outside the classroom.

    The Jordanian-based ed-tech startup was founded in September 2019 by Hamdi Tabbaa, former General Manager of Uber for the GCC & Levant, and AI expert Hussein Alsarabi, former director of technology & product development at Mawdoo3.com.

    Online Learning Platform Abwaab Raises 2.4M in Seed Funding
    Abwaab founders: Hamdi Tabbaa and Hussein Alsarabi

    “There is a clear lack of online educational resources for young people in MENA who are in their prime learning age (0-24) despite the fact that they currently makeup half of the region’s population and rank one of the lowest on academic performance. By providing a high-quality, easily-accessible and fun learning experience, we believe that our product will have a powerful impact on generations to come,” said Hamdi Tabbaa, Co-founder & CEO, Abwaab.

    Abwaab’s website, which launched in early February of this year, offers an online learning experience for secondary school students with programs tailored to specific markets in the region. From concept-based video lessons taught by highly experienced teachers to various forms of assessment and performance-tracking features, students get the opportunity to learn at their own pace, assess themselves and track their progress anytime and anywhere.

    The startup, which has a freemium subscription model, has begun rolling out its content, starting with STEM subjects tailored to the Jordanian market and has produced nearly 1,000 videos to date.

    “Not only are we planning on tailoring the learning experience on the country level, but also on the individual level. We aim to harness the power of AI to provide each and every student with a unique and personalized learning journey. I believe that AI will be an instrumental driver of change in ed-tech and we want to be at the forefront of this,” said Hussein Alsarabi, Co-founder & CTO, Abwaab.

    In recent years, MENA has experienced a boom in ed-tech startups with many attempting to take on the $20B after-school tutoring industry and address the lack of online educational resources for students in the region. Nevertheless, there is still more work that needs to be done. Despite being the 4th largest language globally, Arabic only accounts for 3% of content online which is a huge discrepancy that needs to be addressed.

    “We see huge potential in Abwaab and are very excited to be supporting its mission. We can clearly see the impact Byju’s is having on the Indian market and strongly believe that Abwaab will have a similar effect in MENA,” said Dina Shawar, CEO, Adam Tech Ventures.

  • Unlocking Potential Unicorns in MENA’s Mystery Land

    Unlocking Potential Unicorns in MENA’s Mystery Land

    Aside from the never-ending ancient archeological discoveries, Egypt is one of the fastest-growing startup ecosystems in MENA. A Magnitt report ranks the country as the second largest startup ecosystem in the region, capturing 22 percent of all deals in 2018, with a 7 percent increase in total deals from 2017. The Pharaohs have promising ventures on the rise, with startups like Swvl raising a total of US $80.5 million.

    In this Egypt spotlight, we’ve got an Endeavor entrepreneur joining forces with a coder and a veteran business developer to provide underserved commuters with affordable three-wheel rides. And Y Combinator grads building a startup that detects bugs with just a phone shake!

    All aboard? Get ready for a powerful tech-driven journey into the mysterious land of Egypt!

    Halan ‘All Hail Three-Wheeler Rides’

    The ride-sharing market is worth as much as $5.7 trillion in 175 countries across the globe. MENA’s ride-hailing market is projected to grow from $2.4 billion in 2017 to $7.3 billion by 2023, propelled by increased investments and rising competition between unicorns Careem, Uber, and Swvl. Halan (Arabic for immediately) is the latest addition to the ride-sharing lot.

    Navigating bumpy roads and areas beyond the scope of most conventional means of transportation, Halan’s two and three-wheelers — think tuk-tuks, motorbikes, and cargo tricycles — reach underserved commuters. A single Halan ride costs up to 80 percent less than its ride-hailing counterparts. The 2017 Cairo-based startup also provides B2B and B2C logistics solutions and offers delivery services for everything from food to heavy goods like fridges.

    Investment

    Backed by Algebra Ventures and Battery Road Digital Holdings, Halan’s total funding amounts to $5 million. Since its launch, the startup notched over three million rides in 2018 alone. It gained unparalleled traction with over 1 million downloads, crowning the platform as one of the fastest-growing apps in the region.

    Halan aspires to bridge the gap between public transport and expensive ride services in emerging markets, with plans to expand in Ethiopia and across five Egyptian governorates by the end of the year.

    Founding Team

    Selected among 52 high-impact entrepreneurs in Egypt by Endeavor, CEO Mounir Nakhla has over a decade of experience building microfinance businesses. His venture Halan grew out of a passion for creating fast, affordable, and convenient transportation solutions for underserved communities. “We’re penetrating the regions of Egypt where 80 to 90 percent of the population resides,” Mounir told the National.

    Mounir honed his entrepreneurial skills at several microfinance companies. In 2015, he founded Tasaheel, which grew to become Egypt’s second-largest microfinance company in less than four years, with over 500,000 active borrowers, 200+ licensed branches across Egypt, and over 6,000 employees.

    In 2010, Mounir founded Mashroey, an asset-based microfinance company that sells two and three-wheelers. As Managing Director, he scaled the company to over 100 branches across Egypt and grew its products’ portfolio to include electrical appliances and affordable housing.

    Mounir also worked at Environmental Quality International (EQI). As Managing Partner, he helped EQI become a leading microfinance consultancy, with two operating subsidiaries in sustainable ecotourism and microfinance loan-tracking software industries.

    On keeping up with the competitive transportation space, Mounir told Wamda, “Our history, our DNA makes us understand and know these areas and markets better than anyone else. We’ve been working in these underserved communities for more than a decade.”

    Mounir has an MS in Environment and Development from the London School of Economics and a BS in International Business from the European Business School.

    CCO Mohamed Aboulnaga has over a decade of experience in business development across many sectors, including e-payments, retail, and tech. Leading several roles at Egypt’s e-payment network, Fawry, Mohamed worked with FMCG companies on their cash collection model. He developed the B2B pipeline and was responsible for corporate cash management.

    At Careem, Mohamed assumed many executive positions, including Business Development Director, Commercial and Governmental Relations Director, and Regional Director. He was also CCO of NOG Investments, a company that invests in Egyptian SMEs. He is a Board Member of Robusta Studio and ShopX.

    CTO Ahmed Soliman is a coder and a tech whiz with expertise in software engineering. He was CEO of CircleTie, a mobile social networking and directory application. He was also Security Engineer at Securemisr and Software Engineer at IBM.

    Both Mohamed and Ahmed graduated from the American University in Cairo with BS degrees in Electronics Engineering and Computer Science. Here’s to all-nighters at AUC labs!

    Instabug “Streamlining Mobile One Bug at a Time”

    Welcome to the latest addition to the Endeavor network of high-impact entrepreneurs. Just this week, Instabug got recognized for making everyone’s app usage a lot easier. And if you’re one of the 25,000 companies relying on this startup, you might know exactly whom we’re talking about.

    Founded in 2012, Instabug is a startup that helps maintain high-quality apps through bug reporting, instant user feedback, and diagnosis. Instabug takes under a minute to integrate and a small shake of your phone to invoke their tool as fast as it sounds. They serve reputable teams with no time for delay, like those of PayPal, BuzzFeed, Samsung, Lyft, and Soundcloud. It’s close to sorcery if you ask us!

    With 5.1 billion unique mobile subscribers worldwide, the app development market is expected to grow by 14% from 2016 to 2022. And with fierce competitors in the industry, Instabug mainly prides over its edge in speed, with instant feedback and crash reports throughout the entirety of an app’s cycle.

    But it isn’t just Instabug’s solutions that speed by. It’s also its steady growth and ambition as a company. “Building Egypt’s first Unicorn” is a slogan they go by, and while it’s a hefty aspiration, it has had much to stand on. Instabug’s last round in 2016 was worth $1.7 million, led by Silicon Valley’s Accel Partners, which came in only three years after a US $300,000 Seed round. Their scaleup as a company was coupled with a rapidly growing base of users — 400 million reported issues and 2 billion devices running their Software Development Kit — making them a force to be reckoned with regionally and globally.

    Founding Team

    Along with an entire ‘Bugsquad,’ this founding team embarked upon this journey early on. Both CEO Omar Gabr and CTO Moataz Soliman were fresh out of undergraduate degrees in Computer Engineering from Cairo University when they started Instabug. “Seven years ago, we launched Instabug as a demo video — a cool idea that went viral within developer circles like Hacker News,” narrates Omar.

    With positive word-of-mouth on their side, they took this feedback further and developed a go-to product in bug reporting. In 2013, Instabug won first place at the MIT Enterprise Forum Arab Startup Competition. Shortly after, it secured its first seed funding from angel investors and became part of Flat6Labs, a leading Startup Accelerator in Egypt.

    They then joined Y Combinator’s Winter 2016 batch as the second Egyptian company to join the accelerator. It was only a matter of time before they secured the Accel round a year later, with Y Combinator on board, along with backers like Amr Awadallah, co-founder of Cloudera, Jim Payne, founder and CEO of MoPub, and Sharif El-Badawi of 500 Startups.

    When asked about making it despite some turbulent political conditions, they link their survival back to consistency. “Just showing up, just keeping at it,” Moataz told the Instabug team. “I think it’s mainly that we didn’t give up in any of these situations — and not just Omar and me, the entire team.”

    Instabug completely rebranded last August, changing their signature logo bug to fast, zooming symmetrical parallelograms — their first step beyond debugging. “The friendly ladybug was our lucky charm for years, but it was time to evolve our logo and brand,” wrote Omar. The startup was now moving into a wider, integrated system where mobile teams can get a bigger picture of their performance.

    As Omar’s Twitter bio proudly claims, his ancestors used to worship bugs, and now he builds apps to squash them. There seems to be an ongoing line of development here. From a ladybug to a dreamed-of unicorn, we can’t wait to see this metamorphosis!

    No costume is more frightening than fierce startups ready to scare competitors away, and Egypt has got that one covered. Now, if you’ll excuse us, our AI sorcerers are scheduled to a pre-Halloween party with some mummies they met at a Luxor Temple.

  • Gemini Enterprises Africa and RiseUp LLC join forces for Pyramids Plateau until 2022

    Gemini Enterprises Africa and RiseUp LLC join forces for Pyramids Plateau until 2022

    Gemini Enterprises Africa, part of Orascom Group, and RiseUp LLC, the MENA region’s connector of startups to local and global resources, on Saturday signed a three-year partnership that will make the Pyramids Plateau the official venue for the annual RiseUp Summit and Pitch by the Pyramids competition until December 2022.

    The partnership was announced during the first Pitch by the Pyramids competition, RiseUp’s latest flagship program, by both Engineer Adly Thoma, CEO of Gemini Enterprises Africa, acting on behalf of Engineer Naguib Sawiris, Executive Chairman of Orascom Investment Holding, and Abdelhameed Sharara, Cofounder and CEO of RiseUp.

    Abdelhameed Sharara, riseup summit, Orascom,

    Through this agreement, both parties seek to empower the entrepreneurial and startup ecosystem, and ensure a sustainable future by tapping into the local talent and innovation of young people.

    Witnessing the signing ceremony, Minister of Investment and International Cooperation H.E. Dr. Sahar Nasr said: “I am proud of RiseUp’s selection of the location. We are standing next to the Pyramids which are the symbol of innovation and civilization. This is an excellent platform where we have seen a lot of young people, international institutions, the private sector and investment banks gathered. It is the platform to put together the right ecosystem to ensure our young entrepreneurs get the right enabling environment and the right support for them to grow, because they are the future, and they will remain the main contributor to our sustainable growth.”

    The partnership also stipulates that RiseUp and Gemini Enterprises Africa shall co-develop innovation hubs on the premises and other Orascom-owned holdings, while the former gains exclusivity for any entrepreneurial events in the area.

    Engineer Naguib Sawiris, Executive Chairman of Orascom Investment Holding, declared: “I’m pleased to announce the strategic partnership between Gemini Enterprises Africa and RiseUp to migrate the summit and all its activities to the Pyramids Plateau. We will work together to position the Pyramids venue as the Hub where history meets the future and the place that culture merges with technology and entrepreneurship. We are sure that this partnership will create a generation that will leave a legacy like our pharaonic ancestors did.”

    Engineer Adly Thoma, CEO of Gemini Enterprises Africa, mentioned: “This strategic partnership is not only to change the location of the Summit, but rather to create a new platform that guides our youth to innovation inspired by our ancestors, the Pharaos, the first entrepreneurs in history. We are proud to team up with RiseUp.”

    Abdelhameed Sharara, Cofounder and CEO of RiseUp said: “This partnership truly brings us closer to our vision, as we build bridges to connect entrepreneurs to the most relevant resources in Egypt and the region as a whole. It is a great pleasure to be standing here today and have the support of such an esteemed organization.”

    Joining forces between Gemini Enterprises Africa and RiseUp paves the road for a fruitful partnership as both entities are positioned to be integral players in shaping the life of our population to reach a brighter future.

  • RiseUp kicks off its 7th edition at AUC New Cairo Campus

    RiseUp kicks off its 7th edition at AUC New Cairo Campus

    RiseUp Summit 2019, MENA’s leading entrepreneurship event, kicked off Thursday at the American University in Cairo (AUC) New Cairo Campus, with deep dives into the #JourneyToGrowth of the regional entrepreneurship ecosystem.

    Featuring speakers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Dell Technologies, SAP Egypt, IBM Egypt, an early-stage venture fund and seed accelerator 500 Startups.

    The Summit highlighted the status of innovation and entrepreneurship in MENA, with a special look into local, regional, and international companies that have followed their own growth journey.

    With a total of 11 sessions on the first day, RiseUp Summit 2019 was inaugurated with an opening ceremony hosted by President of the AUC Francis J. Ricciardone Jr and Cofounder and CEO of RiseUp Abdelhameed Sharara, giving an account of what is planned for the three-day event.

    Ricciardone welcomed the audience to the university’s campus: “This is the beating heart of energy and creativity in the Middle East, and I cannot think of a better place to begin our three days of RiseUp together than AUC. We as AUC bring the world back to Egypt – and bring Egypt to the world – not only for tourism but for learning, creating, researching, developing projects and products that will improve lives.”

    With RiseUp expanding its regional footprint further every year, this year’s top speakers include Founder of Orascom Development Holding AG Samih Sawiris, TV Personality Raya Abirached, Executive Chairman of the Egyptian Exchange Mohamed Farid Saleh, Cofounder and Managing Director of Fawry Mohamed Okasha, Co-Author Blitzscaling and Co-founder Global Scaling Academy Chris Yeh, Editor-at-Large at TechCrunch Mike Butcher, and Cofounder and President at F6S Matt Philippe.

    RiseUp will also host the African App Launchpad Cup, in partnership with the Telecommunications Ministry’s Information Technology Industry Development Agency (ITIDA) and several satellite events in different locations all over Cairo. The regional Pitch will follow the Summit by the Pyramids competition, in which 15 startups from MENA will pitch for various prizes.

    Co-founder and CEO of RiseUp Abdelhameed Sharara say: “Every year, we ask ourselves how to grow. In 2013, we started as a Summit, hosting only around 1,900 attendees at the Greek Campus in Downtown Cairo. Slowly, we turned into a company, and last year, our summit was held on over 2,000 square meters with 6,100 attendees from 48 countries. The most suitable place for us this year to pursue our Journey to Growth was the AUC New Cairo Campus, especially as the university celebrates its Centennial.”

    During the Summit, business credit card Tribal Credit – founded by serial tech entrepreneur Amr Shady – announced that it closed a $5.5 million seed round to bank startups in emerging markets and helped

    them break free from local financial barriers. The round was led by BECO Capital and Global Ventures, with other backers that include Endure Capital, 500 Startups, Valve VC, AR Ventures, Off The Grid Ventures, Rising Tide Fund, RiseUp, and Tribe Capital. Tribal is also opening its waitlist for the first time during RiseUp Summit, allowing startup teams to sign up to be first in line for access.

    Additionally, the Egyptian aggregator of outdoor advertising AdMazad announced its latest product, AdMetrics, which allows advertisers to assess any out-of-home ad-space or campaign’s effectiveness. AdMazad’s AdTech has revolutionized the outdoor advertising market by bringing data and analytics to a traditional and chaotic industry.

    RiseUp Summit 2019 will convene from December 5-7, hosting four main stages: Tech, Capital, Creative, and Growth. The seven tracks that the content focuses on are Creative Culture, Creative Economies, Smart Capital, Growth Hacks, Emerging Tech, FinTech, and Tech 4 Humans.

  • Silicon Valley’s Tribal Credit Raises $5.5M in Seed Funding to Bank Startups

    Silicon Valley’s Tribal Credit Raises $5.5M in Seed Funding to Bank Startups

    Tribal Credit closed a $5.5 million Seed round led by BECO Capital and Global Ventures to bank startups in emerging markets and help them break free from local financial barriers.

    The fintech’s backers include Endure Capital, 500 Startups, Valve VC, AR Ventures, Off The Grid Ventures, Rising Tide Fund, RiseUp, and Tribe Capital.

    Tribal Credit is a corporate credit card specially designed to meet the needs of emerging market startups. Using a proprietary AI-driven approval process and blockchain technology, the Silicon Valley-based fintech provides startups with instant access to credit and complete control over their spending.

    “Tribal Credit will bring startups closer to the payment channels and capital they need to grow and scale, giving them access to banking services previously only available to large corporates,” said Amr Shady, CEO and Endeavor entrepreneur who previously founded TA Telecom.

    Around 200 million SMEs in emerging economies lack access to formal savings and credit, which often restrict or slow startup growth. Strict banking regulations often limit or make difficult the opening of business bank accounts, obtaining credit cards, and making cross-border payments.

    “Blockchain is key for achieving business financial inclusion in emerging markets,” said Mohamed Elkasstawi, Tribal Credit’s Chief Strategy Officer who is building the company’s blockchain infrastructure. Elkasstawi was also a founding partner at the blockchain investment firm, zk Capital.

    Founded by serial entrepreneurs, data scientists and fintech execs who have built and led startups in both emerging markets and Silicon Valley, Tribal Credit aspires to bridge the business financial inclusion gap between the two.

    The executive team includes Duane Good, former HSBC EVP, and founding member of eCapital Financial and MBNA International. Bill Crawley of IBM, iSON Technologies, and Net2Phone. Mark Graves of Marqeta Inc., Silicon Valley Bank, and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).