The Borneo Post

Delivery app outdoes Uber by letting Saudis bargain on the go

- By Vivian Nereim

TYPING out your order on Mrsool is only the start of what’s made the Saudi delivery app more popular in the kingdom than Uber and Facebook.

The experience that follows recreates the bargaining of a traditiona­l market. Once the customer picks out items from a store or restaurant, couriers bid to run the errand, offering a delivery price within a certain range, which shoppers can reject if they find the quotes too expensive. The back- and-forth can continue as the courier buys and delivers the order, chatting and sharing photograph­s or voice notes.

“People like to conduct business by conversing with others,” said Abdulrahma­n Tarabzouni, chief executive officer of STV, a US$ 500 million ( RM2.1 billion) venture capital fund anchored by Saudi Telecom that recently took part in Mrsool’s first funding round.

Created in 2015, Mrsool tapped into the quirks of the Saudi market while the economy went through a major transforma­tion.

Although the private sector has struggled to adapt to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s sweeping efforts to wean the kingdom off oil, e- commerce has taken off in a country addicted to smartphone­s as buying habits change and consumers increasing­ly look for deals online.

Meanwhile, as Saudis rethink their household budgets after policy changes like a value-added tax and cuts to energy subsidies, more people are looking to earn extra cash in their spare time by working as drivers or couriers.

But it’s the personal touch Mrsool brought to the business of mobile retail that powered its swift rise, with four million registered users, 150,000 couriers and one billion riyals ( RM1.13 billion) of transactio­ns processed last year alone. Apple’s App Store ranks it among Saudi Arabia’s 30 most popular downloads, several notches above Facebook and Uber.

A takeaway competitor like Uber Eats, which isn’t even in the top 100, offers a more impersonal interface in which customers order food by checking items off a menu.

Mrsool’s under- 40 founders, Ayman Alsanad and Naif AlSamri, recently completed a multi-million dollar fundraisin­g, getting cash from STV as well as local firm Raed Ventures and Saudi investor Mazen Al- Jubeir.

Alsanad declined to say exactly how much capital was raised.

In an interview in the startup’s office in Riyadh, located behind an unmarked door above an Italian restaurant, Alsanad said he wants customers to see the couriers akin to a brother who comes to their rescue.

It’s a role particular­ly suited to a country where women were banned from driving until last year, and most still don’t have licences.

Alsanad recalled using Mrsool to deliver baby formula to his wife. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Naif AlSamri (left) and Ayman Alsanad, co-founders of delivery app Mrsool, at their office in Riyadh. — Bloomberg photo by Vivan Nereim
Naif AlSamri (left) and Ayman Alsanad, co-founders of delivery app Mrsool, at their office in Riyadh. — Bloomberg photo by Vivan Nereim

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