The Pak Banker

Careem to be a Super App, says founder CEO

- KARACHI -APP

In many ways, Careem has been the posterboy for tech startups in the region, be it rapid growth trajectory, ability to raise massive investment­s, being the first to achieve unicorn status or the acquisitio­n by Uber for a massive $3.1 billion.

However, events of the past one year have raised some question marks over company’s future. Starting with Uber’s shaky performanc­e on the New York Stock Exchange, where it has lost more than 37 per cent of the initial public offering price and the epic WeWork debacle which led to reassessme­nt of the top line-driven valuation race, many wonder for how long can Careem continue to bear losses?

Especially when its window of opportunit­y for fundraisin­g has all but closed. Now concerns of profitabil­ity reign supreme but how would that come about? Dawn sat down with CEO Mudassir Sheikha to discuss how he plans to tread this path. “The idea is to transform Careem from a vertical service which does one thing across many markets to a platform that starts simplifyin­g lives across many things through the idea of a Super App.

We realise that while ride-hailing was a great start and has given us the ability to expand and grow, that cannot be the only thing we do. And the vision and the aspiration always was to simplify lives of people, which is not just needed in transporta­tion, but in so many places like getting water, buying something from a store.

“The overall idea is that through its open architectu­re, we can allow developers and companies to put their services on the Careem Super App and benefit from our customer engagement and also benefit from the enabling services we have built. A lot of them would require some logistic capability or payments so they can leverage our infrastruc­ture.”

Even in its more successful iterations across East Asia (Gojek and Grab), Super App is still a new concept that is still being tested. Is it a sound bet then to enter more businesses while struggling with profitabil­ity?

“For the past six to nine months, we have been experiment­ing with offering multiple services on a single screen and the initial data is actually quite promising. The retention rate is higher and users actually use more services with us than they did before, so we have confidence that this will be hugely successful.”

Are you doing too many things?

“We are already doing delivery, payments and now bus [services]. The plan is to keep doing some of these things, which are somewhat closer to mobility, logistics business, but there are so many others we won’t be doing. For them, we will partner with others.”

Recently there were reports of Careem laying off over 150 people in January. Are the costs becoming too much to bear? “Part of the Super App strategy was realising that there are some parts of Careem we’d like to grow and some we’d have to shrink. We identified that 15 per cent of colleagues are playing roles that were no longer needed. Of this, we were able to accomodate 10pc (two-thirds) but the remaining were given a kind and caring exit. It’s not a retrench but a focus towards something else.”

Keeping in view the recent exits in Oman and Turkey, would Careem be able to keep things afloat in emerging markets (smaller cities like Quetta or Sukkur) amid the profitabil­ity constraint­s?

“They were suspended for regulatory reasons and not that the opportunit­y wasn’t big enough. In Pakistan and other countries, there are places that look small compared to Karachi-LahoreIsla­mabad, but if you start calculatin­g the opportunit­y from a Super App lens, you don’t need a large population. Basically you tell them that I am going to be your gateway to every need, so it becomes much larger than just transporta­tion.” How much would the lack of digital penetratio­n in the region affect Careem Pay’s ability to grow?

“Let’s not underestim­ate the vacuum and the opportunit­y that it creates. In such a market we don’t have to disrupt anything which is painful because no infrastruc­ture currently exists. So in Pakistan, Careem Pay can become the financial account for people (who want to invest money in a safe place) and see even faster growth than some other markets. But payments is a highly regulated market, requiring licences and compliance and these are some of the areas we are working on (and have applied for one in Pakistan).”

On that note, how much does the region’s fragmentat­ion adds to cost, especially when there is a new regulator after every few hundred kilometres? “None of these countries are big enough on their own to justify the kind of investment, you need to show operations in many places which results in a different set of issues, regulatory or systemic such as having to open different bank accounts or integratin­g with a new SMS gateway. These are the ground realities and we have to live with it.

“But the one thing we do help with it is the following: Careem has created an infrastruc­ture in 15 countries in the Middle East, including Pakistan, which includes legal entities, logistics, bank accounts, office spaces, payment and SMS gateways. Now that we have done it in 15 countries, we can create an abstractio­n layer on top and can tell all the companies operating here to use that (abstractio­n layer) rather than starting from scratch.”

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