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A VISION TO EMPOWER CONSUMERS’ HEALTHCARE DECISIONS

▶ Faraz Khan wants informatio­n to be easy to get hold of, Alice Haine reports

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When former management consultant and investment banker Faraz Khan decided to set up a business, he identified three things everyone would need in 20 years’ time: education; water; and health care.

He then chose the segment he was most passionate about, launching his tech start-up in the summer of 2016 to help speed the delivery of healthcare products to consumers and bring more transparen­cy to the market.

The e-commerce venture first went live with contact lenses in 2016, followed by fitness products at the end of last year and pharmaceut­icals set to roll out by the second half of 2019.

But delivering healthcare products is only a small-part of the souKare vision. Its ultimate value propositio­n is to store customers’ data to help them track their medication­s and make more informed decisions about which insurer provides the best cover.

“In an ideal world, if there was no e-commerce, you would have one pharmacy that has everything you need and records all the products you use. They would know when you are going to run out of your prescripti­on drugs and call you two days before,” says Mr Khan, 39.

But the souKare model, which has grown from a fulltime staff of two in 2016 to six with 12 part-time employees, will also go one step further. As well as ensuring all medicines, contact lenses and fitness products are in stock and can be delivered locally within 90 minutes – a service the company already offers its Dubai clientele – the customers’ database will also reveal which insurers serve their medical needs best.

“At the end of the year – you will have a dashboard saying these are the 20 drugs you bought – these 11 were covered, these nine were not – so of your total spend of $8,000, $4,000 was covered by insurance,” says Mr Khan.

The portal will then outline how other insurers would have covered the same drugs, explaining that provider X would have covered $5,000. The customer can also find out how much other insurance policies would cost them.

That data can only be built through customer loyalty, says Mr Khan, but the idea is “not to be just another marketplac­e”.

“With insurance, the drugs are often not covered and the visibility is very low,” he says. “In health care, right now, decision-making is very ad hoc and that’s what we want to optimise.”

Entering the e-commerce space is not an easy ride for any new entreprene­ur even if, like Mr Khan, they have identified a gap in the market.

The Middle East’s e-commerce sector is growing at the fastest pace globally with online sales expected to double to $48.8 billion by 2021, according to a report last month by Fitch Solutions Macro Research, a

unit of Fitch Group. In tandem, the Middle East and North Africa region’s healthcare sector is forecast to need 470,000 additional hospital beds in the next four years to keep up with minimum per capita requiremen­ts set by the OECD, a JLL report said last year.

Still, that is no guarantee of success as creative ideas can easily be replicated.

“People can make their own websites and have their own products but what they can’t deliver is the full experience,”

says Mr Khan. “The value really lies in operationa­l excellence and that’s what we focus on.”

One of its key service offerings is the 90-minute delivery policy in its test city of Dubai – difficult to guarantee in a city often clogged with rush-hour jams.

“Ninety minutes is not as important as the call we make within 10 minutes, so that we can arrange a time slot for delivery,” he says. “Fifty per cent of people don’t need the order straight away but the fact that

someone reaches out immediatel­y is important.”

When it comes to rolling out the pharma range next year, how the company gets around the issue of prescripti­ons will be interestin­g. Customers will order the product, scanning in their prescripti­on and then the delivery driver will pick it up with any insurance claim being processed in the same way as a pharmacy.

To offer that service, souKare must have a physical store of its own, operating 24 hours a

People can make their own websites and have their own products but what they can’t deliver is the full experience FARAZ KHAN souKare founder

day to ensure it complies with UAE regulation­s, but it plans to partner with an outlet to lower costs at the outset. To help the entreprene­ur realise his vision, he has a number of key investors already on board.

Among the 11 are former colleagues from his management consultanc­y days who now work for McKinsey, BCG and Bain & Company as well as Careem executives and figures in the private equity arena. The group raised about $250,000 for the seed round, with Mr Khan putting in a further $150,000 himself.

“We wanted the right mix of investors, so consultant­s mainly for advice, people from Careem because they have the start-up and marketing experience and then private equity because they know how to take the company to the next level,” he says, adding that the company has had double- digit growth month-on-month this year, aside from August due to the traditiona­l summer slowdown.

Among the investors is Yousuf Siddiki, partner at the consultanc­y ValuStrat.

“The business idea behind souKare, its scalabilit­y aspect, and the team credential­s were the key drivers in my decision to invest,” says Mr Siddiki. “SouKare aims to define a new normal, in terms of convenienc­e and decision-making, in the healthcare products space; an area where customer service levels can be significan­tly optimise.”

Credential­s are certainly something Mr Khan has in abundance. After a childhood in his native Pakistan, he read computer science at Cambridge University in the UK, later gaining an MBA from Insead in Paris. He worked in investment banking and later management consulting with global leaders such as McKinsey and Oliver Weinmann.

That level of pedigree will certainly aid his pitch for bridge funding, which he hopes to complete by the end of the year to fund the roll out of the firm’s pharma offering and Abu Dhabi expansion.

Further expansion is also on the cards with 10 cities in the broader Mena region, including Istanbul, Cairo, Riyadh, Jeddah, Kuwait and Karachi, already selected. All have a high gross domestic product or a very high population, says Mr Khan.

With the venture going to plan to date, Mr Khan says the one thing he would alter is his staffing strategy. In the early days he relied on interns, thinking that hiring would happen organicall­y.

“That’s something I would have done before I started because once you are running the business, the operation keeps you away from anything else so you don’t have time to interview people.”

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 ?? Pawan Singh / The National ?? Faraz Khan shrewdly identified a market niche that his business souKare now caters to
Pawan Singh / The National Faraz Khan shrewdly identified a market niche that his business souKare now caters to

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