The National - News

Zid looks to help more merchants seeking to set up shop online as Covid fuels digital shift

▶ Platform serves more than 5,000 businesses and is expanding in region, writes Fareed Rahman

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Zid, a Riyadh-based startup that helps businesses to set up online shops, is expanding across the GCC and Egypt after raising $2 million through an early stage funding round led by the UAE’s Global Ventures.

The company used the capital to boost its presence in Saudi Arabia and expand into newer markets such as the UAE, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain, Qatar and Egypt, co-founder and chief executive Sultan Al Asmi told The National.

Other investors in the round included Elm and Arzan Venture Capital

“There is a huge potential for growth,” says Mr Al Asmi. “We can simplify starting a new business digitally and we can help traditiona­l merchants upgrade their presence to online and offline at the same time.”

Online shopping gained momentum after government­s around the world introduced movement restrictio­ns to stop the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic. A number of retail companies in the region have invested heavily in their own online platforms to increase sales.

The Zid platform, which was unveiled in 2017, allows retailers to set up their own online shop through a few clicks. It integrates payment, warehousin­g and delivery systems to make it easier for companies to move online.

Mr Al Asmi says 80 businesses signed up for its services in its first year of operations. This jumped to about 700 businesses in the following year and the company now has more than 5,300 shops that trade through its platform to sell products ranging from clothes to perfumes and food products.

“In 2017, merchants did 4m Saudi riyals [$1.06m] in business and in 2018, we had 600 to 700 merchants who did 40m riyals, generated from 118,000 transactio­ns. In 2020, we exceeded 2 billion riyals in business, with more than four million transactio­ns.”

The company’s revenue also grew as the number of companies registered on the platform increased.

“In 2020, we achieved 1,000 per cent more revenue when compared to 2017,” he says, without giving a figure for the total revenue generated by the company during either period.

The company hired more customer-facing staff last year to boost online sales as demand grew during the pandemic.

“This team is about eight people. We go with them [customers] one to one. We go with them on webinars, create content, customise the content, do the analysis, understand what the obstacles are and try to facilitate and support.”

The company has raised $9m so far, including $2m in a 2019 round led by Riyadh-based Elm venture capital. It intends to raise additional funds to help it grow further but this “will be next year”, says Mr Al Asmi.

Start-ups in the Mena region secured record funding worth more than $1bn last year, according to data platform Magnitt.

The UAE, the Arab world’s second-biggest economy, had the lion’s share and was ranked first in terms of the number of deals while startups in Saudi Arabia, the Arab world’s biggest economy, clinched 18 per cent of the region’s deals and 15 per cent of total funding. The kingdom is also supporting start-up companies with financial aid and other resources.

“We had very good support from the government during the pandemic,” says Mr Al Asmi. “We had financial aid to support employees’ salaries and received 30 per cent of our payroll during the pandemic for six months. The government is also open to doing business with smaller companies such as us.”

Saudi Arabia unveiled 142 stimulus initiative­s worth more than 214bn riyals after the pandemic began last year. The Saudi Industrial Developmen­t Fund also provided $4.5bn in loans to mostly small and medium enterprise­s last year to support them amid the health crisis.

One of the challenges in the first two years of operations was finding the “right kind of talent”, says Mr Al Asmi.

“Nowadays, we have a lot of good talent in Saudi Arabia. Also, we are having customers who do not need any help and who are sophistica­ted enough to start and grow on their own.”

Zid currently employs 150 people. Most of them are in Riyadh but others work remotely from Egypt, the US, Vietnam and Syria.

The company offers two different e-commerce packages for businesses seeking to grow their online sales. A basic package, which costs 230 riyals a month, includes services such as registrati­on of the domain name and handling of online payments.

A “growth” package, which costs 460 riyals a month, offers consulting services, accounting systems and improves visibility on Google Maps. On top of this, other services such as digital marketing, photograph­y, packaging and co-working space are offered for a fee.

Mr Al Asmi owned gift and flower shops before he started Zid with his friend Mazen Al Darrab.

The company first focused on small businesses that were either working from home or had a single shop but lacked the resources or expertise to build their own websites. The platform was later expanded to house bigger businesses with more than one branch

that were able to pay for additional services.

The potential for growth is “huge” in Saudi Arabia as many people shift to online shopping, says Mr Al Asmi.

However, Zid faces competitio­n in the market from “one local company and a few regional companies”. Although only 4 per cent of total retail sales in the kingdom are made online, the medium “is fast catching up”, he says.

In a survey published last week, Saudi Arabia was identified by Mastercard as a country where e-commerce is growing rapidly, with the number of online shops that customers are buying from increasing by 33 per cent last year.

 ?? Zid ?? Saudi start-up Zid integrates payment, warehousin­g and delivery systems on its platform to make it easier for businesses to move online
Zid Saudi start-up Zid integrates payment, warehousin­g and delivery systems on its platform to make it easier for businesses to move online

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