The National - News

Book summary start-up Wajeez raises $3m in funding round led by STV

- DEEPTHI NAIR

Wajeez, an app that offers Arabic audio and text summaries of non-fiction English books by foreign and local writers, has secured $3 million (11.25m Saudi riyals) through an early stage (pre-Series A) funding round led by technology venture capital fund STV.

Set up in December 2020, the audiobook company already has more than 800,000 subscriber­s. Wajeez, which has offices in Amman and Riyadh, currently has a library of more than 3,500 Arabic audio and text summaries.

Other participan­ts in the funding round included Abu Dhabi’s Shorooq Partners, Jordan’s Mawdoo3 and Wise Ventures.

“Despite there being more than 400 million Arabic speakers globally, there is relatively little Arabic content available. People in the region often have a preference for shortened summaries of books and content, rather than full books,”said Wajeez co-founder and chief executive Mohammad Zatara.

“Through Wajeez, we offer anyone the opportunit­y to distil the main points from the most popular and award-winning non-fiction books, in Arabic, saving people the time while still extracting the key points.”

Although Arabic-speaking Mena users comprise 7 per cent of the world’s internet users, Arabic content constitute­s only 3 per cent of overall internet content, highlighti­ng a big gap between demand and content, according to Statista.

Start-ups in the Mena region secured $1.03 billion in funding last year, up 13 per cent compared with 2019, according to data platform Magnitt. E-commerce start-ups and FinTech companies received the bulk of the money.

Wajeez was founded by Mr Zatara, former chief executive of Amman online book shop Faylasof, and Rami Abu Jbara, a former executive at Sky News Arabia and Asharq News, who now leads the company’s content strategy as a co-founder and chief content officer.

In addition to text and audio summaries, Wajeez aims to expand into shortened podcasts (WajeezCast) and business-to-business partnershi­ps. This is in addition to developing products in other languages such as Turkish and Urdu in its next phase of growth.

“We are happy to partner with a fast-growing start-up [such as] Wajeez, which marks our first investment in the Levant,” said Talal Damen, senior associate at STV.

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