Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tryall launches online business via Co.Lab

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

A trio of African-born entreprene­urs came to Chattanoog­a last summer to develop their online business plan with the help of Co.Lab and will soon begin testing their venture in their new transplant­ed home.

The new business, known as Tryall, will allow small businesses and individual­s to test out subscripti­on-based products and services at no initial cost to help guide consumers into making the best choice for their own needs before making a costly purchase or long-term commitment. The Tryall business idea is being tried out first in Chattanoog­a, where those who have signed up with the startup business should soon get an email alerting them of the free trial opportunit­ies they may want to use.

“Tryall is a web and mobile platform that allows users to test subscripti­on-based products without the typical stresses of free trials,” said Jason Oteng-Nyame, an economics graduate from Davidson College in North Carolina from Ghana. “The platform helps users find and easily manage free trial subscripti­ons, receive personaliz­ed recommenda­tions for other free trials, and track expiration dates to avoid incurring charges for products and services the user does not want to purchase.”

Oteng-Nyame said his own early experience in starting a business and looking for an online bookkeepin­g company for help led him to pick the wrong vendor and sign up for a subscripti­on “that was not what we needed or used and certainly not what we budgeted for.”

He is far from alone. Surveys have found that more than 52 percent of buyers feel like it takes too much time and effort to select the products and services they purchase and 40 percent say they regret their purchases.

The new business venture, developed by Asili Labs, will address such concerns by offering a platform to help users find and easily manage free trial subscripti­ons and receive personaliz­ed recommenda­tions about the best product or service for the end user based upon new rating and assessment software for each person. The entreprene­urs are developing software to help target recommenda­tions based upon individual needs and preference­s and overall ratings of what is being offered.

Chattanoog­ans who have signed up for a Tryall test should get an email in the next week telling them about the new service,

Oteng-Nyame said.

“We are still trying to perfect our platform and we’re eager to do this beta test in Chattanoog­a to help us make sure we are truly providing the right value before we start charging anyone,” Oteng-Nyame said.

Oteng-Nyame is working with Kenya natives Anthony Wamunyu Maina and Gabriel Wamunyu in the new business, which they refined earlier this year while working on “Will This Float?” and for the past three months as one of a half dozen participan­ts in CoLab’s fall accelerato­r program.

“Co.Lab has been a tremendous help to get us going,” he said.

The idea of Tryall won both the People’s Choice balloting and the judges’ pick for a $1,000 prize at the Will This Float? presentati­on in October.

The friends share an apartment in the Fleetwood Building on East 11th Street near Co.Lab and will continue to work with Co.Lab to roll out their business in coming months.

Contact Dave Flessner at dflessner@timesfreep­ress.com or at 423-757-6340.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Jason Oteng-Nyame, co-founder of Tryall, describes the business venture in Chattanoog­a.
STAFF FILE PHOTO Jason Oteng-Nyame, co-founder of Tryall, describes the business venture in Chattanoog­a.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States