In what is surely a huge development for Pakistan and its emerging tech economy, Uber — the taxi-calling service smartphone app that has become increasingly popular world wide is all set to launch operations in Pakistan soon.
“We can confirm we are currently recruiting for a team in Lahore, and are very excited about launching in Pakistan as we see huge potential in the way we can help people move around their city safely and reliably,” Shaden Abdellatif, communications manager for Uber’s Middle East and Africa operations told ValueWalk, an online publication.
“We are also excited about the opportunity for economic empowerment we can bring to the drivers we partner with,” Abdellatif added.
This development came to light after the company’s career page listed three vacancies in Pakistan, specifically Lahore. The three positions form what industry insiders refer to as Uber’s expansion ‘troika’: a general manager, operations and logistics manager, and a marketing manager who are put in place before Uber launches into a new market. It is already operating in hundreds of cities worldwide.
Uber’s global success has spawned competitors around the world, many of which now rival Uber in certain markets. In neighbouring India, Ola cabs – a company started by an IIT graduate has received hundreds of millions of dollars in funding and is beating Uber at its own game. Similarly, Didi Kuaidi, a Chinese home-grown Uber, has also raised several billion dollars and is dominant over Uber in marketshare there.
Careem is another Uber-clone but one that has so far focused on the Arab market. What makes its arrival into Pakistan even more interesting is that one of its co-founders is a Pakistani based in Dubai.
“We were expecting Uber’s arrival. Competition is good and we are really excited about their announcement,” said Managing Director Careem, Junaid Iqbal.
“Uber’s arrival will only help develop the ecosystem and speed up the adoption of sharing/on-demand economy in Pakistan. It also brings the right kind of attention to our country,” said Iqbal.
When asked about the now inevitable proposition of competing with a company that is believed to be currently valued at around $70 billion – twice the total market cap of all companies listed on the Karachi Stock Exchange – Iqbal simple replied, “The pie is big enough for everyone.”
He was also quick to point out how Careem had no shortage of funds at its disposal with a working model already in place in the Middle East and North Africa.
“We are in the process of getting some serious backers on board. “We are behind Uber in some countries in the region, … in some they are behind us and in some we are head-to-head.”
Careem raised $10m last year in its second round of funding – a significant contributor being Al Tayyar Group, a Saudi conglormerate.
So how exactly will businesses, such as Careem, compete with a behemoth like Uber? According to Iqbal, the key was in ‘localisation’.
He went on to add how Careem’s approach would also be different in terms of payments. “In most markets. Uber offers credit card payments. We offer credit cards, cash and invoice payments (for corporate clients),” he added. However, having faced this same issue in cash-based India, Uber is adapting from its global model and allowing cash payments in that country and may very well do the same in Pakistan.
Careem isn’t the only player in the local market. Madeeha Hassan’s home-grown Savaree is among numerous others also trying to enter the ‘Uber’ ride-sharing and taxi space.
“It’s very exciting. It only validates the work we’ve been doing,” Madeeha says when asked about her thoughts on Uber entering the Pakistani market.
“There is a huge trust and culture issue. More importantly, there is a huge security issue,” she said, adding that Savaree was diligently working on this issue and doing things ‘differently’ when it came to ride sharing in Pakistan.
Going against the more formulaic positive announcements, the former head for Rocket Internet’s Easy Taxi service in Pakistan – yet another Uber clone that shut its operations earlier this year in Pakistan after failing to make a dent in the market, Adam Ghaznavi, was a little more pessimistic when asked what Uber’s arrival spelled for local competitors. “I think the security situation is always overestimated in Karachi and underestimated in Lahore,” he added.
Ghaznavi says the biggest problem in Pakistan is usage. “If you put all the numbers in a spreadsheet, it all looks great. But when you come down to doing it, it never really goes as planned,” he added.
Ghaznavi also managed to execute a little prank – adding more drama to Uber’s announcement – or what he called “an out of the box strategy at creating pre-launch brand recognition” for his new web marketing company, by posting a status on Facebook saying, “Uber starting its operation in Pakistan and guess who is the next GM.”
He later apologised for the post. “I’ve been getting calls nonstop. My dad just called me to congratulate me. Things clearly got out of hand,” he said.
According to The New York Times, Uber is now the world’s most valuable private company, and a valuation of $70 billion would make it worth more than General Motors and Ford.
Careem, Savaree and many others are all in the game for that very reason: to get a piece of the action in Pakistan’s virtually untapped online ride-sharing market.
Some may also just be in it for the quick buck. “It could be one of the options available to us. At this point, we have nothing to lose,” said Madeeha when asked if her company would be willing to sell its operations to Uber.
But the real question is whether Uber – a company that has taken on governments, competitors, taxi drivers, tax authorities, journalists (and won) – is willing to share any of the pie at all.
Also read:New Delhi bans all web taxis after Uber rape allegations