Fly-Foot Helps Arab Football Fans Attend Matches Without Lifting a Finger
Football fans around the Arab region can now pick a game to
attend, pack their bags, and hop on a plane without a second
thought, thanks to Lebanese company Fly-Foot.
The company, which has been quietly building since 2011, offers
monthly ready-made or customized travel packages that secure every
details for Arab football fans, from flight to hotel, to
transportation to and from the match and to local
hotspots.
It sounds fun, but
when I first heard co-founder Rayan Ismail introduce his startup, I
wondered, why would someone need a company like Fly-Foot to
organize this kind of trip? How hard is it to book tickets and fly
somewhere to see a match? Here's why.
Getting a
large group to a game is difficult.
Before the economic crisis hit, Ismail worked in the banking
sector. He returned to Lebanon to work as a Senior Business
Analyst at Aramex Levant and Europe, but decided to focus on his
passion in his free time."I am in love with football and, at
the time, discovered that no one tapped into the online logistics
angle," he says.
He realized the scope
of the problem when trying to organize a trip to go watch a game in
Europe with friends: getting around town was difficult, and finding
tickets for a large group was near impossible.
Fly-Foot now works to fix that; fans can customize their trip,
turning it into an adventure beyond the match itself. Clients are
ferried to an from the airport in branded Fly-Foot taxis, and, thanks
to partnerships with
hotels in cities throughout Europe, they can book rooms directly on
the site.
Partnerships with teams and stadiums, that the startup carefully
built up over time, also mean that Fly-Foot now has access
to an unlimited number
of seats per game, so it can serve large groups of fans
travelling together.
"We took advantage of
the current economic crisis in Spain and made deals with agents who
already took their own lot of tickets from the club. We offer to
buy them all at once which is pretty suitable for the agent since
he avoids any risk of not selling them all later on", explains
Ismail.
Arab Hospitality in Europe
Although the startup hasn't spent a penny on marketing so far, integration with travel agencies has also allowed the startup to sell to more customers. "The agencies actually approached us themselves, first in Lebanon and we built on it in other countries like Jordan", says Ismail.
Bootstrapping the Model
To build the company from scratch, Ismail tapped into his personal contacts and childhood friends to partner with him, bringing on board five partners- one Jordanian, on Spanish, and the rest Lebanese.
"There was zero investment upfront; we only invested our efforts," says Ismail.
Rather, the team bootstrapped by advertising packages before actually buying them. "Step by step, as we earned a little profit, we bought other packages, and so on," he explains.
Over the past year,
the platform has served just over 200 clients,
most, unsurprisingly, from Lebanon, with a significant
portion from Saudi Arabia as well. Now, the startup is
seeking investment and looking to scale; a re-branding and the
addition of an online payment service last week should
help.
Is it Really a Niche Market?
Whether you are a football fan or not, sitting in a stadium and feeling the rush of cheering with thousands of fans is something worth being experienced at least once in a lifetime. This takes the startup further than targeting just one niche market. If the team chooses to drive it towards building a football community and targeting tourists looking to visit the cities as well, they could sell to a global market, as long as the prices don't skyrocket.