Is the Middle East the new land of opportunity?
Before the uprising in Tahrir Square, young entrepreneurs had been creating their own opportunities throughout the Middle East and North Africa. For investors brave enough to overcome the existing political strife, the pay-offs could be huge.
This article was originally published in Fortune.
The great science fiction writer
Arthur C. Clarke famously said that revolutions are most often
overestimated in the short run and underestimated in the long run.
One need look no further than recent events in Middle East and
North Africa, the region known as MENA, to know that the long run
is now.
Many investors understandably
remain on the sidelines of a region long caught in a narrative of
political unrest, poverty and corruption. Others, however, are
betting on a new generation of entrepreneurs writing their own
narratives of technology and innovation at a regional and global
scale.
Arif Naqvi, Pakistani-born founder
of Abraaj Capital, the largest private equity firm in the global
emerging markets, knows these entrepreneurs well. "These young
populations have strong aspirations for a better life and are
better educated, better connected, more politically aware and have
a stronger sense of national pride and dignity than many give them
credit for," he says. "As such, they want to have a voice in
deciding their own futures. "
Ahmed Alfi, who returned to Egypt
after a 40-year absence 18 of them investing in successful tech and
media companies in the U.S. notes that recent events electrified
these voices in his country for an almost patriotic mission.
"Egyptians have always loved Egypt, but they haven't always felt
that Egypt belonged to them," he says. "People are feeling
empowered now, they have demonstrated together for their rights and
have stood guard together over their homes and families. They are
responsible for Egypt now."
This empowerment has recharged the
entrepreneurial energy throughout the region. "These levels of
energy and passion are the bedrock of entrepreneurship," Naqvi
says. "The events have given people self confidence that will
translate into vibrant economic activity when the situation
normalizes."
Often forgotten in today's
uncertainty are the region's remarkable market dynamics. Begin with
a population of 320 million people, nearly twice the size of
Brazil, with a GDP larger than Russia and India, and per capita GDP
nearly twice China's. Add disposable income growing 50% over the
past three years to eclipse $1 trillion in 2010. Make it a young
market, with over 100 million people under the age of 15, who love
their connectivity and mobile phones. Mobile penetration, in fact,
will approach 100% in three years. Social media penetration hits
25%, growing 125% year over year. There are more college and
graduate students and engineers turning to start-up and
medium-sized ventures than ever before.
Both Naqvi and Alfi are hoping to
capitalize on that talent. Abraaj raised hundreds of millions of
dollars last fall as the largest player to invest specifically in
small- and mid-cap tech innovation companies in the region. Alfi
recently launched the newest MENA venture capital fund, Sawari
Ventures, with investors including Naguib Sawiris, executive
chairman of a leading regional and global telecom company, and one
of the courageous executives to remain in Egypt and support reform.
They are not alone.
Opportunity in Arabic and
Beyond
Usama Fayyad also returned to the
region from years in Silicon Valley, having created and sold
several successful technology and data companies, including one to
Yahoo. He heads Oasis500, one of the first start-up tech
incubators, backed by the Jordanian government and private sector.
His goal is to invest in 500 regional start-ups within five years.
With Arabic-speakers representing nearly 9% of the globe, and less
than 1% of all online content, he believes opportunities abound for
the region. "Arabic content is at least ten times smaller than
where it ought to be by population index, and of the seven trillion
ecommerce dollars worldwide, MENA represents $100 million," Fayyad
says. "This is all huge upside."
Arabic, Islamic and
culturally-attuned versions of proven successful web companies can
be quite lucrative. But Alfi and one of his partners, Hany Sonbaty
himself a development engineer and veteran of regional private
equity and tech investing see greater excitement in regional
start-ups embracing the global reach. "They have international yard
sticks," he notes. "They consider themselves citizens of the world
that have signed up to make their mark on the global scene and not
just on the local and regional levels." They are backing a young
team from Alexandria, Egypt that's creating the best-selling paid
weather app in the world, and considering an Egyptian,
Stanford-educated PhD who has patents pending for his technology
allowing significantly accelerated server speeds.
Investor support could not come at
a more critical juncture for the nascent movement toward
entrepreneurship. Too often, founders and CEOs who receive initial
funds from friends and family, "enter a veritable desert when it
comes to capital" notes Fayyad. While money has been available in
the region for some time for later-stage, profitable enterprises,
"most entrepreneurs never survive the desert crossing, and those
who do are totally alienated to the notion of raising capital for
equity having survived a harrowing prolonged ordeal."
It's too early to know whether
there will be one main hub of activity. Alfi and Sonbaty have
started in Cairo and remain committed to staying, for now. Egypt
has nearly a quarter of the region's population, a fifth of the
mobile subs and both mobile and Internet penetration that grew 40%
each per year over the last five years. There is already a broad
information tech environment, with nearly 3,700 companies employing
more than 150,000. It's a leading producer of film, print and video
in the region. But they focus on the wide local entrepreneur talent
itself. Sonbaty observes, "The raw number of individuals combined
with ingenuity and opportunity means you get many more and better
projects and ideas."
Fayyad has put his stake in Amman,
leveraging its well-trained IT population and a relatively low cost
of doing business. Located geographically in the heart of this
rapidly growing region, he notes Jordan is "an amazing place to do
start-ups that benefit from local strengths, political and legal
stabilities and its capitalist orientation it is a great
environment to operate and grow companies. "
Naqvi headquarters in Dubai. In
many ways, no other place in the region stands as better evidence
of the raw will it takes to create something that was never there
before. "Anyone who comes to this city state can only see and feel
the power of vision and determination," he says. "Dubai has become
the home to families and peoples from around the world. Dubai has
been a trendsetter. It is a first mover that has shown the way to
what this region can become."
Staying above the political
fray?
Business ideas are coming from
every corner of the region. Imagine the next leading animation firm
being Ox Animation, headquartered in Damascus and backed by Syrian
angel investors. Or how about the next great media enterprise being
the comic book/television series The 99, founded by Kuwaiti-based
clinical psychologist Dr. Naif al Mutawa, backed by
Abraaj?
Sonbaty notes that entrepreneurs
like these are moving at Internet speeds, refusing to wait for
fixes to the obvious political, infrastructure and economic
challenges of the region. "Most of all, the MENA region is
connected," he says. "The new generation is educating themselves
and bypassing failed systems. They are seeing online what can be
done and no longer being told what can't be done. They are hungry
for success and recognition."
To feed this hunger, these
investors know that their job is more than investment capital, but
the commitment to mentor and build an ecosystem that embraces
entrepreneurship. Naqvi with his friend Fadi Ghandour, who built
the region's largest logistics company and is viewed by many as a
god father of entrepreneurship in the region, hosted a sold-out
gathering of over 2,400 regional entrepreneurs and investors at
"Celebration of Entrepreneurship" in Dubai last November. They've
since launched what they hope will become a central, inclusive
portal dedicated to entrepreneurship in MENA.
Google was among the many global
tech companies in the region connecting entrepreneurs long before
its executive Wael Ghonim became a leader among the protesters. It
held a conference last December with the goal "to invest in the
Egyptian talent pool and to increase online penetration by giving
developers, academia and businesses the tools to grow local content
in order to make information more relevant and more accessible,"
says regional director Wael Fakharany. More than 2,000 people
attended over the course of three days. Similar sized gatherings
are happening regularly from Beirut to Morocco every
month.
Despite significant progress and
potential the narrative of political risk and concerns over rule of
law remain perhaps more uncertain than ever. There is no doubt,
Naqvi cautions, that "the direction will be determined by whether
regimes in the region realize that 21st century developments should
not be met by a 19th century mindset