Waseem Afzal

7.8K posts

Waseem Afzal

Waseem Afzal

@WassWass

Just an average guy digitising brands in MENA since 2004.

ÜT: 25.191483,55.264126 Katılım Mayıs 2009
4.2K Takip Edilen999 Takipçiler
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
farrukh saleem
farrukh saleem@SaleemFarrukh·
1. Three startups 2. ABHI 3. BAZAAR 4. HABALL 5. All three from Karachi 6. All founded after 2019 7. All backed by global capital Mohammad Ali. 31 years old. Pakistani founder. Brilliant app idea. Needs Rs50 million. No money. No assets. No track record. No bank will touch him. Fifteen years ago, Pakistan had virtually zero institutional venture capital. Zero. Today — 53 funds. Karachi alone: 23. An entire ecosystem. Built from scratch. In one generation. Here’s what a VC does: it raises a pool of money from wealthy individuals, institutions and pension funds — and bets it on young companies that banks won’t touch. Any one of the homegrown Pakistani VCs — Zayn VC, Sarmayacar, i2i Ventures, Lakson Investments, Fatima Gobi Ventures — can write Mohammad Ali a Rs50 million cheque. And then there are the internationals. Indus Valley Capital — diaspora-led, US-based. Alter Global — San Francisco. Karandaaz — backed by UK Aid and the Gates Foundation. All of them. Looking at Pakistan. Writing cheques for Mohammad Ali. Imagine: Fifteen years ago, Mohammad Ali had no options. Today, he has 53. For decades, the only way a Pakistani entrepreneur could get capital was through bank loans or family money. VCs change that entirely. They fund the idea, absorb the risk, and ask for nothing back if the startup fails. That’s a fundamentally different relationship between capital and ambition — and it’s still very new in Pakistan. In 2021, Ali Ladhubhai and Omair Ansari of Karachi founded ABHI, an app that employees download, connect it to their employer’s payroll, and withdraw earned salary on demand — before payday. By 2026, ABHI had raised $57.8 million, expanded into the UAE and Saudi Arabia, and acquired a microfinance bank. ABHI also earned a World Economic Forum Technology Pioneer designation. ABHI has over 1 million users and is valued at around $90 million. Potential IPO by 2028. Bazaar is a B2B (business-to-business) platform — meaning its “customers” are small shopkeepers and businesses. Shopkeepers use it to order inventory for their stores digitally instead of calling a distributor. Think of it as an app for shop owners, not shoppers. Bazaar raised $108 million from Tiger Global and Dragoneer. Haball is also a B2B payments infrastructure platform — meaning it works behind the scenes connecting large corporations with their distributors and suppliers automating invoicing, payments and supply chain financing. Haball processes $3 billion in transactions. Plain fact: ABHI is an app in your pocket. Bazaar is the app behind your neighbourhood kiryana store. Haball is the invisible financial plumbing connecting Pakistan’s entire supply chain. Three very different products — one common thread: Pakistani founders, Pakistani problems, global capital. All three success stories are from Karachi. Yes, Pakistan’s startup revolution is currently a Karachi story. Lahore is catching up but the capital, the founders, and the exits are concentrated in one city — Karachi. Three startups. All from Karachi. All founded after 2019. All backed by global capital. Here is how fast this has moved. In 2015, Pakistan had almost no institutional venture capital. Today — 53 funds. $4.77 billion in cumulative funding. Tiger Global. Dragoneer. The Gates Foundation. The Qatar Investment Authority. All here. All betting on Pakistan. An entire venture capital ecosystem — built in 10 years. That is not progress. That is a revolution. Remember Mohammad Ali? 31 years old. No money. No assets. No track record. Fifteen years ago, no options. Today — 53 funds. Mohammad Ali’s time has come. Mohammad Ali. 31 years old. Pakistani founder. Brilliant app idea. Needs Rs50 million. No money. No assets. No track record. No bank will touch him. Fifteen years ago, Pakistan had virtually zero institutional venture capital. Zero. Today — 53 funds. Karachi alone: 23. An entire ecosystem. Built from scratch. In one generation. Here’s what a VC does: it raises a pool of money from wealthy individuals, institutions and pension funds — and bets it on young companies that banks won’t touch. Any one of the homegrown Pakistani VCs — Zayn VC, Sarmayacar, i2i Ventures, Lakson Investments, Fatima Gobi Ventures — can write Mohammad Ali a Rs50 million cheque. And then there are the internationals. Indus Valley Capital — diaspora-led, US-based. Alter Global — San Francisco. Karandaaz — backed by UK Aid and the Gates Foundation. All of them. Looking at Pakistan. Writing cheques for Mohammad Ali. Imagine: Fifteen years ago, Mohammad Ali had no options. Today, he has 53. For decades, the only way a Pakistani entrepreneur could get capital was through bank loans or family money. VCs change that entirely. They fund the idea, absorb the risk, and ask for nothing back if the startup fails. That’s a fundamentally different relationship between capital and ambition — and it’s still very new in Pakistan. In 2021, Ali Ladhubhai and Omair Ansari of Karachi founded ABHI, an app that employees download, connect it to their employer’s payroll, and withdraw earned salary on demand — before payday. By 2026, ABHI had raised $57.8 million, expanded into the UAE and Saudi Arabia, and acquired a microfinance bank. ABHI also earned a World Economic Forum Technology Pioneer designation. ABHI has over 1 million users and is valued at around $90 million. Potential IPO by 2028. Bazaar is a B2B (business-to-business) platform — meaning its “customers” are small shopkeepers and businesses. Shopkeepers use it to order inventory for their stores digitally instead of calling a distributor. Think of it as an app for shop owners, not shoppers. Bazaar raised $108 million from Tiger Global and Dragoneer. Haball is also a B2B payments infrastructure platform — meaning it works behind the scenes connecting large corporations with their distributors and suppliers automating invoicing, payments and supply chain financing. Haball processes $3 billion in transactions. Plain fact: ABHI is an app in your pocket. Bazaar is the app behind your neighbourhood kiryana store. Haball is the invisible financial plumbing connecting Pakistan’s entire supply chain. Three very different products — one common thread: Pakistani founders, Pakistani problems, global capital. All three success stories are from Karachi. Yes, Pakistan’s startup revolution is currently a Karachi story. Lahore is catching up but the capital, the founders, and the exits are concentrated in one city — Karachi. Three startups. All from Karachi. All founded after 2019. All backed by global capital. Here is how fast this has moved. In 2015, Pakistan had almost no institutional venture capital. Today — 53 funds. $4.77 billion in cumulative funding. Tiger Global. Dragoneer. The Gates Foundation. The Qatar Investment Authority. All here. All betting on Pakistan. An entire venture capital ecosystem — built in 10 years. That is not progress. That is a revolution. Remember Mohammad Ali? 31 years old. No money. No assets. No track record. Fifteen years ago, no options. Today — 53 funds. Mohammad Ali’s time has come. The only question is whether Pakistan will get out of his way.
English
17
36
191
27.5K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Uncover AI
Uncover AI@uncover_ai·
🚨 BREAKING: Claude can now completely rewire your brain so you can learn anything in a few clicks. Here are 7 Claude prompts to learn anything 10x faster:
English
5
93
460
80K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
Here are 10 GitHub repos that quietly print money while you sleep. 1. Cal. com Open-source Calendly. Fork it, white-label it, sell to dentists and lawyers for $200/month. The founders hit $5M ARR in 3 years doing exactly this. Repo → github.com/calcom/cal.com 2. Plausible Analytics Privacy-first Google Analytics. Self-host it, resell to agencies for $50/month per client. Two founders bootstrapped this to 7 figures. Repo → github.com/plausible/anal… 3. Ghost Open-source Substack with 100% margin. 1,000 readers at $5/month equals $60,000 a year. Forever. Repo → github.com/TryGhost/Ghost 4. n8n Open-source Zapier. Sell automation services for $500-$2,000 per setup. n8n raised $14M because the agency model behind it works. Repo → github.com/n8n-io/n8n 5. Supabase Free Firebase replacement. Build a SaaS in a weekend, charge $29-$99/month. They raised $116M for a reason. Repo → github.com/supabase/supab… 6. Medusa Open-source Shopify. Take 5% on every sale forever. Zero rev share to Shopify. Repo → github.com/medusajs/medusa 7. AppFlowy Open-source Notion. Sell self-hosted to enterprises worried about data privacy. They raised $30M because this market is massive. Repo → github.com/AppFlowy-IO/Ap… 8. Coolify Open-source Vercel and Heroku. Charge developers $20/month to manage their deployments. Replace their $200 Vercel bill. Repo → github.com/coollabsio/coo… 9. Listmonk Open-source Mailchimp. Send unlimited emails for the cost of an AWS bill. Resell to agencies at 10x markup. Repo → github.com/knadh/listmonk 10. Penpot Open-source Figma. Sell self-hosted design tools to agencies who refuse to upload client files to the cloud. Repo → github.com/penpot/penpot The difference between developers who build features and developers who build businesses is one decision. Pick one of these. Fork it this weekend. Ship it next week. The founders behind these repos already proved the model. Save this. Share it with the developer in your life who deserves to break free. 100% free. 100% open source.
Nav Toor tweet mediaNav Toor tweet mediaNav Toor tweet mediaNav Toor tweet media
English
109
792
6.1K
436.6K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Rajiv
Rajiv@Rajiv1841·
Just listen to this GOAT conversation between Ian Bishop & Virat Kohli, you will get a cricketing masterclass conversation in 2 minutes♥️
English
53
2.2K
17.6K
530.9K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Ryan Hart
Ryan Hart@thisdudelikesAI·
Omg… ChatGPT just turned Reddit complaints into startup ideas people might actually pay for. Here’s the exact prompt I used:
English
10
32
326
55.1K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Nick Zviadadze 🇺🇦
Nick Zviadadze 🇺🇦@Nick_zv_·
SEO in 2025: ❌ Ahrefs for keyword research ❌ Human prospecting for links ❌ Surfer for content optimization ❌ Screaming Frog for tech seo ❌ 2-3 content writers for blogs SEO now: ✅ Claude + API keys Here's how I run my ENTIRE SEO operation through Claude 👇
English
25
52
441
53K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Salman.
Salman.@TsMeSalman1_·
THE GREATEST EVER PROMO FOR THE PSL FINAL CAPTAINS' PHOTOSHOOT…!!! 🤩 - PSL management absolutely cooked with this one. Next level creativity. 🔥
English
59
279
4K
153K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
hazharoon
hazharoon@hazharoon·
The saddest thing about PSL 11 is that no team picked Khawaja Arham. Sialkot boy. Mark my words. In a few years every team will want him. 6 foot 4 powerful opening bat. Can take bowling attacks apart. Scored 295 in a club game recently. Can bowl too.
English
12
13
206
19.1K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Crazy Moments
Crazy Moments@Crazymoments01·
Pelicans saw a mother dog in trouble and didn't hesitate. Nature is undefeated
English
199
653
8.4K
1.7M
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Sheri.
Sheri.@CallMeSheri1_·
THE GAME-CHANGING OVER...!!! 🔥 - Khushdil Shah treated Shaheen Afridi like an ordinary bowler. - A brain fade over from Shaheen.
English
158
191
3.2K
211.4K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Dan Qayyum
Dan Qayyum@DanQayyum·
Sharif in Riyadh. Munir in Tehran. Same day. Pakistan is doing what the UN, the EU, and the Security Council combined cannot. One country holding the ceasefire together.
Dan Qayyum tweet mediaDan Qayyum tweet media
English
185
818
3.9K
71.2K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Ahmed
Ahmed@ThisahmedR·
The difference in attire by Field Marshal Asim Munir while receiving the Iranian and U.S. delegations is not accidental, it reflects diplomatic signaling rather than just protocol variation. When he received the Iranian delegation in full military uniform, it carried a strategic message. It is a signal to Israel that Pakistan stands firmly engaged on security matters concerning Iran, and that this relationship has a defense dimension, not just diplomacy. On the other hand, his meeting with JD Vance in civilian attire reflects a different diplomatic posture. Wearing a civilian suit aligns with standard diplomatic norms, projecting a softer, statesman-like image rather than a security-centric one.
Ahmed tweet mediaAhmed tweet media
English
146
831
7K
660.1K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Cappuccino.
Cappuccino.@drac0_d0rmiens·
I love this video of Khan Sahab. A simple cake you'd find in your neighborhood bakery. Cuts it, takes his piece, picks the part that fell on the table, and he's already finished it by the time the camera pans back to him. Nothing extravagant. From the people, for the people.
English
58
274
1.6K
80.1K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
𝐀
𝐀@was_abdd·
The Champions started their campaign with Victory. 💚 (No Coaches, No mentor, No data analyst). Just Sameen, Shaheen & Sikandar doing mock auctions, Drafts, fantasizing elevens while playing Luddo & won LQ THREE titles in the last FOUR years!!!
English
15
27
348
35.9K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Gracious Onuoha
Gracious Onuoha@grayshurz·
DOCTORS WILL NEVER TELL YOU THIS: 1. Anxiety – Magnesium, B6, Omega‑3 2. Insomnia – Magnesium, B12, D 3. Brain fog – B1, B12, Omega‑3 4. Low libido – Zinc, D, B3 5. PMS – B6, Magnesium, E 6. Constipation – Magnesium, C, Fiber 7. Eye twitching – Magnesium, B12, Potassium 8. Irritability – B1, B6, Magnesium 9. Sugar cravings – Chromium, Magnesium, Zinc 10. Depression – D, B12, Omega‑3 Your “mental health” might be a micronutrient deficiency in disguise.
English
5
73
546
17.9K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Oscar Patel
Oscar Patel@OscarPatel·
The Way You Walk Changes Your Facial Structure
English
229
2K
17.2K
2.4M
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
Amir
Amir@Khanu_3·
Last time when HBL PSL was played behind closed doors, this iconic interview took place…
English
8
71
1.5K
177.6K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
RAVI KUMAR SAHU
RAVI KUMAR SAHU@RAVIKUMARSAHU78·
Instead of watching a movie, learn OpenClaw in 317 minutes.
English
7
115
523
27.9K
Waseem Afzal retweetledi
GREG ISENBERG
GREG ISENBERG@gregisenberg·
i heard about a guy in a small town in england who turned his openclaw into a short form video marketing machine millions of views, steady app downloads, and revenue coming in every day i needed to find out how he was doing it 1. spin up an ai “employee” using openclaw 2. give it one job like grow your app with tiktokk 3. give it access to tiktokk analytics, a browser to research and image/video tools to create content 4. the openclaw studies your niche and starts generating slideshows and videos 5. every post feeds performance data back into the system views → hook quality downloads → CTA quality revenue → funnel quality the openclaw then iterates on - new hooks - new formats - new CTAs until it finds winners one of his posts hit 170k+ views and the system keeps improving because the analytics loop feeds back into the content generation so the agent slowly learns what works what i like about this is the framing most people think about ai tools this is different you spin up an ai employee you give it a job and let it run the loop thanks to @oliverhenry for coming on the @startupideaspod today more like this soon, i will share the most interesting stories and gatekeep nothing this episode was dripping in sauce i gotta try this and see if it works kinda wild if it does watch
English
158
317
3.4K
1.3M