Chefaa And Dabchy, The Only North African Startups Chosen For MENA’s First Google For Startups Accelerator

Tunisia’s “Dabchy”, an online fashion shop as well as Egyptian medicine delivery startup, Chefaa, are the only North African startups chosen among the 10 startups for the first “Google For Startups Accelerator” in the Middle East and North African region. 

Google’s program will ask each startup to describe and establish the problem they are working to solve.

“From there, knowledgeable experts from the startup industry and Google will monitor and help address the challenges each startup faces and organize workshops focused on machine learning technologies, design product development, customer acquisition and even leadership development,” said Salim Abid, Google’s regional manager of the developer ecosystem in the MENA region

Read also:Google Expands Kenya’s Accelerator Program, Donates $5m To Startups

“The MENA region is rich in local entrepreneurs who, during the pandemic, stepped up to solve unexpected challenges with innovative technology and resilience,” said Salim Abid, Google’s regional manager of the developer ecosystem in the MENA region,” he added. 

Read also: Plotting Africa’s Startup Funding Landscape: A List Of Over 500 Active Investors In The Last 5 Years

Here Is What You Need To Know

  • Out of more than 500 startups, only 10 were chosen to benefit from the monitoring and support of this accelerator of the American giant, which seeks through this mechanism to identify the “solvers” of the most innovative problems in the region. 
  • The program which targets tech startups has been based on criteria that include several factors, including the problem startups are trying to solve and how they create value for users.
  • It’s also about their willingness to use machine learning technology to solve business challenges and long-term sustainability of scale.
  • The 10 companies in the region were selected from more than 500 applicants. They specialize in several areas ranging from health technology to electronic commerce.
  • These are 3 Jordanian startups (Careers, Abwaab, Viavii), 3 from the United Arab Emirates (Designhubz, Lamsa and 360VUZ), an Egyptian (Chefaa), a Saudi woman (Lendo), and a startup from the Sultanate Oman (Nafas Meditation).

What Does Dabchy Do?

Founded by Amani Mansouri, Ghazi Ketata and Oussama Mahjoub, Dabchy that had initially started as a Facebook Group now has a community of over 400,000 users in Tunisia, Morocco, and Algeria, who use its web and mobile-based platform to buy and sell new (unused lying in one’s wardrobe), self-made, pre-owned (used) clothes and accessories for women and kids. Dabchy’s Android app has been downloaded over 100,000 times.

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In Tunisia where most of the Dabchy’s business comes from, it takes care of the entire buying and selling process including shipping and payments.
The startup claims to have doubled the catalog of items listed on its platform to 420,000 which (it says) makes it one of the largest online stores in Tunisia. The users, according to a statement by Dabchy, are adding more than 2,000 new items every day.

Read also: Why Are Investors Rushing After North Africa’s Fashion Startups?

What Does Chefaa Do?

Founded in 2017 by Doaa Aref and Dr. Rasha Rady, Chefaa connects patients and pharmacies, enabling chronic patients to schedule, order, and refill their recurring prescriptions as well as other non-pharmaceutical products from pharmacies, through its web or mobile apps. The Egyptian startup claims to have fulfilled hundreds of thousands of orders to date.

Chefaa, serving as a marketplace, when a customer places an order, routes it to the nearest pharmacy who then delivers the medicines to the customers.

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer who has advised startups across Africa on issues such as startup funding (Venture Capital, Debt financing, private equity, angel investing etc), taxation, strategies, etc. He also has special focus on the protection of business or brands’ intellectual property rights ( such as trademark, patent or design) across Africa and other foreign jurisdictions.
He is well versed on issues of ESG (sustainability), media and entertainment law, corporate finance and governance.
He is also an award-winning writer

Dabchy Chefaa Google Accelerator