Criticisms Linked To Recent Pivoting: CEO of Embattled Nigerian Transport Startup Treepz Shares New Details

treepz

Onyeka Akuma, the CEO of Treepz, an embattled Nigerian transportation startup, recently shared new details about the company’s pivot to car-sharing services across Nigeria, Ghana, Uganda, and Kenya. The announcement, made on May 3, 2023, drew mixed reactions from the media and technology communities. While some applauded the innovation, others expressed concerns about the business model and market size.

Treepz originally launched in Lagos, Nigeria, in September 2019, pioneering bus hailing in West Africa. However, the public transportation industry’s high price-sensitivity posed a challenge, with the company spending $1.5 for every $1 earned and resulting in a negative gross margin of 5%, Akuma says in a statement. After carefully analyzing their offerings, Treepz then decided to prioritize car rental as their core business and discontinue other services. The decision to re-launch their B2C product with a car-sharing model and marketplace for car rental companies (hosts) as their single focus was made on May 3, 2023.

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Besides financial considerations, Treepz notes that it recognized several compelling trends that underscored the untapped potential of the car-sharing/rental market in Africa. First, the company observed a notable shift in consumer preferences towards flexible transportation solutions, with people and organizations prioritizing convenience, affordability, and environmental sustainability. Second, globally, the car-rental market is expected to reach USD $121.1 billion by the end of 2031, with more individuals and businesses seeking flexible transportation options. Third, over the past decade, the mobility landscape has undergone a transformation driven by technological advancements, rapid population growth, and urbanization.

Treepz, a Nigerian shared mobility startup, has raised $2.8M
Source: Treepz

Treepz claims prioritizes both sustainable and equitable transport, recognizing that they can coexist and reinforce each other. The company says the new business model addresses the issue of equitable access to transportation in Africa. Treepz is a car-sharing marketplace that connects car owners with individuals in need of transportation. Through the platform, owners can rent out their vehicles on an hourly, daily, weekly, and monthly basis, and users can conveniently browse, book, and unlock cars using the Treepz app.

By leveraging the sharing economy, Treepz aims to promote resource efficiency and reduce congestion. By offering a cost-effective and convenient solution, the company believes they can attract price-conscious consumers who are more responsive to changes in price, thereby impacting price elasticity and expanding the addressable market of car-sharing.

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer, who has several years of experience working in Africa’s burgeoning tech startup industry. He has closed multi-million dollar deals bordering on venture capital, private equity, intellectual property (trademark, patent or design, etc.), mergers and acquisitions, in countries such as in the Delaware, New York, UK, Singapore, British Virgin Islands, South Africa, Nigeria etc. He’s also a corporate governance and cross-border data privacy and tax expert. 
As an award-winning writer and researcher, he is passionate about telling the African startup story, and is one of the continent’s pioneers in this regard

Nigerian Mobility Startup, Treepz, Acquires Uganda’s Ugabus, Raises $2.8M Seed

Ugabus, a Ugandan bus firm that combines inter-city bus carriers, has been bought by Treepz (previously Plentywaka) a mobility-as-a-service platform in Nigeria . While the specifics of the deal were not disclosed, Treepz CEO and co-founder Onyeka Akumah stated that the acquisition was made possible by a recent $1.5 million investment that served as a follow-on to a previous seed round.

“We’ll be able to service most of the major cities in Uganda, but the good thing about East Africa is they have very seamless borders between the countries, so it’s easy to move from Uganda to Rwanda, Uganda to Tanzania, Tanzania to Burundi, and so forth,” Akumah said in an interview. “The plan is to extend into Tanzania and Burundi first. Those are places we will pay attention to next year. We are also really interested in Ethiopia. So the same thing we were doing with Ghana, across Ghana to Togo and Benin from Nigeria for the West African region. So next year, we will consolidate on our positions on East Africa and West Africa and start collapsing into on in sub-Saharan Africa.”

Treepz CEO and co-founder Onyeka Akumah
Treepz CEO and co-founder Onyeka Akumah

The seed extension, which included new investors such as Japan’s Uncovered Fund, Dubai’s Blanford Capital and Jonomi Capital, and Egypt’s Jedar Capital, builds on Treepz’s $1.3 million round in August, which was used to buy Stabus, a Ghanaian bus firm, and expand across the continent. Treepz has raised $2.8 million in the seed round.

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Treepz has also recently acquired money from Google’s African Investment Fund, which it plans to utilize to aggressively expand its on-demand ride-sharing and intercity bus ticketing services in Africa. Treepz had previously stated that it intended to expand as far as Toronto, where it received funding after being accepted into Techstars Toronto, but it is now focusing on helping to digitize and modernize Africa’s transportation ecosystem.

“Treepz is building the most important mobility infrastructure in Africa’s megacities,” Takuma Terakubo, CEO and general partner of Uncovered Fund, said in a statement. “The development of public transportation is essential in African countries where urbanization is advancing.”

Why The Acquisition?

Treepz’s initial step into the East African market will be through this acquisition, which will see Treepz entirely absorb all of Ugabus’ business and staff. According to Treepz, Ugabus, which will be renamed Treepz Uganda on December 1, presently has 70% of the country’s bus operators on its platform, with over 50,000 clients using the service to travel between Ugandan cities.

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Treepz Uganda will begin with intercity and corporate services when it starts this week.

A Look At What Treepz Does

Previously known as Plentywaka before its rebranding, Treepz’s business model in Lagos, its hometown, comprises of three verticals. “Daily Treepz,” the main service, is similar to Uber for minivans and buses. It provides riders in a city with scheduled daily itineraries from bus stop to bus stop, as well as the ability to book seats and pay via a digital wallet system. The startup’s intercity bus service, called “Travel Treepz,” allows Treepz to function as an aggregator for other bus firms, similar to how Ugabus works. Finally, Treepz just launched corporate bookings, a service that provides transportation for corporations.

“We will look at the opportunity of doing Daily Treepz there in the future, but for now it’s easier for us to launch there with what we already have and what the team is already used to,” said Akumah.

Because Treepz is a daily service that people use twice a day, five days a week, and spend an average of $2 to $3 per day, said Akumah, intracity travels account for the majority of Treepz clients.

“Bus operators are starting to see us as a technology partner against competition,” said Akumah. “The Treepz technology as an inventory management system can now be used by the bus operators to power their different systems. And that … turns out to be a tremendous opportunity for growth for us. So we see a future where as we aggregate bus operators for city to city, and we also work with bus operators within cities. It just grows the numbers over time around the transactions that happen on our platform.”

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 write

Nigeria Mobility Startup Plentywaka rebrands as Treepz

Onyeka Akumah, Co-Founder and CEO of Plentywaka

In line with its continental expansion mission, Nigeria’s leading mobility startup, PlentyWaka which provides hassle-free shared rides on-demand, has announced that it is changing its name to Treepz. This is coming a few weeks after raising $1.2 million seed funding and acquiring Ghana’s leading mobility startup, Stabus.

Onyeka Akumah, Co-Founder and CEO of Plentywaka
Onyeka Akumah, Co-Founder and CEO of Plentywaka

The startup in a statement said that the move presents an opportunity to align the company name with its Pan-African expansion plan. It will also better represent the vision of the company which is to build the largest shared mobility platform across Africa.

Pronounced  ‘Trips’ (Treepz), the company has also released a new company logo. Its core service offerings will remain the same but with new names; Daily Treepz, Travel Treepz, and Corporate Treepz. Its existing mission statement and “black & yellow” brand colours will also be retained for marketing and branding purposes.

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Existing users won’t have to take any action as the new app will automatically force an update to the new Treepz experience in Africa.

Its CEO, Onyeka Akumah said that “This name change is a result of in-depth discussions with our stakeholders, partners and staff. With our plans for sub-saharan African expansion in a few months, we discovered the word “waka” means many things different from trips or movement. So, we decided to change it to something exciting that will allow us to scale fast.

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Today I’m excited to introduce you to Treepz and you can create many variations from it (my treepz, daily treepz, travel treepz, holiday treepz, corporate treepz)”

The name Treepz embodies everything that happens on the road, travelling across cities, within cities and it gives a cool vibe to the experience, he added. 

The new name boldly states our mission to provide safe, convenient and comfortable trips across Africa with plans for our expansion to 6 countries in 2 years on the continent.”

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry