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Strategies to scale: TA Telecom’s expansion beyond Egypt [WRL report]

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Strategies to scale: TA Telecom’s expansion beyond Egypt [WRL report]


Scaling is a tough challenge for startups to overcome but some, like TA Telecom offer strategies that other companies can follow. (Image via Tatelecom.com and Blog.gleam.io)

MENA’s startups can help create more jobs in the region, provided they can move beyond launch and achieve growth at scale.

Finding new ways to employ people has never been more pressing in MENA than it is today. In order for the region’s economies to accommodate the next generation of job seekers, 100 million new employment opportunities need to be created by 2020, according to the World Bank.

In a Wamda Research Lab (WRL) study of over 170 entrepreneurship experts in MENA, the majority said that the most challenging phase for entrepreneurs is scaling – more than starting up, piloting, or even sustaining their company.

A new report released this week by the WRL in collaboration with Endeavor Egypt and TA Telecom, ‘Customer Analytics, Agility, and Corporate Partnerships How TA Telecom Expanded Beyond Egypt’ sheds some light on two fundamental questions facing MENA’s entrepreneurs when it comes to scaling:

(1) How can enterprises in the region expand beyond the original countries in which they were founded? 

(2) How can they grow or scale to increase their revenue, their impact, and the number of people they employ?

Entrepreneurs that can come up with answers to these questions can further achieve their goals for growth. At the same time, those startups that do manage to grow at scale will contribute meaningfully to the region’s capacity to employ the greatest number of workers possible.

The rise of TA Telecom

TA Telecom launched in 2000 as a mobile advertising provider, and before morphing into the prolific mobile technology and software company it is today, it had a small client base.

A year after starting up, the company pivoted into ‘value-added services’ (VAS), and between 2006 and 2013 they grew rapidly. Company size quadrupled between 2006 and 2008 and then more than doubled between 2011 and 2014.

Staff size has increased much less than revenue over time, signaling that TA Telecom is producing value more efficiently: the company had 15 employees in 2006 and 65 in 2015. Revenue grew 560 percent in five years (2009-2014), ranking on Deloitte’s Fast 500 EMEA and Fast 50 Africa – a prestigious list of fastest growing technology companies.

In 2012, TA Telecom began developing mobile applications, and ventured into Big Data and predictive analytics. TA Telecom’s products continue to reach approximately 10 million people in 10 different countries (Egypt, Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya, Rwanda, Libya, UAE, Saudi Arabia and Afghanistan). They are now preparing to enter the Tanzania and Cote D’Ivoire markets.

TA Telecom’s strategies to scale:

  1. Be agile in response to market trends. In 2004, TA Telecom responded to demands for digital content that could be delivered to users by SMS or MMS. The company created its own content and sold it to Vodafone while also developing platforms to manage and sell more mobile content. Agility enabled the company to secure even more new clients, telecom companies Mobinil and Etisalat.

  1. Use data to understand your customer and drive innovation. After determining that users at the base of the economic pyramid in Egypt were the company’s most important market segment, management determined that users would very often not have enough money in their prepaid account to pay for a VAS service on the day of the month when they happened to be charged for it. As a result, the users’ payments bounced and their service was automatically discontinued. TA Telecom adapted and began charging users every other day, breaking up the monthly payment for a VAS subscription service into 15 micropayments.

  1. Find corporate clients who can facilitate your expansion. Seven years after launching, in 2007 TA telecom’s primary client, the telecom operator Etisalat, opened operations in Afghanistan and Nigeria. The Etisalat team in Cairo and UAE recommended TA telecom to its teams in the new markets, and TA telecom thus joined Etisalat as it expanded into Africa and Central Asia.

  1. Turn recruitment and retention into a science. TA telecom uses an array of incentives to retain employees, including: recognition, ownership of projects, clear goals (KPIs), bi- annual reviews, an annual performance bonus, gift certificates as thank you vouchers, flexibility (employees can work from home, arrive late, or leave early occasionally), and training (employees are sent to training in Egypt and abroad).

Growth into the future

To date, TA Telecom has successfully demonstrated its ability to remain agile, pivot, partner, and grow at scale. The company will have to balance the wins of the past with the need to adapt in the face of a rapidly changing and fickle new generation of digitally savvy customers. The company is already using its data and analytics capability to explore “sticky” VAS services that users will love and that operators cannot easily replace.

TA Telecom’s success offers insights into possible strategies that other startups in MENA can use to grow their operations at scale, and ultimately contribute to employment and economic growth in the region. 

To download the full report, please scroll up and click the gray box to the right.

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