Ride-hailing firm 'Little' plans to raise USD 50 mn; to expand in Tanzania, Ghana


Devdiscourse News Desk | Nairobi | Updated: 22-02-2019 19:39 IST | Created: 22-02-2019 18:02 IST
Ride-hailing firm 'Little' plans to raise USD 50 mn; to expand in Tanzania, Ghana
The company will offer rides in Tanzania's commercial capital Dar es Salaam from next week and plans to launch in Accra by May, Budhabhatti said, adding to operations in Kenya, Uganda and Zambia.
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Kenyan ride-hailing company Little is expanding to Tanzania and Ghana by May and plans to raise about $50 million more from investors, its chief executive officer said on Friday. Little, which competes with global players Uber and Taxify in Kenya, is valued at about $70 million to $75 million, Chief Executive Kamal Budhabhatti said, a minnow compared to rivals but it has aimed to expand across Africa.

The company will offer rides in Tanzania's commercial capital Dar es Salaam from next week and plans to launch in Accra by May, Budhabhatti said, adding to operations in Kenya, Uganda and Zambia. "We want to get into a lot more countries than what we are in at the moment," Budhabhatti said.

He said Little was talking to investors to raise about $50 million in series A funding, the financing received when a start-up opens up to outside investors for the first time. It aims to finalise this by mid-2019. "We are meeting a couple of investors, both on the continent and in Silicon Valley. The interest is there," he said, adding that new funds would be used to develop technology and to expand to more countries. He did not name the potential investors.

Without the deep pockets of its ride-hailing rivals in the region, Little has been attracting drivers by encouraging them to offer extra services to earn money, Budhabhatti said. "Our drivers are agents, they can sell insurance to you, they can sell (mobile) airtime, they can pay light and/or water bills, they can do all those little things around that increases that income," he said.

Little, which has a marketing partnership with Kenya's biggest mobile operator Safaricom, is also available to Kenyan customers who do not have a smartphone. The company worked with mobile operators to introduce a code to identify a passenger's location. "About 20 per cent of our rides actually come from non-smartphones," Budhabhatti said.

The company, which started up in 2016, has 10,000 registered drivers in Nairobi, with about 60 per cent of those active, and more than a million users on its platform across all markets, with more than 60 per cent of those in Kenya, he said. Uber, which has been operating in Kenya for four years, has 6,000 active drivers. Little launched a bus service in January in Nairobi, on top of its car taxi service and motorcycle taxi service, known in Kenya as "boda boda". It is also looking at a delivery service.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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