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RiseUp Summit: 13 Years of Fueling Egypt's Startup Growth Amid Funding and Sustainability Challenges

After 13 years, the RiseUp Summit has played a huge role in helping startups grow in Egypt. However, the ecosystem still faces big challenges like securing funding, ensuring long-term sustainability, and navigating institutional changes as companies mature.

1 1 Updated 5 min read
RiseUp Summit: 13 Years of Fueling Egypt's Startup Growth Amid Funding and Sustainability Challenges
After 13 years since the RiseUp Summit first kicked off, Egypt's startup scene has become both more mature and more complex. While some companies have successfully transformed from initial ideas into strong economic entities, attracting significant funding or even considering going public, the ecosystem as a whole still grapples with fundamental challenges related to funding, sustainability, and the regulatory environment. Abdelhameed Sharara, the founder and chairman of the RiseUp Summit, sees the event as a mirror reflecting the market's evolution over time. He explains that companies that participated in the summit's early editions are now much more established. Some, like Bosta, have successfully closed major funding rounds, while others are exploring options for initial public offerings (IPOs), signaling their shift from rapid growth to seeking long-term sustainability. When it comes to funding, Sharara reveals that over the past 18 months, investments flowing into Egypt's entrepreneurship sector have exceeded $250 million. While this figure is positive, especially given the global slowdown in startup funding, it remains modest compared to competing regional markets. This highlights a key challenge: a narrow investor base and the market's heavy reliance on a limited number of venture capital funds. This year's RiseUp Summit theme, "Transformation," isn't just a catchy slogan; it truly reflects a critical phase that startups are going through. Discussions are centered on how to bridge the gap between initial growth and institutional expansion. This stage is often the toughest, with increasing operational pressures, liquidity shortages, and changing market conditions, which can lead some companies to stumble or completely restructure their business models.

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