Founder of GoNabit Joins MarkaVIP as COO
After the close of daily deals site
LivingSocial, Sohrab Jahanbani is now joining MarkaVIP.
After first founding daily deals site GoNabit, bringing it to
profitability, and navigating its acquisition by LivingSocial and its
later closure, with co-founder Dan Stuart, all within
the space of three years, you’d think he’d be ready to take a
break.
But no- he’s joining flash sales site MarkaVIP to bring his
extensive experience to bear as their Chief Operating Officer.
“I wasn't going to do anything for awhile, I was going to take some
time off,” says Jahanbani. But as he chatted with Marka’s investors
and the team, “those conversations got more and more exciting. We
had a shared vision."
Working at another startup at the cutting edge of the e-commerce
market now just seemed too good to pass up. It’s also a pledge that
Jahanbani is continuing to bet on e-commerce in the Middle East, a
market valued at around
$11 billion, and set to reach
$15 billion by 2015.
“I still very much believe in the space,” he says. “There’s still a
lot to play for. In other parts of the world, the landscape hasn’t
been defined.” Jahanbani also sits on the advisory board of
e-commerce solution ShopGo.
As COO, working alongside CEO Ahmad Khatib and CFO Wissam Otaky,
Jahanbani will focus on logistics, working to hone efficiency and
expand into new markets. While logistics are one challenge that
daily deals sites don’t typically face, Jahanbani earned his
stripes in shipment when handling LivingSocial Shop, the company’s
foray into selling physical goods.
Last year, MarkaVIP sank a lot of investment into logistics,
establishing an on-the-ground presence in the Saudi market and
setting up its own last-mile delivery system in the UAE, Jordan,
and Lebanon, boosted by its
$10 million Series B round. This year, says Jahanbani, the
company will see the benefits of that investment.
“If you look at scale and what the team has achieved to date, I
don't see any other platform in the region as geared for explosive
growth and taking over the region,” he says. “If it wasn’t with
MarkaVIP, I wouldn't have joined an existing business. But because
it's such an entrepreneurial culture, it's an exciting place to
be.”
At the end of the day, the decision all comes down to the team, he
says. “Ahmad's a great entrepreneur, and it’s a great team. There
are a lot of aspects I see that are similar to previous
partnerships I’ve had.”
(For more details on MarkaVIP, see our recent Face Off between Ahmad Khatib and Souq's Ronnie Mouchawar).