Payroll startup Cercli inks $4M to build the 'Rippling for the Middle East and North Africa'
Cercli · TechCrunch · Image Credits:Cercli

While scaling and managing teams at two of the largest unicorns in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, Akeed Azmi and David Reche stumbled on what they believed was a $2 billion opportunity. They realized that their former employers at Careem and Kitopi (Reche, the former; while Azmi, both), as well as other local businesses in the region, struggled with payroll management and high compliance costs due to human error.

Cercli, the startup they launched in January, addresses this challenge via software it developed that allows businesses in the MENA region to hire, manage and pay their global workforce. The potential of Cercli's platform has attracted investor interest, leading to $4 million in seed funding led by San Francisco-based Afore Capital, marking the fund’s first deal in the region.

Afore Capital backed Cercli, which claims to be building the "Rippling for MENA," because the founders are "building to solve for one of the region’s largest challenges: managing a global workforce while meeting compliance requirements," managing partner Anamitra Banerji said.

Azmi, who previously led operations at Kitopi and Careem, encountered this challenge firsthand while spearheading global expansion at cloud kitchen startup Kitopi, where he managed employee payroll across multiple countries.

“I was doing what Deel was doing at Kitopi. When we launched in a new market, we would have to find an employee of record to pay folks that we would have to hire in those markets,” Azmi explained in an interview with TechCrunch. “And that is where I came across the pain point that we're solving now, which is payroll and all of the adjacencies around it, where these companies did not have a system in place to run and process payroll across the entire workforce."

The ex-Kitopi director thought that if prominent tech startups in the region struggled with payroll inefficiencies, other companies, regardless of size, would likely face similar challenges. To validate this, he interviewed more than 30 companies, from Saudi Aramco, one of the world's largest corporations, to a small mom-and-pop store in Dubai’s Karama area, to understand their payroll practices.

Per his findings, smaller businesses often rely on spreadsheets, which are prone to data privacy risks, fraud and errors. Larger companies, on the other hand, spend millions on ERP solutions like Microsoft Dynamics, SAP or Oracle to manage payroll in-house. He, alongside Reche, the ex-CTO at London-based but Africa-focused sports-tech platform KingMakers, launched Cercli to unify payroll management across the region by replacing these outdated methods with a single platform.