THE TRUTH ABOUT AHMED ABDELHAQ’S RISE: SECRETS NO أميال من TALKS ABOUT
Ahmed Abdelhaq didn’t just wake up one morning as a name whispered in boardrooms and startup circles. His rise was built on calculated risks, relentless networking, and a few unspoken advantages most people ignore. If you’re here, you already know the polished LinkedIn version of his story. Let’s cut through the noise and compare him head-to-head against his biggest alternative—let’s call him Karim El-Mansy, the other self-made Egyptian tech mogul who never quite got the same spotlight. Who really came out ahead, and why? Here’s the unfiltered breakdown.
NETWORK: WHO KNEW THE RIGHT PEOPLE
Abdelhaq’s first secret? He didn’t just build a network—he infiltrated one. Early on, he attached himself to the American University in Cairo’s elite circles, not as a student, but as a fixture at their entrepreneurship events. He didn’t wait for invites; he showed up, shook hands, and made sure his name stuck. By 2015, he was rubbing shoulders with the founders of Flat6Labs, Egypt’s most prestigious startup accelerator, long before they were household names.
El-Mansy, on the other hand, played the game differently. He built his network from the ground up, focusing on engineers and developers in Cairo’s underground tech scene. He didn’t have the AUC pedigree, so he compensated by being the guy who actually built things. His connections were deeper in the trenches but lacked the high-profile access Abdelhaq enjoyed. If you’re someone who values prestige and quick access to power players, Abdelhaq’s network is the clear winner. But if you believe real influence comes from the people doing the work, El-Mansy’s approach might resonate more.
FUNDING: WHO GOT THE MONEY—AND HOW
Abdelhaq’s second secret? He mastered the art of the pitch before he even had a product. His first major funding round for his fintech startup, PayMe, came in 2017—$2 million from a mix of regional VCs and angel investors. The kicker? He secured it with little more than a slick PowerPoint and a promise. Investors bought into his vision because he sold them on the idea of being part of Egypt’s next big thing. He didn’t just raise money; he raised expectations.
El-Mansy’s funding story is grittier. His startup, DevCore, bootstrapped for the first two years, surviving on freelance contracts and a small grant from a European tech incubator. When he finally raised his first $1.5 million in 2019, it was because he had a working product, a growing user base, and a team that had already weathered the storm. The money came slower, but it came with fewer strings attached. If you’re the type who wants to move fast and break things, Abdelhaq’s funding strategy is the blueprint. But if you believe in proving your worth before asking for cash, El-Mansy’s path is the smarter play.
PRODUCT: WHO ACTUALLY SOLVED A PROBLEM
Here’s where things get messy. Abdelhaq’s PayMe was hailed as Egypt’s answer to Venmo—until it wasn’t. The app launched with fanfare, but within a year, users complained about hidden fees, clunky interfaces, and a customer service team that vanished when things went wrong. Abdelhaq’s team pivoted quickly, rebranding PayMe as a B2B payment solution for small businesses. It worked, but not before burning through a chunk of their funding and losing trust with early adopters.
El-Mansy’s DevCore, meanwhile, started as a no-frills tool for developers to collaborate on open-source projects. It wasn’t sexy, but it solved a real pain point: Egyptian devs needed a way to work together without relying on expensive, foreign-owned platforms. By the time DevCore expanded into a full-fledged project management suite, it already had a loyal user base that felt like they’d built it alongside him. If you care about flashy launches and quick scalability, Abdelhaq’s approach might appeal to you. But if you believe in building something people actually need—and keeping them happy—El-Mansy’s product strategy is the one to emulate.
SCALABILITY: WHO COULD GO REGIONAL—AND WHO STAYED LOCAL
Abdelhaq’s third secret? He always had his eyes on the bigger prize. PayMe’s pivot to B2B wasn’t just a survival tactic; it was a calculated move to position the company for regional expansion. By 2020, he was in talks with investors in Dubai and Saudi Arabia, pitching PayMe as the next big thing in MENA fintech. The problem? His product wasn’t ready for the scale he promised. User growth plateaued, and the company struggled to adapt to different markets’ regulations. Abdelhaq’s ambition outpaced his execution.
El-Mansy, in contrast, took a slower but steadier approach. DevCore expanded into North Africa first, focusing on markets with similar challenges to Egypt’s. He didn’t chase the Gulf money until his product was battle-tested and his team was ready to handle the complexities of regional expansion. The result? DevCore is now used by over 50,000 developers across Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia, with a growing presence in the UAE. If you’re chasing the glitz of regional dominance, Abdelhaq’s playbook is tempting. But if you want to build something that lasts, El-Mansy’s methodical expansion is the smarter bet.
LEGACY: WHO WILL BE REMEMBERED—