Cafe Bazaar

Cafe Bazaar (Persian: کافه بازار) is an Iranian Android marketplace founded in April 2011 by Reza Mohammadi and Hessam Armandehi. In April 2019 Cafe Bazaar announced it has surpassed 40 million users.[1] Cafe Bazaar provides its services specifically to Persian-speaking users[2] and offers more than 25,000 downloadable Iranian and international apps for gaming, social media, messaging and other uses. It gets roughly 20 million visits a week within Iran[3] and its value is estimated at €380 million.[4]

Cafe Bazaar
Native name
کافه بازار
Private
IndustryInternet

Computer software

Digital Application Marketplace
FoundedApril 6th, 2011
FounderHessam Armandehi, Reza Mohammadi
Headquarters,
Total equity€380 million
Websitecafebazaar.ir

Cafe Bazaar is by far the most popular app store among Iranians, controlling 97%[5] of the market. Cafe Bazaar is owned by Hezardastan Information Technology Development Group which also operates Divar, a popular online classified ad service.[6] According to an April 2018 report,[7] Cafe Bazaar has 36 million users, with 29 million using the platform every month and 5.3 million using it every day. In 2017, Cafe Bazaar participated in the World Mobile Congress event in Barcelona, the world's largest mobile gathering, to introduce Iran's local mobile ecosystem resulting in many new partnerships.[8]

Content

Nearly 160,000 applications are available on Cafe Bazaar's platform covering a wide range of uses such as education, planning, ride sharing, e-commerce, travel, lifestyle, wellness and others. According to the report, citing data compiled between March 2017 and March 2018, income from gaming apps experienced a 94% year-on-year increase. Other apps also surged 64% compared to the year which ended in March 2017. 4.7 million apps are downloaded from Cafe Bazaar every day and 7.9 million apps are sold every month.[9]

َApplications

According to the report, citing data compiled between March 2017 and March 2018, income from gaming apps experienced a 94% year-on-year increase. Other apps also surged 64% compared to the year which ended in March 2017. 4.7 million apps are downloaded from Cafe Bazaar every day and 7.9 million apps are sold every month.

According to Cafe Bazaar's CEO Amin Amirsharifi, in 2017, the most popular apps on Cafe Bazaar are Telegram, Instagram, SHAREit (a file transfer platform), Divar (a classified ads app) and Snapp (a taxi-hailing app).[10]

According to the 2018 report, the most downloaded apps between March 2017 and March 2018 are as follows:

Applications Number of active Installations in the year
1 Divar (classifieds and sharing) 13 million+
2 Baad Saba Calendar 8 million+
3 Toolbox 6 million+
4 My Irancell (official app of Irancell) 6 million+
5 Snapp (ride sharing) 6 million+
6 App (financial services) 5 million +
7 Sheypoor (classifieds and sharing) 4 million+
8 Aparat (video sharing) 4 million+
9 Telewebion (video) 4 million+
10 My Hamrah (official app of Hamrah Aval) 4 million+

Games

Cafe Bazaar has had much success with game downloads in the midst of the “raging success of mobile games”[11] in Iran as demonstrated by the popularity of games like Clash of Clans. According to the 2013 survey, Iran had 18 million gamers between the ages of three and forty. Café Bazaar is increasingly looking towards games to drive future revenue. Chinese developers have already staked a prominent position in the games offered by Cafe Bazaar. Their app marketplace offers games from major international developers including Supercell, Tap4Fun and Elex.[12]

In terms of revenue generated from game users, Iran ranks third behind Turkey and Saudi Arabia in the Middle East region according to data compiled by Newzoo.[13]

According to Cafe Bazaar, there are about 120 non-Iranian publishers and developers, with over 800 apps, that offer apps through its platform. App developers receive 70% of revenue from their apps. There are local publishers that work with foreign developers to localize apps and games for a Persian-speaking customer base.[5]

Media and Video

In 2018, Cafe Bazaar announced a new collaboration with local VOD and IPTV service providers like Filimo to deliver video streaming services. The new service, at its inception, largely focused on the 2018 World Cup. After that, the video content was diversified on the platform with the help of other content providers. Currently, thousands of film and television programs are provided on the platform, including all popular Iranian titles, in addition to an IPTV channel for kids.

Financial Transactions

As mobile games got more popular in Iran, Cafe Bazaar allowed In-App purchases with debit cards for popular foreign Android games. This is especially important as e-commerce is very popular in Iran and Debit Cards are the preferred system of payment. By 2015, 20% of Iranians reported shopping daily using their debit card, 24% weekly, and 28% on a monthly basis.[14] As of 2016, Machinarium, Clash of Kings, Brothers in Arms 3, March of Empires, Township, King's Empire and other world renown titles were participating in this mechanism. Prior to Cafe Bazaar facilitating the use of local debit cards for In-App purchases, users of foreign games like Clash of Clans, one of the most popular games in Iran, had to resort to using third-party websites were security was sometimes lacking and services were expensive.[12]

Parent Company and Shareholders

Cafe Bazaar is a product of Hezardastan Information Technology Development Group that is owned by an international group of shareholders. According to the company, their shareholders are as follows:[15]

Name Share (Percent)
Founders and managers 39.65
Employees’ incentive 1.31
Rahnema Kamyaban Nokhostin Co. 29.92
Novin Andishan Sarava Pars Co. 19.22
Other legal entities 7.85
Incentive Share Committed to Employees 2.06

Cafe Bazaar is part of a technology scene that has developed amid —and perhaps due to— international sanctions and strict censorship laws that have scared off global tech companies.[3] Considering the fact that at the time, Google Play was not accessible to the Iranian users, Cafe Bazaar launched their marketplace offering not only the viral apps you see in Google Play, but local Iranian apps making a room for Iranian startups and app developers to launch their product in their homeland.[16]

Investment and Diversification

In 2018, Amsterdam-based International Internet Investment Coöperatief (IIIC) committed to investing €38 million in Cafe Bazaar's parent company, Hezardastan Information Technology Development Group, in exchange for a 10% stake. Co-Founder and Chairman Hessam Armandehi told ILNA that “[o]ur management structure will remain intact after the investment. … The money will be used to develop new services including a cloud service.” He added that “We are planning to turn Cafe Bazaar into a unicorn startup.” The investment of the Dutch firm will facilitate Cafe Bazaar moving into new fields of innovation.[17]

Philanthropic Work

Cafe Bazaar donated money to help rebuild a school in Revansar County, in the province of Kermanshah that was badly affected by the 2017 earthquake that devastated parts of western Iran. Cafe Bazaar teamed up with developers from Iran and abroad to raise funds. The school was opened on November 26, 2018.[18]

Cafe Bazaar has sponsored a number of competitions and events aimed at promoting digital and programming knowledge in Iran and promoting Iran's information technology industry globally. These events include the 43rd ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest,[19] the Iran Internet Programming Contest,[20] the International Bebras Challenge on Informatics and Computational Thinking,[21] and the annual Born in Iran festival.[22]

gollark: Declarative macro-y languages could be parallelized quite well through analyzing their dependency trees.
gollark: Lisps and stuff are actually different.
gollark: Those are fairly C-like with the main difference being better memory management and some level of object orientation.
gollark: What languages are you meaning specifically? There are many not-particularly-C-like ones.
gollark: I think making a less efficient Python program (with intensive mathy things done via numpy etc. which use bindings to C) makes a lot more sense than having a possibly-faster C program which takes several times longer to write, in most cases.

See also

References

  1. "Iranian Android Market Records 40 Million Active Users". Financial Tribune. 2019-04-09. Retrieved 2019-04-10.
  2. "About Us". Cafebazaar.ir. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  3. "Technology Startups Take Root in Tehran". WSJ. 2015-02-25. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  4. Author Interviews. "Iranian Entrepreneurs Make Pitches That Are Just Practice, For Now : Parallels". NPR. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  5. "How developers can make money in Iran's app market?". AzerNews.az. 2017-09-04. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  6. Jozi, Alireza (2016-08-23). "Cafe Bazaar and Divar Expand to Afghanistan". TechRasa. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  7. "Cafe Bazaar Annual Report" (PDF). Cafe Bazaar. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
  8. Azali, MohammadReza (2017-03-03). "Cafe Bazaar Introduces Iran's Local Mobile Ecosystem at MWC". TechRasa. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  9. "Sanctions push Iran develop tailored Android app stores". AzerNews.az. 2017-09-03. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  10. "Q&A: Cafe Bazaar discusses Iran apps market". Mobile World Live. 2017-10-05. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  11. "Raging Success of Mobile Games". Financial Tribune. 2016-04-26. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  12. Azali, MohammadReza (2016-04-02). "Cafe Bazaar Signed a Contract With Supercell". TechRasa. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  13. "Top Countries & Markets by Game Revenues". Newzoo. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  14. "As sanctions lift, Western companies can meet a thriving Iranian e-commerce industry". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  15. "Cafe Bazaar: About Us". Cafe Bazaar. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  16. Alireza Jozi. "How Sanctions Helped Iranian Startups Thrive". Techrasa. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  17. "Dutch Company to Invest in Iran Technology Firm". Financial Tribune. 2018-01-23. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  18. "زنگ امید به صدا درآمد :: کافه‌بازار | وبلاگ رسمی توسعه‌دهندگان". blog.cafebazaar.ir. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  19. "ACM-ICPC, Asia Region, Tehran Site". Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  20. "Internet Contest | ACM-ICPC, Asia Region, Tehran Site". Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  21. "ببراس – چالش بین‌المللی ببراس" (in Persian). Retrieved 2019-03-11.
  22. "گزارشی از برگزاری سومین دوره "متولد ایران" :: کافه‌بازار | وبلاگ رسمی توسعه‌دهندگان". blog.cafebazaar.ir. Retrieved 2019-03-11.
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