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Manila-based startup Teko provides convenience and job opportunities amid pandemic

Manila-based startup Teko provides convenience and job opportunities amid pandemic

Three years after its launch in 2017, local startup Teko steps into the limelight post-lockdown, stronger and even more committed to provide convenience and job opportunities to Filipinos than ever before.

It started with a broken fridge

In 2017, Teko’s CEO and co-founder Farah Barre just moved to the Philippines from the United States and noticed that there is an opportunity to create an online platform that lets homeowners and businesses conveniently request for appliance repairs.

By June, Barre launched Teko with only $30,000 capital using his Credit Card. After gaining initial traction with a prototype, he teamed up with his co-founder Chris Teodoro to bring consumers a convenient, safe and most of all, digital service to get their appliances repaired.

Empowering local technicians

Teko started with the convenience of the homeowners in mind, but when the demand evolved, so did their business model. The startup now serves businesses and works with both technicians and manufacturers to provide consumers with a wider range of services.

Through Teko, hundreds of technicians transitioned out of low-paying wages and have managed to thrive as solopreneurs. It is also Teko’s proprietary technology that enabled their partner technicians to focus on their careers, while the startup provided the necessary business support such as back office processes, marketing, and business development.

Even with the threat of pandemic, Teko has continually provided opportunities to technicians, especially those displaced by the current circumstances.

Collaborating with manufacturers

Being in the aftersales business, instead of competing against the manufacturers’ service centers, Barre and Teodoro took on the collaborative approach and presented Teko as the missing link in providing optimal aftersales services.

In 2018, Teko launched its first round of funding and received the backing of Concepcion Industrial Corporation (CIC).

This paved the way for the startup to collaborate with manufacturers and propelled Teko to introduce two Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions specifically for manufacturers and distributors, to cost effectively streamline their aftersales.

Through these solutions, manufacturer and distributor aftersales organizations can tap into Teko’s large pool of partner technicians via its platform.

The startup also offers its technology to digitally power manufacturers’ aftersales organizations with a customized version of its platform.

Through this technology, the entire aftersales process is powered and supported by Teko, enabling manufacturers to easily connect their customers, call centers, service centers, aftersales support teams, and parts suppliers all on a single platform.

Leading the future of home service industry

Starting as a project to satisfy Barre’s personal need in 2017, Teko has evolved into a promising startup that has quadrupled its sales in less than two years, since receiving initial funding from CIC.

While challenges were faced during the pandemic, the startup took the opportunity to emphasize the need for their services following emerging demands of customers. In fact, it was during the lockdown that Teko recorded its highest number of orders.

Teko is now looking to expand its services geographically and categorically, to support more homeowners, businesses, and technicians.

To know more about Teko, head over to https://teko.ph/.

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About The Author

Raymund Ravanera is an accomplished and experienced graphic designer with almost 20 years of creative expertise working in the graphic design industry. He loves the latest gadgets, food and movies. Currently, he owns and manages megabites.com.ph, an online technology and lifestyle blog since 2015.

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