Business16.01.2017

South African start-up’s Uber solution for parcel delivery

Smartphone bedroom

A local start-up aims to be the ‘Uber’ for same-city parcel deliveries in Gauteng and Cape Town.

South African start-up WumDrop has launched its Deliver 2 Me service, which allows users to deliver packages to the exact location of recipients by determining their exact GPS location on their smartphones.

Apart from identifying the recipients’ exact locations, the service also tracks packages along its route – offering what the start-up dubs ‘a no address solution’.

Working similar to cab-hailing app Uber, Wumdrop’s Deliver 2 Me allows for Wumdrop’s drivers to download an app similar to the Uber Drivers’ app.

The company has said that the service is available to retailers via integration with WumDrop’s API.

Deliver 2 Me also represents a potential push for the company into business-to-customer delivery, particularly across Africa, where address data can be highly unreliable. “What makes this technology remarkable is its scalability,” said Wilson Canda, WumDrop CTO.

“Deliver 2 Me isn’t locked into a native mobile app like most geolocation services – it leverages the increasingly powerful suite of features found in mobile browsers to deliver an accurate delivery location to the driver, and a clean, easy to use interface to the end user,” Canda said.

Wumdrop was founded in May 2014, and has offices in Cape Town and Johannesburg.

They were awarded the MTN Business App of the Year in 2015.

Deliver 2 Me is available exclusively through www.tfg.co.za for the launch of the product.

“We’re honoured to be partnering with TFG for the launch of Deliver 2 Me. It’s incredibly encouraging to see one of South Africa’s most established businesses willing to put their trust in the technology of a young local start-up,” Simon Hartley, WumDrop founder said.

Fin24

Now read: Why AG Mobile was liquidated

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