Daraz

Daraz Pakistan Steps In to Support Sellers Affected by the Gul Plaza Tragedy
Pakistan

Daraz Pakistan Steps In to Support Sellers Affected by the Gul Plaza Tragedy

Daraz Pakistan is mobilising platform and ecosystem support for impacted sellers, including onboarding, storage solutions, marketing enablement, and dedicated incubation over the next three months. Daraz Pakistan, under its Daraz Cares arm, has announced a dedicated support initiative for sellers impacted by the recent fire at Gul Plaza in Karachi, aimed at helping affected businesses regain stability and continue serving customers across Pakistan. Through this initiative, Daraz Pakistan will launch a dedicated segment and page on its platform (app and desktop) for sellers impacted by the incident, helping customers discover and support their businesses as they rebuild. Daraz Pakistan will also facilitate onboarding for impacted sellers and provide targeted training to enable them to restart operations online with ease. To help address immediate operational challenges, Daraz Pakistan will make warehouse space available for those who require storage for existing or incoming inventory and offer subsidised delivery. In addition, Daraz Pakistan will extend free on-site and digital marketing support by leveraging its owned assets to help affected sellers gain reach and momentum. Read more: Daraz Pakistan kicks off 2026 with 1.1 “The #1 Sale” and five days of big savings A dedicated incubation and support track will also be introduced to provide hands-on guidance and continued assistance to impacted businesses as they stabilise over time. This support will remain in place over the next three months to help affected sellers recover and sustain their businesses through the Ramadan and Eid season. Daraz Cares is Daraz Pakistan’s social impact arm, focused on mobilising the company’s platform, resources, and partnerships to support communities in times of need. Commenting on the initiative, Ehsan Saya, Managing Director, Daraz Pakistan, said: “Gul Plaza has never been just a marketplace; it has been a place of livelihoods, relationships, and decades of hard work. Many of the sellers connected to it were among the earliest to bring their businesses onto Daraz and learn how to serve customers far beyond Karachi. What has happened is heartbreaking. Our focus now is to stand with these entrepreneurs in a way that is practical and compassionate, and to use the reach of Daraz and our wider ecosystem to help them rebuild and move forward.” Gul Plaza has long been a vital business hub in Karachi and has remained closely linked to the journeys of many entrepreneurs who power commerce in the country. Over the last decade of Daraz in Pakistan, the marketplace has also been an important part of Daraz Pakistan’s broader seller ecosystem, supporting a wide network of direct and indirect sellers, including home-based entrepreneurs who procure from there and deliver products to customers nationwide. For many families and small businesses, the incident has not only disrupted trade but also placed livelihoods and working routines under immense strain. Daraz Pakistan encourages sellers impacted by the incident to share their details so the company can connect them with the relevant support track. Impacted sellers can register through https://darazvoc.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_8CEbdm4sGnFWa0e or reach out via their usual Daraz Seller Support channels. Daraz Pakistan’s thoughts remain with everyone affected by the tragedy, including families who have suffered loss and those awaiting news.

Daraz Pakistan kicks off 2026 with 1.1 “The #1 Sale” and five days of big savings
Pakistan

Daraz Pakistan kicks off 2026 with 1.1 “The #1 Sale” and five days of big savings

As Pakistan counts down to the New Year, Daraz Pakistan has announced 1.1 ‘The #1 Sale’, a five-day shopping celebration designed to kick off 2026 with standout value across electronics, fashion, beauty, lifestyle and everyday essentials. The sale goes live at 8:00 PM on 31 December 2025 and runs till 5 January 2026, giving customers the chance to start the year by upgrading their homes, refreshing their wardrobes, stocking up on essentials, and ticking off long-awaited wish lists with exciting savings. To make the New Year shopping moment more festive and interactive, Daraz 1.1 will feature platform favourites including Shop & Win and Treasure Chest, alongside Brand Rush Hour, which unlocks time-limited offers from participating brands. Read more: Daraz Pakistan Extends 11.11 Excitement with Big Friday Sale from 21 to 30 November Built around the spirit of new beginnings, Daraz 1.1 brings together platform-wide vouchers, best-value pricing and a wide assortment from leading brands, including LG, TCL, Samsung, Xiaomi, Tecno and Haier Pakistan in electronics and home, alongside Abbott, L’Oreal, Ana & Batla, Saeed Ghani, Golden Pearl Cosmetics, Jenpharm and Philips across health, personal care and beauty. Customers can also shop household and pantry favourites from Nestle, Pepsico, Colgate Palmolive and Olper’s, while exploring fashion and accessories picks from Meclay London Official, J., and Calza during the sale. Daraz 1.1 is supported by payment partners Upaisa, MCB, Askari Bank and Soneri Bank, enabling customers to unlock additional value through partner-backed offers. The sale will also feature 100% authentic products and free delivery offers during the campaign period, supporting a smooth and trustworthy shopping experience as customers step into the New Year. “New Year’s is all about fresh starts, and we want 1.1 to feel like the first celebration of 2026 for our customers,” said a Daraz Pakistan spokesperson. “We have brought together exciting savings, a strong line-up of trusted brands, and a shopping experience that is simple and reliable, so customers can start the year by treating themselves, upgrading their homes, or stocking up on essentials, all with great value and 100% authentic products.” Daraz 1.1 “The #1 Sale” will be live nationwide via the Daraz app and website from 31 December 2025 to 5 January 2026.

Asad Jawaid
Tech

Building a Career at the Intersection: Asad Jawaid on Strategy, Risk, and Leading Through Change

In a session, we engage with Mr. Asad Jawaid, a seasoned strategy and commercial leader whose career is a masterclass in navigating the evolution of South Asia’s consumer landscape. With over a decade of experience, Asad uniquely bridges two worlds: the entrenched, distribution-heavy fundamentals of FMCG, honed at Reckitt, and the agile, data-driven arena of modern digital commerce, shaped within the Alibaba and Daraz ecosystem. He is recognized for translating complex insights into scalable growth and driving commercial transformation, with a track record of full P&L ownership and market strategy across Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and the wider region. We sat down with him to unpack his perspectives on the convergence of traditional and digital business models, the future of commerce, and the essential mindset for leading in a period of rapid transformation. TBR: You have built your career across different industries and roles. When you look back, what were the key chapters that shaped who you are as a leader today? AJ: My career has come in a few chapters. At Reckitt, I learned discipline, ownership, and how to understand customers from the field, not just presentations. Moving into Daraz and the Alibaba ecosystem shifted my thinking toward systems: category strategy, seller economics, and using data to move fast. Regional work across South Asia taught me to adapt playbooks to local realities. Across all of it, I have become more curious, more practical, and more focused on building teams that can scale. TBR: Was there a defining moment early in your career when you realised you wanted to work in high growth, consumer facing businesses rather than a more traditional path? AJ: Early on, I noticed I was most energised when the consumer was changing and the answers were not obvious. I enjoyed ambiguous problems where you have to build the approach, test it, and improve it quickly. That pace and constant learning felt more meaningful to me than a predictable path, so I leaned into high-growth roles where the market keeps you sharp. TBR: You now lead commercial strategy at Daraz, one of Pakistan’s most visible digital businesses. What were the most important skills or mindsets you had to develop along the way to make that transition possible? AJ: Three things helped most. First, systems thinking: seeing how assortment, pricing, traffic, seller health, and operations link together. Second, data fluency: spotting real signals, then converting them into actions fast. Third, a learner’s mindset: staying curious, unlearning what no longer applies, and partnering closely with cross-functional teams to execute. TBR: Every career has inflection points. Can you share one decision, move or risk you took that felt uncertain at the time but proved transformative later? AJ: Leaving a clear FMCG track for e-commerce was the biggest risk. I went from familiar brands to leading Fashion, learning new consumers, new metrics, and a new operating rhythm. It felt like starting over, but it forced faster learning and more structured thinking. I learned to build growth engines instead of relying on inherited playbooks. That move later unlocked multi-category leadership, regional exposure, and transformation work that still shapes how I approach strategy. TBR: Who have been the most influential mentors or role models in your journey, and what are the one or two lessons from them that you still apply every day? AJ: I have learned from leaders who combined high standards with trust. Two lessons stay with me. First, execution is where strategy becomes real, so keep plans simple, clear, and repeatable. Second, leadership is about enabling others: set direction, ask better questions, and give teams the tools and confidence to own outcomes. TBR: You have seen the evolution of Pakistan’s consumer and e-commerce landscape first hand. How has that context shaped your thinking about growth, partnerships and doing business here? AJ: Pakistan teaches resilience. Consumers are value-conscious, behaviour shifts quickly, and external conditions can change plans overnight. That has made me focus on fundamentals: trust, selection, service, and pricing discipline. It has also reinforced that partnerships must be win-win and grounded in data. The goal is flexible systems that can absorb shocks and still deliver consistent value. TBR: What kind of leader do you consciously try to be for your teams, and how has your leadership style changed from your first managerial role to now? AJ: Earlier, I thought leadership meant having answers and pushing hard. Now I try to create clarity, context, and momentum. I focus on direction, simple decision frameworks, and removing friction so teams can move faster. I encourage ownership, thoughtful experimentation, and learning from mistakes. My job today is less about doing the work myself and more about making strong execution repeatable. TBR: On a personal level, what keeps you motivated in demanding roles, and how do you reset or stay grounded outside of work? AJ: Progress motivates me: a category improving, a process scaling, or someone on the team stepping up. To reset, I lean on fitness, travel, and time with people who keep me grounded. I also reflect regularly on what is working, what is not, and what I need to learn next. TBR: If you were speaking to a young professional at the very start of their career, what honest advice would you give them about building a meaningful long term journey, not just chasing the next title? AJ: Optimise for skills, not titles. Take roles that stretch you and teach you how to solve unfamiliar problems. Work with people who challenge you and give direct feedback. Stay curious, stay humble, and build a reputation for reliability. Careers compound through capability and relationships, and the best opportunities usually follow consistent growth over time.

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