Sindh Enterprise Incubation Center is hosting a session on July 21, 2026, from 2:00 PM to 3:00 PM at SEIC Catalyst Hall, bringing together Urooj Zia, Co-Founder and Chief Operating Officer at Startup Syndicate, and Khizer Ahmed, Director and Chief Operating Officer at Kaacib, for an honest dialogue on what building a startup in Pakistan actually looks like in practice rather than in the sanitised version that most panel discussions and success story narratives tend to present. Registration is open at lnkd.in/dG7cFHWN, with further details available at seic.ac.pk or by contacting info@seic.ac.pk or +92 301 9469964.
The framing of the session around reality rather than theory is a deliberate and important signal about what kind of conversation is being invited. Pakistan’s startup ecosystem has no shortage of events where successful founders share the highlights of their journey in formats that are inspiring but often uninstructive, because the gap between the polished retrospective account and the lived experience of navigating regulatory uncertainty, operational friction, and commercial setbacks in real time is wide enough to leave aspiring founders with an accurate sense of the destination but a distorted picture of the terrain between here and there. Urooj Zia and Khizer Ahmed’s session is designed to close that gap, bringing two operational leaders whose daily work involves managing exactly the kinds of challenges that do not make it into keynote addresses into direct conversation with an audience that needs to understand those challenges before they encounter them in their own ventures.
The regulatory dimension of building a startup in Pakistan deserves serious attention in any honest conversation about the subject. Company registration, tax compliance, foreign exchange regulations for startups earning in dollars, labour law requirements, and sector-specific licensing requirements all create a layer of operational complexity that founders with technical or commercial backgrounds are frequently underprepared for, and where a single misstep can create disproportionate consequences that consume time and resources at precisely the moments when a startup can least afford distraction from its core business. The operational realities, covering everything from hiring and team management to vendor relationships, banking limitations, and the practical mechanics of running a business in Pakistan’s infrastructure environment, add another layer of complexity that is equally consequential but even less frequently discussed in founder-facing programming. The commercial dimension, including how Pakistani startups price their products, acquire customers, and build the revenue sustainability that investors look for, completes the picture of what the dialogue will engage with.
The session is part of SEIC’s Open House programme running across July 21 and 22, which is inviting Karachi’s startup community to engage with the incubation center and the ecosystem it supports through a range of events and conversations under the Build What Matters theme. For aspiring founders who want an unfiltered account of what they are getting into before they commit to building, and for early-stage founders who are already in the middle of navigating the challenges the session will address, the July 21 dialogue at SEIC Catalyst Hall offers the kind of practical and candid conversation that is genuinely hard to find elsewhere in Pakistan’s startup programming landscape.
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