Our Mission
Building the digital infrastructure that enables businesses in emerging economies to thrive
We believe that access to quality digital infrastructure should not be determined by geography. Our mission is to build the software backbone that empowers businesses to operate efficiently, compete globally, and create prosperity for their communities.
Why We Exist
The opportunity in emerging economies is immense - but so are the challenges
Emerging economies represent over 85% of the world's population and are home to hundreds of millions of businesses. These businesses - from family farms to local manufacturers to service providers - form the backbone of their communities, providing livelihoods for billions of people.
Yet these businesses often operate at a significant disadvantage compared to their counterparts in developed markets. While a small business in San Francisco or London can access sophisticated logistics platforms, payment systems, and business management tools with a few clicks, a business in Jakarta or Lagos often relies on a patchwork of manual processes, paper records, and informal networks.
This digital infrastructure gap is not just an inconvenience - it is a fundamental barrier to growth and prosperity. Without reliable digital systems, businesses cannot scale efficiently, access formal financial services, or compete in an increasingly connected global economy.
Majin exists to close this gap. We build the digital infrastructure that enables businesses in emerging economies to operate with the same efficiency and capability as those anywhere in the world.
The Challenges
What businesses in emerging markets face every day
We have spent years working with businesses across Southeast Asia, understanding the obstacles that prevent them from reaching their full potential.
Fragmented Infrastructure
Businesses operate with disconnected systems - paper ledgers alongside spreadsheets alongside partial digital tools. This fragmentation creates inefficiency, errors, and limited visibility.
Limited Financial Access
Without proper digital records and systems, businesses struggle to access formal financial services. They cannot prove their creditworthiness or track record to lenders and investors.
Scaling Barriers
Manual processes that work for 10 customers break down at 100. Without digital infrastructure, businesses hit a ceiling that prevents them from growing and creating more jobs.
Talent Gaps
Enterprise software designed for developed markets is often too complex or expensive. Local businesses need solutions that match their context, language, and business practices.
The Importance of Digital Infrastructure
Digitization is the great equalizer
When we talk about digital infrastructure, we mean the fundamental systems that enable modern business operations: logistics platforms that coordinate the movement of goods, payment systems that enable secure transactions, marketplaces that connect buyers and sellers, and management systems that provide visibility and control.
These systems do more than just automate existing processes. They fundamentally transform what is possible for a business:
- Efficiency at Scale: A delivery company with a digital logistics platform can manage 10x the fleet with the same team. A manufacturer with proper inventory management can reduce waste and stockouts simultaneously.
- Access to Capital: Digital records create the paper trail that enables businesses to access formal financing. Banks can lend to businesses they could not underwrite before.
- Market Expansion: Digital platforms enable businesses to reach customers beyond their immediate geography. A farmer in rural Indonesia can sell directly to restaurants in Jakarta.
- Data-Driven Decisions: Visibility into operations enables better decision-making. Businesses can identify bottlenecks, optimize pricing, and forecast demand.
This is why we believe digital infrastructure is so important. It is not just about technology - it is about creating the conditions for businesses to grow, create jobs, and generate prosperity.
Our Approach
How Majin builds infrastructure that works
We do not just build software - we build operational systems designed for the realities of emerging markets. Here is how our products address the challenges businesses face.
Logistics Infrastructure
We build platforms that coordinate the movement of goods - from farm to table, warehouse to customer. Real-time tracking, route optimization, and inventory management that work in low-connectivity environments.
Impact
Reducing food waste by 40% in agricultural supply chains
Payment Rails
We create payment infrastructure that integrates with local payment methods, from bank transfers to e-wallets to cash on delivery. Secure, compliant, and accessible.
Impact
Enabling digital payments for previously unbanked merchants
Marketplace Platforms
We build multi-sided marketplaces that create efficient markets where none existed before - connecting suppliers to buyers, service providers to customers.
Impact
Connecting thousands of SMEs to new customer bases
Operations Systems
We develop ERP and business management systems tailored for SMEs in emerging markets. Digital-first operations that grow with the business.
Impact
3x productivity improvements for partner businesses
Our Vision
A future where digital infrastructure is universal
We are working toward a future where the quality of digital infrastructure available to a business is not determined by its location or size.
Every Business Digital
We envision a future where every business, no matter how small or remote, has access to digital tools that help them operate efficiently.
Local Solutions, Global Standards
Software built for local context but meeting global standards of quality, security, and reliability.
Prosperity Through Efficiency
When businesses operate more efficiently, they can serve more customers, create more jobs, and generate more prosperity for their communities.
“We believe that when businesses in emerging economies have access to the same quality of digital infrastructure as those in developed markets, they will not just compete - they will lead. Our job is to build that infrastructure.”
The Majin Team