US expert impressed with Pakistan’s tech industry

“I have been very impressed with the tech industry here (in Pakistan),” said visiting US technology expert Rebecca Garcia.

US expert impressed with Pakistan’s tech industry

She called people in the country very smart and hardworking, saying they were doing a lot of good-to-great things through tech start-ups.

US expert impressed with Pakistan’s tech industry

Talking to The Express Tribune, Garcia underscored the need for encouraging more people to acquire skills and become entrepreneurs, adding the country needed to create an enabling environment to encourage people to conduct new experiments and learn new things for building their future. “The private sector should take the lead in shaping all this,” she said.

“Top 10 tech companies in the world were founded by the people who had dropped out. The second biggest tech company had no capital right away.”

She was of the view that the construction of tall tech buildings and school buildings would not alone achieve the purpose, but availability of an enabling environment for youth would prove their strength.

During her visit to Pakistan, she held a series of seminars and workshops on entrepreneurship, tech start-ups, and women entrepreneurship in Islamabad, Lahore, and Karachi. She also visited several public and private universities, schools, institutions, and chambers of commerce.

She is a self-taught developer, public speaker, and educator and has served at Microsoft besides undertaking many other tasks. “Pakistanis have good ideas; many of us believe that it is usually the lack of capital that discourages entrepreneurs. But it is not the case, what is most important is the enabling environment or the culture to be an entrepreneur,” she said.

US expert impressed with Pakistan’s tech industry

The tech expert pointed out that the challenge was going to be to connect the dots of available resources in emerging markets, adding hubs of entrepreneurs and incubators were in place and everybody should have access to that knowledge.

“The other challenge is going to be culturally allowing people … to experiment more,” she said, adding such cultural limitations were found in general throughout Asian countries.

She emphasized that one of the strong areas of Pakistan was that it had a well-educated IT population, which could find its way into small companies, businesses and start their own business. “Pakistan’s tech side is very strong. I think this is the entrepreneurial side and business skills which need to be grown,” she said.

“Education is the main actor of success. I think it is really great you (Pakistan) have a good foundation of (IT) education,” the tech expert said and called on youngsters to acquire skills like becoming better programmers, acquire communication skills that would help them better market their ideas and develop the habit of working independently.

Pakistan can continue to encourage individuals to see entrepreneurs. “It should value individuals not just for their degree and educational background, but what they individually contribute and what skills they have,” Garcia said.

Praising Pakistani women, in particular, she said they were really doing amazing things in the fields of entrepreneurship and tech start-ups. But the country still needs to make extra efforts to encourage them to play their part more actively as their participation remains very low.

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