On the 5th of November, National Incubation Center, Karachi hosted the Grand Finale of the Built By Her Hackathon.
Built By Her was an online 48 hour long hackathon conducted by National Incubation Center, Karachi in collaboration with the Asia Foundation and the US Department of State from the 23rd to the 25th of October. The aim of the competition was to empower young women in creating technological solutions for developmental challenges that fall under the Asia Foundation’s key themes.
After hearing pitches from 20 finalist teams, a panel of six expert judges picked out 2 winners. The panel consisted of;
- Khursheed Kotwal (CEO, Asmaan International)
- Sadaf Mahmood (CEO and Founder, Xiphios Innovations)
- Maryam Mohiuddin (Co-Founder, Social Innovation Lab)
- Cameron Thomas-Shah (Cultural Attaché, US Consulate General Karachi)
- Farid Alam (Director Programs, The Asia Foundation)
- Faizan Laghari (Chief Rnnr, Rnnr)
Team Team Barricade and Team Elletech took home a shared prize of Rs. 1.65 million in seed money. Team Barricade created an attendance management system that aimed to encourage maximum participation within classrooms while Elletech pitched their product the ElleApp, a one-stop shop for training and facilitation of female entrepreneurs.
Program Manager, National Incubation Center Karachi, Syed Azfar Hussain, during his welcome address lauded all the participants, mentors and judges for coming together as a collective to create a platform for young women to utilize their talent.
The Hackathon was created to empower young women in creating change within their communities and invigorate interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education and STEM fields. Over 200 teams made up of more than 700 participants from 28 cities across Pakistan had applied to be a part of the competition.
At the launch of the Built By Her Hackathon, Amy Christianson, Public Affairs Officer at the U.S. Consulate General, Karachi and Sofia Shakil, Country Representative at The Asia Foundation reiterated the importance of encouraging women to participate in STEM fields and the country’s ever-growing startup ecosystem to help unlock Pakistan’s economic potential.