How Egypt’s Cloudilic helps businesses create AI-based “digital team members”

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Egyptian startup Cloudilic has created Dragify, a no-code platform that helps businesses automate workflows and build AI agents that act like “digital team members”. 

Launched this year after the team identified a growing need for AI-powered automation that was accessible, flexible, and enterprise-ready, Cloudilic aims to bridge the gap between basic workflow automation tools and true intelligent automation.

“Existing platforms like Make.com, Zapier, or n8n focus on simple task execution, but lack real autonomy, memory, or contextual reasoning,” Cloudilic founder and CEO Ahmed Al-Bassyouni told Disrupt Africa.

“Dragify fills this gap by allowing companies to build and orchestrate AI agents that understand objectives, take decisions, and integrate directly into business processes – without requiring coding or complex AI infrastructure.”

Whether it’s managing support tickets, processing documents, integrating with third-party tools, or handling internal tasks, Dragify enables companies to deploy intelligent agents that work 24/7, follow logic, escalate when needed, and learn from interactions. Al-Bassyouni said adoption has been strong since launch. 

“We’ve onboarded multiple companies across fintech, real estate, and logistics. Key clients include MDP, XPay, and EgyProperty, using Dragify for AI-driven support agents, document automation, and lead engagement bots. Feedback has been overwhelmingly positive, with most clients reducing operational time by 40–60 per cent,” he said.

Currently self-funded and revenue-generating, Dragify has entered partnership discussions with international companies like Vectara and 700Apps, aiming to bring its AI automation technology into broader enterprise ecosystems.

“Our primary market is Egypt and the MENA region, with planned expansion into the GCC and European markets through channel partnerships and direct outreach. We’re also exploring collaborations with local tech consultancies and accelerators to scale faster in high-potential sectors,” said Al-Bassyouni.

“We offer a tiered SaaS model – free plans for startups, monthly subscriptions for SMEs, and on-premise deployment packages for enterprises. Revenue is currently driven by both one-time setup fees and recurring subscriptions. With over six paying clients and strong pipelines, we’re projecting solid growth through 2025.”

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Passionate about the vibrant tech startups scene in Africa, Tom can usually be found sniffing out the continent's most exciting new companies and entrepreneurs, funding rounds and any other developments within the growing ecosystem.

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