Business For Teens, a Cairo-based education technology startup building entrepreneurship and financial literacy programs for teenagers, has secured a six-figure pre-seed round as it prepares for regional expansion.
The funding will support the company’s move beyond pilot deployments into a more deliberate rollout across Egypt and select Gulf markets, marking an early but important step in its growth journey.
Since launch, the startup has focused on validating demand through direct partnerships with schools rather than broad consumer marketing.
It has worked with more than ten schools across Egypt and Saudi Arabia, reaching over 600 students between the ages of 10 and 16.
The programs are positioned as a hands-on complement to standard curricula, prioritising applied learning over textbook instruction and exams.
At the core of Business For Teens’ model is its emphasis on execution. Students are not only taught basic concepts around money, entrepreneurship, and problem-solving, but are also guided to apply those lessons through real projects.
The company has organised student bazaars and exhibitions where participants present business ideas to the public, interact with customers, and learn first-hand how pricing, demand, and communication work outside the classroom.
This project-led approach reflects a broader shift in education toward skills acquisition that mirrors real economic activity.
The pre-seed round was led by training and sales professional Salah Abou Elmagd, alongside a group of angel investors.
According to the company, investor interest was driven by early signs of product-market fit, disciplined execution, and a clear plan for scaling through institutional partnerships rather than fragmented consumer channels.
The capital will be directed toward strengthening operations, expanding program offerings, and deepening relationships with schools and education providers.
Founder Nadeem Barakat frames Business For Teens as a structured pathway that takes young learners from basic exposure to entrepreneurship through to building and presenting tangible projects.
The company’s programs are designed to develop confidence, financial awareness, and practical business skills that are increasingly relevant as regional economies place greater emphasis on private enterprise and self-employment.
With new funding in place, the team plans to focus on longer-term school partnerships that allow for sustained student engagement rather than one-off workshops.
The curriculum itself is built on years of business development experience, adapted into formats suitable for younger audiences.
Lessons combine project-based learning, startup simulations, and educational games aligned with widely recognised learning frameworks.
This structure is intended to keep students engaged while treating entrepreneurship as a learnable discipline, not an abstract aspiration.
From the investor side, Abou Elmagd has positioned the deal as part of a broader investment strategy, citing confidence in the founding team and the company’s ability to scale responsibly.
He sees Business For Teens as an early example of how education platforms in the region can deliver both commercial returns and measurable social outcomes by addressing gaps in practical learning.
The startup plans to introduce three new program levels in the first quarter of 2026. It is targeting partnerships with more than 30 schools and aims to train over 6,000 students by year-end.
Egypt remains the core market, but additional GCC countries are firmly on the roadmap as the company tests its ability to replicate outcomes across different education systems.
Founded in 2024 and headquartered in Cairo, Business For Teens sits at the intersection of education, entrepreneurship, and youth development.