With over 5.2 million small and medium enterprises (SMEs), Pakistan’s SME sector forms one of the most vital engines of the country’s economy. SMEs contribute nearly 40 percent to the national GDP, account for 25 percent of exports, and employ close to 78 percent of the non-agricultural workforce. Yet, despite their economic importance, the majority of SMEs in Pakistan remain financially underserved — operating primarily through cash-based systems that limit scalability and long-term sustainability.
Recognizing this gap, Mashreq Bank has introduced NEOBIZ, a digital-first business banking platform aimed at transforming how Pakistan’s entrepreneurs and small businesses access and manage finance. The initiative is led by Syed Jaffar Abbas Shirazi, Head of NEOBIZ at Mashreq Pakistan, who brings over 15 years of experience in digital banking, fintech innovation, and SME enablement.
“SMEs in Pakistan have shown incredible resilience, but they have not been given the tools or trust they deserve from the financial system,” says Jaffar. “Traditional banking has often viewed SMEs as high-risk, yet they are among the most resourceful and adaptable sectors of our economy. The real risk lies in ignoring their needs.”
NEOBIZ is built to change that. Unlike traditional banking channels that depend on physical paperwork and lengthy processes, NEOBIZ offers SMEs a fully digital, paperless, and frictionless experience. From opening accounts to managing payments, the platform simplifies business banking and gives entrepreneurs the autonomy to operate efficiently without having to visit branches or wait weeks for approvals.
Drawing on Mashreq’s extensive experience with SMEs in the UAE, NEOBIZ’s model has been adapted to address Pakistan’s unique business landscape. Before launching, the NEOBIZ team held consultations with freelancers, micro-retailers, and home-based entrepreneurs to understand their daily financial challenges. These insights helped shape a product that aligns with local realities — offering simplicity, transparency, and reliability.
“NEOBIZ is not just about putting a bank on a screen,” explains Jaffar. “It’s about solving real pain points — from access to accounts and payments to understanding cash flow and growth potential. We’re using technology to rebuild trust and make finance accessible to those who have been left out of the system.”
In Pakistan, where over 72 percent of the non-agricultural workforce operates informally, many small businesses lack registration or credit history. Traditional lending models, which require collateral and years of documentation, simply don’t work for them. NEOBIZ instead evaluates digital behavior and transaction data to assess creditworthiness. “A steady cash flow, even if small, tells us a lot about reliability,” says Jaffar. “Consistency matters more than scale.”
Targeting entrepreneurs who have never had a formal banking relationship, NEOBIZ is especially focused on digital-first professionals, home-based women entrepreneurs, and small traders. Jaffar emphasizes that this is not a one-size-fits-all model imported from the UAE but a solution built from the ground up for Pakistan. “This is a local-first platform designed for the challenges and opportunities of the Pakistani market,” he adds.
The platform’s roadmap includes expansion into embedded lending, micro-insurance, and AI-powered cash flow analytics. Yet, as Jaffar notes, the focus remains on building trust and utility before scaling. “Financial inclusion isn’t just about technology — it’s about making finance meaningful, accessible, and relevant. We want to move at the pace of our customers, not the other way around.”
As Pakistan continues to strengthen its digital ecosystem with initiatives like the State Bank’s Digital Bank Licensing regime and the Raast payment infrastructure, NEOBIZ is well-positioned to complement these efforts. By offering practical tools for growth and inclusion, Mashreq aims to redefine what business banking can mean for entrepreneurs.
In a country where formal banking often feels distant, NEOBIZ represents a new kind of partnership — one built around real needs, real data, and real people. “Our mission is not just digital banking,” concludes Jaffar. “It’s about creating digital partnerships for economic upliftment. When SMEs grow, Pakistan’s economy grows with them.”
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