As Pakistan continues its digital transformation journey, one of the most pivotal figures leading the charge is Syed Aamir Jafri, CEO and co-founder of Eocean Pvt Ltd, a cloud communications company known for delivering cutting-edge solutions to both domestic and global enterprises. In a recent interview, Jafri shared insights into Eocean’s innovative trajectory, its global recognition by Meta, and the rapidly evolving role of messaging platforms in enterprise communication.
Under Jafri’s leadership, Eocean has served top-tier clients including Google, Facebook, Unilever, British Council, and Visa. With over 11 years of experience in marketing communications, business development, and mobile advertising, Jafri has continuously championed human-centered digital solutions tailored for scale and adaptability. He is also the co-founder of Kistpay, a digital platform aiming to increase access to smartphones through flexible financing—opening the digital economy to underserved populations in Pakistan and beyond.
Eocean recently made headlines after receiving global recognition from Meta for its WhatsApp Business Platform integration with PTCL. According to Jafri, the idea stemmed from a common problem: overwhelmed call centers and rising customer expectations. “PTCL wanted to modernize its service experience, and WhatsApp is already a part of everyone’s life. We just reimagined service as a natural, intuitive chat,” he explained.
The implementation was not without challenges. Eocean had to integrate modern communication layers over PTCL’s legacy systems. The biggest hurdle was not technical—it was designing the experience to feel human, not robotic. Through continuous testing and feedback, Eocean was able to refine a seamless self-service journey that now serves as a case study in effective digital transformation.
Jafri believes this milestone signifies a turning point for Pakistan’s position in the global digital arena. “It proves we can build globally relevant solutions from here. It opens the door for other innovators, investors, and policymakers to take our tech ecosystem seriously,” he noted.
In his view, messaging platforms like WhatsApp have become the new storefronts. “It’s no longer about websites or apps. It’s about starting a conversation, resolving issues, making payments—all within a single thread,” Jafri said, underlining how conversational commerce is reshaping customer engagement.
Discussing Eocean’s growth, Jafri pointed out the company’s strategy has always been rooted in solving core communication problems. From working with HBL to Aga Khan Hospital, the focus has remained on trust, execution, and innovation. Moving forward, Eocean is investing in AI, payment solutions, and regional expansion, especially into the GCC and South Asia.
Kistpay, Jafri’s other venture, is central to his broader mission of digital inclusion. “Smartphones are the gateway to everything—education, financial access, even healthcare. We’ve financed thousands of devices already and plan to reach 25,000 more this year,” he said.
When asked what Pakistan needs to accelerate its digital ambitions, Jafri emphasized the need for accessible devices, reliable broadband, platform interoperability, and regulatory simplification. “Digital services should be treated as infrastructure, not a luxury,” he added.
Eocean is also exploring voice bots in local languages and full-stack engagement platforms that combine AI, advertising, payments, and analytics. “The future is conversational—and we are building for it,” Jafri concluded.
His 11-year journey with Eocean has been full of learning moments, but none more significant than the COVID-19 pandemic, which underscored the critical role of communication infrastructure. The lesson? “Stay useful, stay adaptable, and stay close to the customer,” he said.
With leaders like Jafri at the helm, Pakistan’s digital ecosystem is not just evolving—it is becoming globally competitive, signaling a new era of innovation and opportunity.





