v0.1 · pre-launchPricing infrastructure that connects global surplus to African affordability. Controlled inventory. Demand-driven pricing. Owned fulfillment.
Not because goods don't exist — because the infrastructure to price and distribute them fairly has never been built.
AI-driven manufacturing and overstock are flooding global liquidation channels. Warehouses across America, Europe, and Asia have more inventory than retail can absorb.
Families pay luxury prices through broken intermediation, fake goods, and zero price transparency.
Every layer of the transaction — from sourcing to fulfillment — built into one system.
Global overproduction is accelerating. Ghana's digital infrastructure is ready. And the trust crisis demands a formalized alternative.
Right now, warehouses across America, Europe, and Asia are drowning in surplus inventory — overstock, customer returns, last-season goods. Perfectly functional products with no efficient path to market.
Meanwhile, families in Ghana and across Africa pay 2–3x global prices for basic goods. A tablet that costs $80 in a US liquidation warehouse sells for $300 in Accra. A pair of headphones marked down to $15 in Dallas retails for $60 in Kumasi.
This is not a supply problem. This is a pricing infrastructure problem. And it has gone unsolved because the systems that should connect global surplus to African demand simply do not exist.
As global overproduction accelerates and African demand grows, this pricing inefficiency becomes unsustainable. ChinChin is the system that corrects it.
Price discipline is the missing layer in African commerce. ChinChin is not fighting deal culture — it is formalizing it. Every product sourced, verified, graded, and sold through transparent, demand-driven auctions.
We control inventory end-to-end — sourcing, verification, pricing, and fulfillment — eliminating the inefficiencies that inflate prices. No third-party sellers. No unverified listings. No intermediaries. One integrated system that turns global surplus into local savings.
Build the operating system for value-commerce in Africa — connecting global abundance to African affordability. Ghana is the launchpad. The continent is the destination.
Each product serves a distinct role. Data, trust, and infrastructure flow across every layer.
Mobile-first auction marketplace. Surplus inventory sourced globally, verified, graded A/B/C, sold through demand-driven auctions. Every winner saves 30–70%.
Owned-fleet logistics. Employed drivers, hubs in Accra, Kumasi, Tamale. Full chain of custody.
Technology and data engine. Pricing intelligence, AI recommendations, demand forecasting.
Embedded payments. Consumer credit, installment purchasing, wallet infrastructure.
Grocery vertical leveraging Drop infrastructure. Partnering with local farmers to source fresh produce and everyday essentials for African households.
Consumers will keep chasing deals. The winner is not the platform that says "stop." The winner is the platform that says "Get deals safely."
*Internal estimates based on pilot assumptions.
Ghana-born. US citizen. Decade-long systems engineer. Raised across multiple African countries. Witnessed pricing distortions and trust failures firsthand — not through research, but lived experience.
10+ years in regulated US enterprise environments: FISERV (fintech), Humana (healthcare), Peraton (DoD/DHA). Cybersecurity at Purdue, 4.0 GPA.
Self-funded with $62K–$120K in personal capital. Platform built. Inventory secured. Delivery vehicle acquired. Registration complete. Launching November 1, 2026.
Investors, suppliers, partners, future team members.