Wajih Othmani built ACCP in 30 days with zero budget — now targeting 400 million underserved Arabic speakers
FasterCapital has added Tunis-based Causal Quantality to its EquityPilot program, backing founder Wajih Othmani as he scales ACCP (Agentic Causal Control Platform) — an Arabic-native AI tool that moves beyond correlation to deliver actual causal diagnosis.
The platform addresses a fundamental gap: most AI systems tell users what is happening, but not why. ACCP flips that model. Using a 20-engine auto-chain architecture and a proprietary six-layer methodology called CQM (Causal Quantitative Methodology), it delivers root-cause analysis and structured action plans — fully in Arabic — in under five minutes.
What makes the story more striking: Othmani built the entire platform in 30 days with no external funding and no formal technical background.
Why This Matters for MENA
Across the Arab world, an estimated 400 million people remain underserved by AI-powered decision tools. Most enterprise AI products are English-first, Western-designed, and optimised for correlation rather than explanation. ACCP is built from the ground up for Arabic speakers — right-to-left interface, culturally relevant, and focused on explainability.
Regulatory momentum is also building. GCC governments are investing heavily in AI infrastructure while pushing for transparency and accountability in automated decision-making. A causal AI tool that can show its reasoning — not just its outputs — fits squarely into that trajectory.
What FasterCapital Will Provide
Through EquityPilot, the Dubai-based venture builder will support Causal Quantality with:
- Execution-focused milestone planning
- Product development guidance (authentication, saved reports, English-language readiness)
- Introductions to MENA enterprise pilot partners
- Communications and regional visibility support
- IP documentation and patent filing assistance
The 90-Day Plan
Over the next three months, the startup plans to onboard its first paying users, launch Pro subscriptions, file an INNORPI patent disclosure in Tunisia, and roll out mobile optimisation and API readiness for enterprise clients.
An English-language version is also in development to support pilot conversations beyond MENA.
The Bigger Picture
Causal Quantality sits at an interesting intersection: philosophical framework meets working product. Othmani’s underlying thesis — that AI should help humans understand causes, not just predict outcomes — is now live and testable.
FasterCapital’s bet is that the thesis holds, and that MENA’s underserved markets are ready for it.
The platform is live and free to use at accpv5.netlify.app.


