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Welcome to Coruscant Technologies, home of the Digital Executive Podcast. Do you work in emerging tech? Working on something innovative? Maybe an entrepreneur? Apply to be a guest at www.corazon.com brand. Welcome to the Digital Executive. Today's guest is Warren Myers. Warren Myers is the co founder and CEO of Aura, a life saving technology company transforming access to emergency response services through intelligent on demand dispatch infrastructure. Under his leadership, Aura has built South Africa's largest vetted response network, connecting users instantly to private security and medical responders via smart auto dispatch technology. The platform integrates seamlessly into partner ecosystems through APIs, mobile apps, WhatsApp and IoT devices, enabling organizations and individuals to embed emergency response directly into their services. Well, good afternoon Warren. Welcome to the show.
B
Hey, great to be here Braun.
C
Thanks for having me. Absolutely my friend. I appreciate it. And traversing multiple time zones and calendars to get here. You're in Johannesburg, South Africa. I'm in Kansas City. So I really appreciate that. And Warren, if you don't mind, I'm going to jump into your first question here. You co founded Aura in 2017 in South Africa to address a deeply local problem overstretched public safety infrastructure where emergency assistance is often delayed or ineffective. What was the moment that convinced you this was solvable with technology? And how did that local insight set the foundation for what's now a global expansion?
B
So Brian, when we got started, we did know at that stage that only a tiny percentage of the population of South Africa were able to access and afford private security and private ambulance response. And that was mainly linked to you owning an expensive house with an alarm system or having medical aid or medical insurance, which is a tiny percentage of developing market, but 5% only. And this is in a country where unfortunately the public sector and the services that citizens get from police and public ambulance services almost non existent. So you have this dynamic where 95% of people in a country that's extremely dangerous are not able to get any public response in emergencies and also cannot access and afford access to, to, to private. And because even before, like a few decades before we started, the public sector was already so broken, they naturally built, there was large amounts of private fleet security and ambulance networks that operated in very localized geographies and cities. And when we looked at this, we said, right, 95% of people can't access these emergency response services. But at the same time, those fleets were doing nothing 90% of the time. So you had all this demand and you had all this supply and they just weren't finding each other properly. And that's where the technology platform like Aura was birthed, really coming out of marketplace technology platforms that come out, okay, that already came out of America, like Uber, etc. Where you're really bringing supply and demand together in what's called a shared value concept, where millions more people can access and afford a service while enabling idle providers or suppliers who have idle capacity and are able to make additional revenue on the existing fleet overhead. So that's how the whole thing sparked and that's why we have a triangle in our logos. We've built a shared value concept where millions more people can afford this basic human need, the safety need, the suppliers are making more money and us as a platform are growing. So there's this frictionless model that we've been lucky to jump on and scale. And just to your point around why it applies in other regions is I mentioned earlier that there's a gap between what citizens need and what its government can provide. And granted, in emerging markets that gap is massive. But in more developed markets like in Europe and America and parts of Asia and Australia, that gap is small. But it's growing because there's far more millions more connected devices that citizens are buying. Handsets, Iot connected homes. And the police have always been the response to that. And it's getting to a point now in Europe and America where we operate where the police are saying, guys, we can't do all of this triage and all of these responses to these, these alarms. We just don't have the resources to manage all the false alarms because 95% of activations from home alarms and business alarms are false alarms. So they're moving to a world where they deprioritizing responding to fixed property alarms. And we've come in and built a private network of licensed, vetted and insured guard networks that go out and do and provide an inspection or a triage at their property. So I think just to bring it home, every region has a gap between what its government can provide to their citizens. That gap is growing and we use our platform, the on demand guard response platform, to fill that specific gap in that country.
C
That's amazing. I really like the story too. You talked about that and I know it's a, it's. This is a global issue, of course, even in the United States. But you talked about only a small percentage, percentage of people in South Africa were able to afford private security and safety. And that's where you saw that gap. And it's certainly public sectors overstretched, broken in a lot of areas. But you built this shared value concept which I really like. It's a frictionless model where everybody can benefit and folks can make additional revenue through these shared platforms like Uber, etc And there is, there are a lot of false alarms. In fact we have a lot here in the US and fire they start. And police, they start charging you for false alarms if they show up. So I definitely see your value proposition here and I'm just excited to hear more. So Warren Aura largely delivers its service through partnerships with companies like Uber, Samsung, fnb, insurance providers embedding emergency response as a value added feature within their existing platforms. Why did you choose to build primarily through partner ecosystems rather than a direct to consumer app? And what makes a partner integration successful versus one that fails flat?
B
Yeah. So just to take a quick step back, in our emerging markets in Africa and in others around the world, we provide two services. Where one is we respond to people, individuals. That's almost like a private 911 service where they're accessing private responders. As I mentioned, the public services, the 9 one just doesn't work. And we also respond to properties. But in Europe and America, our models are purely focused on responding to properties to verify why alarms have gone off gladly. Like the 911 infrastructure in Europe and America still is very good because if you're having a personal safety issue when you speak to a 911 operator, you typically would get a very good response. So that's not broken and we're not trying to fix that. So just delay the land of what we do in each region. But in all regions, no matter whether we responded to people or places, we decided to move on this go with this B2B2C distribution strategy. And I've got to Say there's give and take or pros and cons doing that as opposed to going direct to consumer. The reason why initially we decided to do that was we quite rightly understood that the power and the moat within our model was to network and almost own or monopolize the response layer using our tech and rather outsource the distribution to companies that already have engaged customers on apps or they already monitor their home alarms. And like I said there are cons. Dealing through huge companies creates quite sales cycle lags, you know that sometimes take six months, 12 months to get over the line. You're working through companies like Samsung, they're really big. So you have to manage those, those sales cycles. But I think going back to the root cause of this is we it was really a cost per acquisition and and a focus point when we launched the business was we had limited capital initially and going B2C you have a very high initial cost per acquisition because no one knows who you are and this is a safety brand and that requires trust. So we decided to rather work through brands who already had trust with existing large subscriber bases that went and resold our service.
C
Thank you. Really appreciate that you served the emerging markets around the world. You talked about that you respond to two areas, individuals and properties and you serve that B2B2C space. And I know you're not trying to solve that 911 or personal safety landscape which you talked about, but again leveraging these partnerships with these big players in the market and again filling that gap, especially in that area where there could be false alarms or property that might be in jeopardy. So I appreciate those insights. And Warren Aura was initially built to address gaps in emergency response in emerging markets. As you talked about where public safety infrastructure is often under resourced. As the company has expanded in the market such as the US and the uk, you've encountered a different but related challenge. Growing pressure on emergency services, longer response times for non life threatening incidents and increasing demand for faster access to health. How has Aura adapted its technology and model to solve these different problems across markets? And what have these experiences taught you about the future of emergency response regardless of a country's level of development?
B
So in the more developed markets like the UK and America, we luckily didn't have to rethink how our platform works because our platform effectively we boil it down to its really core principles is we're getting the closest responder to respond to a location. That location could be a person or it could be a property. So in the uk, in America, where We respond to alarms on behalf of alarm companies who monitor home and business alarms. The platform was already really well entrenched. What was different and ready to deploy? What was different was kind of the distribution model and the partnerships model. We in the UK and America, we partner with alarm companies and dealers who already service homes and businesses who have alarms and they go and bolt and add our subscription onto their monthly fee. Because most people are aware or becoming aware that the police are either massively deprioritizing alarms, sometimes the response times an hour and a half, or they outright just have mandated that they will no longer respond to unverified alarms. And I'm sure you can imagine anyone paying for an alarm, there's no point having it if no one's responding. Like it's a key complimentary requirement when you have an alarm subscription. So going back to your point, technology wise, most of what we had built in Africa was replicatable in new regions. It was more about adapting it to self through the existing alarm companies who now needed a private layer to dispatch before they could dispatch. And I have to stress, we respond to a quarter of a million properties in these regions already. And what we're seeing is Most of them, 95, 97% of them are false alarms. But the ones that are real, the police are great. You know, they come out there and they're there quickly, they're just not able to do all of that triage that 97%. And it makes sense if you're a citizen to say my police force needs to be ready and responsive to deal with a real serious crime. And I think that's what these police forces are doing is to say, right, we have all this demand, we don't have enough supply, where do we go and reprioritize our resources in order to be most effective for real life threatening or threat to property crimes. And that's why they've deprioritized alarms. And I like to think of us as, we're already getting recognition in the UK from police forces to say the aura is doing such an amazing job because that 3% is still important to them. That 3% of the, because they would have never gotten to those. We're helping them triage that and, and deploying them to that 3% that's helping them still help help their citizens and reduce crime. Because without a private layer, that 3% would have just gone undetected and unresponded to. So we actually like to think of ourselves as enabling police to be more available and more responsive to do Real police work which is responding to life threatening and property threatening incidents.
C
Thank you. Really appreciate that. You know you talked about this and you're doing this again globally, but you talked about initially in developed countries you didn't have to really reinvent anything, really just help augment or fill those gaps. In the US and the UK for example, you work with alarm companies directly in these markets and you manage a lot of those false alarms. Of course you talked about this helps local law enforcement focus on personal safety and critical events, enabling again that perception of safety, but also really augment the safety, allowing the prioritization of local law enforcement. So I really love that. Appreciate that. Warren Aura has further rollouts planned for India, Sri Lanka and Latin America in 2026. Regions identified as high priority due to high rates of violence under resourced public services and growing urban populations. As you look out maybe five, 10 years, what does a world look like where rapid emergency response is truly universal and what has to be true technologically, commercially and regulatory to get there?
B
So the vision that I see for five years is a very interesting question as it pertains specifically to personal safety. This is people having life threatening emergencies is at the moment the main modality is for you to pick up your
C
phone and phone 911.
B
And again in a lot of developed markets that really works well. But there's tons of scenarios where someone is just in such dire situation they're not even able to phone. And I think that the emergence of biometric triggers coming straight out of wearables activations, triggers like crash detection, the OEMs that create these, which would be like your whoops and your apples and all wearable companies and even vehicle OEMs that can push crash detection, they're going to need one global partner that helps clear that into a global response infrastructure. And we've built that already across 52 countries where one integration with a global OEM can come into our environment. And we would then push that through to a control center in that region, even somewhere like the Philippines, where they would have someone with a local dialect understanding the situation and dispatching police and ambulance out. And that's a big part of our vision is around enabling personal safety specifically for what I call autonomous triggers. I think that that is the future for massively reducing deaths linked to medical emergencies and motor vehicle accidents, where the trigger is coming automatically out of the human's body or out of the OEM out of the vehicle. And going back to regulatory. You mentioned, if you imagine like an OEM like WOOF or even a vehicle oem. They don't understand how to clear these emergencies in every region and understand the licensing requirement, the regulatory and the liability. We take care of all of that. We like, we like to see ourselves in a year now to be like the main integration partner to help clear SOS emergencies across nearly every country in the world through one sla, through one integration. And we take care of all of the local regulatory, licensing and liability requirements. That's the vision.
C
That's amazing. Really love that and talked about looking ahead in the future, you know, maybe five years. That main modality right now is really picking up the phone, dialing 911. And we, we see that all the time. But there's a lot of examples and you talked about that, where, and especially moving into the future of having an autonomous and biometric triggers that will be important for those situations where maybe a phone isn't available or a person may be incapacitated. I really love that. And of course, having all these OEM providers and their smart devices connect with a global provider to ensure that everyone can feel safe and no matter what the situation or event that has happened. So I appreciate that. And Warren, it was such a pleasure having you on today and I look forward to speaking with you real soon.
B
Great, Braun, thanks for having me. I really appreciate it.
C
Bye for now.
The Digital Executive – Episode 1276
Guest: Warren Myers, Co-Founder & CEO of Aura
Date: July 1, 2026
This episode features Warren Myers, the co-founder and CEO of Aura, a pioneering technology company transforming emergency response via intelligent on-demand dispatch infrastructure. Myers discusses how Aura bridges the gap between public and private emergency services, the logic behind its B2B2C partnerships, scaling challenges across regions, and a bold vision for the universal, autonomous future of global emergency response.
Timestamp: 01:45–06:08
South Africa’s Broken Emergency Infrastructure:
Myers describes how, in South Africa, only about 5% of the population could access private emergency services—mostly wealthier citizens with insurance or advanced alarm systems. Meanwhile, public emergency response is "almost non existent."
Idle Private Fleets + Mass Unmet Need:
“You had all this demand and you had all this supply and they just weren't finding each other properly.” (Warren Myers, 03:35)
Marketplace Technology Inspiration:
Aura applied concepts from platform businesses like Uber to connect unused capacity in private security/ambulance fleets with people who previously couldn't access such services.
Shared Value Model:
Aura’s “triangle” logo represents a win-win: citizens can afford basic safety, providers earn more on their existing fleets, and Aura grows as a platform.
Global Applicability:
The foundational gap—between citizen safety needs and what the government can provide—exists in every country, though wider in developing nations. Even in developed countries, demand (home alarms, connected devices) is outstripping public resource supply.
Timestamp: 06:08–09:32
Service Segmentation:
In emerging markets, Aura provides both personal (like a private 911) and property response. In developed regions (US, UK), Aura focuses exclusively on property response due to already robust 911 services.
Why Partner Ecosystems, Not Direct-to-Consumer:
Myers explains that building through partner integrations allows Aura to leverage “brands who already had trust with existing large subscriber bases.”
Cost and Trust:
“Going B2C you have a very high initial cost per acquisition because no one knows who you are and this is a safety brand and that requires trust.” (Warren Myers, 08:20)
Challenges:
Working with large companies can mean slow sales cycles (up to twelve months), but the trade-off is a lower CAC and instant credibility.
Timestamp: 09:32–13:45
Core Platform Principles Transfer:
The same tech “getting the closest responder to respond to a location” works globally. The adaptation is in partnerships and distribution: in the UK and US Aura partners with alarm companies, who sell Aura’s services to home/business alarm customers.
Growing Gaps in Public Response:
With police resources strained, particularly for non-verified alarms (as 95-97% are false), departments are de-prioritizing responses or issuing fines—creating need for private intervention.
Supporting the Public Sector:
“We’re already getting recognition in the UK from police forces to say Aura is doing such an amazing job because that 3% is still important to them... We’re helping them triage that and deploying them to that 3%... helping them still help their citizens and reduce crime.” (Warren Myers, 12:19)
Aura as Enabler:
Aura helps police spend resources on real emergencies, making public forces “more available and more responsive to do real police work.”
Timestamp: 13:45–17:45
Next Rollouts:
Aura is expanding to India, Sri Lanka, and Latin America—regions with high violence and under-resourced public services.
Vision for Five Years Out:
Myers predicts true universal emergency response will depend on three pillars:
Autonomous Triggers Will Become Critical:
“There’s tons of scenarios where someone is just in such dire situation they’re not even able to phone… enabling personal safety specifically for what I call autonomous triggers… that is the future for massively reducing deaths.” (Warren Myers, 15:15)
The End-State:
A world where personal and property safety is embedded in every connected device, with Aura clearing and dispatching help globally.
On the Shared Value Model:
“We've built a shared value concept where millions more people can afford this basic human need, the safety need, the suppliers are making more money and us as a platform are growing.” (Warren Myers, 04:30)
Trust as Go-to-Market Advantage:
“We decided to rather work through brands who already had trust with existing large subscriber bases that went and resold our service.” (Warren Myers, 09:05)
On Police Resource Challenges:
“Most of them, 95, 97% of them are false alarms. But the ones that are real, the police are great… they’re just not able to do all of that triage.” (Warren Myers, 11:12)
Vision for the Future:
“We like to see ourselves… as the main integration partner to help clear SOS emergencies across nearly every country… we take care of all of the local regulatory, licensing and liability requirements. That's the vision.” (Warren Myers, 16:27)
Warren Myers brings an optimistic, practical perspective rooted in on-the-ground realities of both emerging and developed markets. The discussion highlights Aura’s commitment to inclusivity, leveraging technology platforms for public good, and envisions a future where emergency response is as simple and seamless as the devices we carry every day. The show maintains an energetic, solution-focused tone, making a compelling case for the critical role of intelligent platforms in next-generation public safety.