Ali and Sharmin Habib were not aspiring entrepreneurs. Their parents, immigrants to Canada, instilled in them at a young age the idea to pursue professions that provide.
They did just that. Ali became a mechanical engineer and Sharmin, an optometrist.
But that all changed after Ali sought out a solution to a common problem.
It started in 2010 when Ali was experiencing itchy, burning and stinging sensations in his eyes that worsened after a “digital marathon.” He went to see his sister, Sharmin, for an eye exam where she diagnosed him with Meibomian Gland Dysfunction (MGD).
MGD, a common cause of Dry Eye Syndrome, occurs when the tiny oil glands on our lid margins get clogged. Once clogged, these glands no longer secrete adequate oil, which causes our tears to evaporate more quickly, leading to dry eyes. Traditional therapy for MGD involves using a warm compress to help the oil move more freely.
Sharmin instructed Ali to heat up a small towel and leave it sit over his closed eyes until it cooled down. Ali tried out his sister’s recommendation, but soon found water dripping into his ear and the compress cooling down too quickly to be of any use. To Ali, there had to be a better solution than a warm towel.
“I brought an almost mechanical lens to it,” he says. “Like, hey, there’s this valve that doesn’t seem to be working and it’s getting clogged. And I kept imagining a car engine, for example, that if the oil gets gummed up in the pistons and it’s not going to flow very properly, or the pistons are not going to move properly. It was a kind of curiosity of how problems were being solved and why things were being done a certain way, and why people weren’t being curious about doing it a different way.”
His curiosity led him to work on a solution. He applied for a Health Commercialization Grant through Alberta Innovates and was awarded $100,000. He started working full-time on a prototype device, creating the Edmonton-based company, Umay, in 2014.
Sharmin was intrigued by what her brother was working on. Ali encouraged her to join him at Umay, but she was reluctant at first to jump out of her optometry career into “unknown territory.”