Skip to main content

Home/ Spring 21 Capstone 640pm/ Group items tagged Analysis

Rss Feed Group items tagged

mehdibella

Carbon , Nigerian fintech startup processed $240M payments transactions in 2020 - Techg... - 0 views

  • In 2012, two brothers, Chijioke Dozie and Ngozi Dozie, founded Carbon, a Nigerian digital bank start-up. Carbon began as a digital lending company, but now the company provides a variety of services, from payments to savings to investments. According to Dozie, “Our annual report will be released in the second quarter after our financial audit is complete, to gain customer trust, Chijioke Dozie, the CEO, told ProWellTech in 2019 that the company will make Carbon’s financials public.” If you note, before we published the 2019 fiscal year update, we released a year under review in January 2020.Gross profits, profit or loss before and after tax, liabilities and equity, total assets, etc. are included in Carbon’s annual report. Carbon’s year of analysis reveals processed payments, client base, disbursed loans, and investments made on the platform. The business with about 659,000 customers processed N96.54 billion (~$241.35 million) according to Carbon’s year of analysis for fiscal year 2020, which is up 89 percent compared to the same period a year earlier. N25.51 billion (~$63 million) was the disbursement volume for its lending arm, an improvement of 9.1 percent from the 2019 financial year. Investments worth N13.02 billion (~32.55 million) were made on the site, up by 365 percent from FY 2019.The factors that affected these numbers last year, according to the company, included the launch of an iOS app that pushed clients Acquisition, introducing its feature for low-income customers with USSD banking services; and a social chat feature to allow faster transactions. Besides that, Carbon obtained a microfinance bank license in an attempt to become a digital bank. The license implies, according to Dozie, that Carbon’s customers are given additional protection by the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation through depositor insurance. The standard Carbon wallet is now a full-fledged bank account, Dozie says, and clients will transact on the platform like any bank would.
    • samiatazi
       
      Carbon's analysis year offers statistics on processed purchases, user base, loans paid out and network expenditures. The corporation has processed 96,54 billion (241,35 million dollars) last year with around 659,000 customers. N25.51 billion represented a 9.1 percent increase over the 2019 budgetary year for the disbursement of the lending arm. Carbon was invested in N13.02 billion ($32.55 million), up 365% from FY 2019.
  • Carbon , Nigerian fintech startup processed $240M payments transactions in 2020 - Techgist Africa | Africa Leading Tech
nouhaila_zaki

Agricultural growth is key to spur Ghana's economic growth | IFPRI : International Food... - 0 views

  • In our new book, Ghana's Economic and Agricultural Transformation: Past Performance and Future Prospects, we integrate economic and political analysis to explore the challenges to and opportunities for Ghana's economic transformation. Using a wide range of primary and secondary data at multiple scales, we examine Ghana's overall economic performance since the major Structural Adjustment Program in the mid-1980s and provide an analysis of the performance of the agricultural sector and broader economy over the past four decades.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This article is important because it gives us other potential sources for scanning.
omarlahmidi

Global Payment Gateways Market Current Trends, Competitive Landscape and Future Growth ... - 0 views

  • This Global Payment Gateways Market report provides the readers with detailed figures at which the Payment Gateways market was valued in the historical year and its expected growth in upcoming years. Besides, analysis also forecasts the CAGR at which the Payment Gateways industry is expected to mount and major factors driving markets growth. The global Payment Gateways market report offers users the detailed study of the market and its main aspects. There are different marketing strategies that every marketer looks up to in order to ace the competition in the Global market. There is a target set in market that every marketing strategy has to reach. Some of the important aspects analyzed in the report include market share, production, key regions, revenue rate as well as key players.
mbellakbail69

South Africa Mobile Retail Shopping Report 2019: Market Size and Forecast, Retail Spend... - 0 views

  • South Africa Mobile Retail Shopping Market Size and Forecast (2016 - 2025)Market opportunity and growth dynamics in retail shopping by mobile payment transaction value, volume and average transaction value across following segments in South Africa
aminej

Abacus Kenya | F6S - 0 views

  • We provide both local and international investors with the tools they need to understand and invest in Kenya's financial markets. Via web and mobile apps, we provide news aggregated from different publishers and fed through sorting and analysis artificial intelligence, real time data from the the securities exchange, charting and analysis tools and order placement for shares currently, but will carry bonds, derivatives and investment funds as well. We have partnered with local banks and stock brokers to leverage their back-end infrastructure and for provision of liquidity.
    • aminej
       
      I love this service because it will reduce the percentage of unbanked people among the Kenyan population. People will learn how to invest their money and maximise their profits through different instruments and services which is good for the banking sector but also the Kenyan economy.
samielbaqqali

South Africa's $29+ Billion Mobile Wallet & Payment Market, 2016-2025 - Featuring Flick... - 0 views

  • The mobile payment industry in South Africa is expected to record a CAGR of 12.9% to reach US$ 29,424.3 million by 2025. The mobile wallet payment segment in value terms increased at a CAGR of 12.6% during 2018-2025.This report provides a comprehensive view on mobile payment / mobile wallet market size and growth dynamics, industry dynamics, retail spending, consumer attitude and behaviour, and competitive landscape in South Africa. The report focuses on data-centric analysis of mobile payment market dynamics to help companies understand business and investment opportunities along with risks.
  • The mobile payment industry in South Africa is expected to record a CAGR of 12.9% to reach US$ 29,424.3 million by 2025. The mobile wallet payment segment in value terms increased at a CAGR of 12.6% during 2018-2025.This report provides a comprehensive view on mobile payment / mobile wallet market size and growth dynamics, industry dynamics, retail spending, consumer attitude and behaviour, and competitive landscape in South Africa. The report focuses on data-centric analysis of mobile payment market dynamics to help companies understand business and investment opportunities along with risks. It details growth dynamics in 45+ market segments (600+ KPIs) across mobile commerce, mobile P2P transfer (domestic and international remittance), mobile lending, and a range of other payment avenues in South Africa.
  •  
    In my point of view, the growth of the market size of mobile payment technology is kind of obvious because the world is heading towards a new generation of digitalization and companies are creating new technologies in order to dominate a certain market. SnapScan does offer a new technology which is QR codes and this technology does contribute to the development of the mobile payment technology.
  •  
    The increase in mobile payment technology's market size is somewhat evident because the world is moving into a new age of digitalization and businesses are developing new technologies to dominate a certain market.
hindelquarrouti

Full article: Institutional entrepreneurship and social innovation at the base of the p... - 1 views

  • M-Pesa development, and the strategies employed to engage with different actors in the financial services sector. Purposive theoretical sampling strategy (Strauss 1987Strauss, Anselm L. 1987. Qualitative Analysis for Social Scientists. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9780511557842 [Crossref], [Google Scholar]) was used to identify relevant sources of data both for the secondary data collection process and identification of informants for the interviews.
  •  
    In M-pesa, the strategy was implemented for the identification of relevant sources of data.
sawsanenn

When fintech met crowdfunding - AltFi - 0 views

  • It became clear that fintech companies began to prize crowdfunding three years ago. Monzo crashed our servers in 2016 when it raised £1m in 96 seconds. Last December, the now-serial crowdfunding neobank raised £20m from retail investors. 
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      Crowdfunding would be a beneficial strategy for EasyEquities to help young entrepreneurs raise money for their new investments.
  • The world’s leading fintechs are using crowdfunding to cement and enhance their relationship with their customers. The latest Unicorns report from Beauhurst, an independent analysis firm, identifies the UK’s 21 unicorn companies – those worth $1bn (around £760m) or more. Of the 21, six are fintechs, and two are digital banks: Monzo and Revolut. Both have turned to crowdfunding – at a time when they are the darlings of the tech scene and its investors – to raise capital. 
    • hichamachir
       
      Crowdfunding is becoming a very used strategy for fintechs because it's a concept that help entrepreneurs finance their projects. Also it's a concept that makes the community more connected
  • The staggering thing about Monzo’s raise – and it speaks volumes about where crowdfunding and fintech have reached – is that it did not need to raise the £20m from any of us on the street. In October – i.e. just two months shy of the raise – the bank had closed an £85m round led by VC firm Accel. Raising £20m is no walk in the park. You need to build a prospectus, which is a lengthy and expensive process. Monzo’s crowdfunding raise capped all investments at £2,000, meaning the team chose to have more investors to look after. 
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt uses the example of Monzo's fundraising through crowdfunding to show that the latter could be a great source of financing for fintech companies.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Making consumers owners and giving them a say has become integral to how these companies run. Indeed, many are now building their own platforms to manage ownership. What does this tell us about the future? Here are businesses offering equity – not for money, not because they want to list, but to build an affinity with their customers. As these relationships evolve, both sides benefit: greater engagement – better products – more customers – growth – profit – both sides capitalise.  It could be called the democracy of building business. Technology is making this shift around the consumer possible not just in finance, but across markets. While the former has emerged as the vanguard, there are other non-tech sectors that have leapfrogged traditional ownership structures and cemented their own success. Food and beverage, historically underserved by the financial world, was an early adopter of crowdfunding. BrewDog is the poster child for this – a four-time Crowdcube funded brewery. It has 120,000 investors, aka Equity Punks, who, in its words, kick-started the craft beer revolution and, presumably, enjoy its beer. The prospect gets so much more exciting when you start to think of the markets that are hardest to disrupt, build a community around, and fight injustices: insurance, mining, the coffee industry, healthcare.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      Here the positive side of crowdfunding is presented and includes the ownership of customers over the businesses/brands they fo to. Crowdfunding here appears to be a great opportunity, which the article describes as the democracy of building business.
  • The world’s leading fintechs are using crowdfunding to cement and enhance their relationship with their customers. The latest Unicorns report from Beauhurst, an independent analysis firm, identifies the UK’s 21 unicorn companies – those worth $1bn (around £760m) or more. Of the 21, six are fintechs, and two are digital banks: Monzo and Revolut. Both have turned to crowdfunding – at a time when they are the darlings of the tech scene and its investors – to raise capital. 
    • ghtazi
       
      what we can say is crowdfunding is the future for fintech. using Crowdfunding will helps the fintech to have a stronger and powerful relationship with its customers.
  • To answer that, I believe we have to go back to the financial crisis. After 2008, a chasm opened up in financial markets, encouraged by a profound lack of trust. We’re well-versed with the outcomes. The banks that survived had to change their ways, and new players came onto the scene. A decade later, it is the novel relationship between these latest entrants and consumers that gives us an idea of what the future looks like: a world where any business-to-consumer company knows that sharing ownership with its customers is fundamental to long-term success. This is the cooperative movement of the twenty-first century, and it is driven by technology.
    • sawsanenn
       
      This could imply that future companies are effective for a variety of reasons. Rather than capitalizing on cost savings, piling up high-quality products and selling them cheaply, or structural brands that are more myth-based than substance-based, they will be firms that effectively utilize network effects, concentrate on being a product first, and bake their clients into everyones brand
omarlahmidi

Ethiopia Mobile Wallet and Payment Market Opportunities Databook 2019 Featuring M-Birr,... - 0 views

  • The mobile payment industry in Ethiopia is expected to record a CAGR of 18.7% to reach US$ 7,818.2 million by 2025. The mobile wallet payment segment in value terms increased at a CAGR of 18.3% during 2018-2025.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      It is fascinating to see such African companies grow tremendously over a short period of time. EthioPay is among one of the companies that helped the mobile payment industry in Ethiopia increase at a CAGR of 18.3% and is still expecting to grow.
  • The mobile payment industry in Ethiopia is expected to record a CAGR of 18.7% to reach US$ 7,818.2 million by 2025. The mobile wallet payment segment in value terms increased at a CAGR of 18.3% during 2018-2025.
    • sawsanenn
       
      A significant number of smartphone subscribers are feature phone users, and smartphone users are increasing recently due to the rising availability of more affordable smartphones on the local market.
  • This report provides a comprehensive view on mobile payment / mobile wallet market size and growth dynamics, industry dynamics, retail spending, consumer attitude and behaviour, and competitive landscape in Ethiopia. The report focuses on data-centric analysis of mobile payment market dynamics to help companies understand business and investment opportunities along with risks. It details growth dynamics in 45+ market segments (600+ KPIs) across mobile commerce, mobile P2P transfer (domestic and international remittance), mobile lending, and a range of other payment avenues in Ethiopia.
  • ...5 more annotations...
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This article is very interesting because it briefly introduces the findings of a report that provides a comprehensive view about the Ethiopian mobile payment/mobile wallet industry in which Ethiopay operates.
  • Companies Mentioned M-Birr BelCash Amole EthioPay YenePay
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      This excerpt is important because it enumerates Ethiopay's main competitors.
  • Ethiopia Market Share by Mobile Payment Technology: Provides market share by key mobile payment technologies -
    • ghtazi
       
      you can pay by : SMS/USSD NFC Code-Based Web-Based
  • Ethiopia Mobile Wallet and Payment Market Opportunities Databook 2019 Featuring M-Birr, BelCash, Amole, EthioPay, YenePay
    • nourserghini
       
      This article discusses the mobile wallet market in Ethiopia and mentions providers like Belcash such as M-birr, Amole, Ethiopay and YenePay which are potential competitors.
  • Report ScopeThis report provides in-depth market opportunity analysis and growth dynamics of mobile payment industry in Ethiopia. Below is a summary of key market segments:Market Size and ForecastMobile payment and mobile wallet market size and forecast across 45+ markets segments on three essential KPIs - mobile payment transaction value, volume and average transaction value.
    • omarlahmidi
       
      This article discusses the mobile payment industry. It also talks about providers such as Belcash.
aminej

MTN 5G IN GHANA,WHEN CAN WE EXPECT IT? | by Nana Yaw Jr. | Medium - 0 views

  • Recently the introduction of 5G to the world has got everyone interested to find out more about it.5G is the fifth-generation mobile network. It is a new global wireless standard that is designed to connect virtually everyone and everything together including machines, objects, and devices
    • aminej
       
      5g can be an amazing opportunity for our company in the future since it will develop the technological environment, improve data speed, provide more storage and reliability.
aminej

Ghana elections 2020: Nana Akufo-Addo declared winner - 0 views

  • The Electoral Commission of Ghana has officially declared Nana Akufo-Addo as the winner of the 2020 presidential elections. Akufo-Addo has been reelected for a second term with 51. 59% of votes, beating out former president John Mahama of the NDC.
    • aminej
       
      It shows that delegation of power is not an issue among political parties in the country. The opposition has managed to win over the NDC and now has been elected for a second time in the 2020 elections.
aminej

Promising future for Islamic banking in Ghana | Ghana 2015 | Oxford Business Group - 0 views

  • In Ghana there is currently just one sharia-compliant financial institution – Ghana Islamic Microfinance, which began as an NGO – though there is significant scope for growth. Part of this is due to the country’s demographic make-up. Although Muslims are far from the only potential client base for IFS, as evidenced by the rollout of Islamic financing instruments in countries like the UK and Japan, sharia-compliant products could prove attractive for the roughly 17.6% of Ghana’s population that identifies as Muslim, according to the 2010 census.
    • aminej
       
      The fact that 17.1% of Muslims in Ghana won't be able to invest in our applications is a big threat but we have thought that if we included shariah compliand products such as sukuk we could include this marginalized part of the country and improve their situations
aminej

Fintech 2020 | Laws and Regulations | Ghana | ICLG - 0 views

  • The Payment Systems and Services Act of 2019 (Act 987) provides the regulatory framework.  The Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2008 (Act 749), Data Protection Act of 2012 (Act 843), and Electronic Transactions Act of 2008 (Act 772) provide additional regulation.
    • aminej
       
      This is good for the legal framework in which our company operates since Fintech businesses are well regulated in order to protect them and their customers
aminej

Ghana - Market Overview - 0 views

  • Ghana is a country of roughly 30 million people. It is a young and fast-growing country, with a relatively high population growth rate of 2.2 percent. More than half the population (57 percent) is under 25 years old. The country’s capital, Accra, is a bustling metropolitan area that is home to roughly 2 million people. Kumasi, the capital of the Ashanti Region north of Accra, is another large population center and an active commercial center with roughly the same population as Accra.
    • aminej
       
      The demograhics in Ghana are fascinating since half of the population is under 25 which is good for our company and digitalization in general throughout Ghana. The younger population will be more keen to use mobile apps than elder generations
aminej

Average Salary in Ghana 2021 - The Complete Guide - 0 views

  • A person working in Ghana typically earns around 5,070 GHS per month. Salaries range from 1,280 GHS (lowest average) to 22,600 GHS (highest average, actual maximum salary is higher).
    • aminej
       
      Unfortunately, The mean salary in Ghana are really low so it can be considered as a threat for people who would like to use our app but cannot due to low salaries that only permit them to eat and pay their housing.
samielbaqqali

Improved ICT infrastructure in Ghana raises data penetration | Ghana 2018 | Oxford Busi... - 0 views

  • In 2017 MTN Ghana – the local subsidiary of the South African mobile operator, and the market leader – redefined what constitutes a subscriber, removing 3.4m inactive lines from its network in the first quarter of the year. However, in the same quarter the company gained more than 800,000 new active customers. The net effect was a drop of 2.5m in its subscriber base, leaving it with 16.9m voice subscribers, according to the NCA.
  • MTN Ghana holds the largest market share. As of April 2017 it had a 56.1% share of mobile data services and 46.9% of voice. It also held 59.7% of broadband wireless access through its 4G services.
  • The firm saw revenue growth of 19.8% in 2016 on the back of its strong performance in the data segment. According to the company’s financial results, data revenue increased by 66% and accounted for 42% of total revenue in 2016 on the back of the launch of a 4G network.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • This led to a drop in the overall mobile penetration rate in Ghana. It fell from 139% in February 2017 to 127% at the end of April. However, the country has actually seen a slight increase in the number of customers. In 2016 monthly mobile subscription growth ranged from 0.22% to 1.51%, and in March 2017 the segment was growing at a rate of 0.57%. The sluggishness is a result of the fact that the voice segment is saturated, but there is still room for expansion and building revenues in data services. Data
    • samielbaqqali
       
      Businesses that are constantly planning a way to better their company will always find new ways of making decisions. You only need to pursue a certain methodology that needs a full analysis of the market or the segments of the consumer.
  •  
    As you can see, MTN is always taking crucial decisions. I think that companies that always plan a way to improve their business can always find innovative ways to take decision. You just need to follow a certain strategy that requires a full study of the market or the customer segments.
  •  
    MTN and Ayo engaged in a partnership in order to launch an insurance on mobile money transfer. It was called "send with care" which allowed clients to pay premiums that would cover them in some determined situations.
kenza_abdelhaq

M-Pesa: A Case Study in Financial Inclusion | by Matt ฿ | ChainRift Research ... - 0 views

  • M-Pesa was launched in 2007, and it’s still going strong. The concept of a phone-based money transfer service originated back in 2002, when researchers realized the popularity of the market for phone airtime — individuals in a handful of African nations often transferred it to friends and family for subsequent use or resale.
  • Their analysis found that, as a result of M-Pesa’s proliferation, 2% of Kenya’s households had been lifted out of poverty. Moreover, the study established (due to the lack of hard cash in said households) that money was better managed and less prone to being allocated to unimportant endeavors (I feel there’s a loose parallel to be drawn to the HODL/long time preference mentality here).
  • When M-Pesa (launched by Safaricom) made its debut a few years later, it had initially been conceived as a solution for microfinancing — allowing institutions to distribute and collect loan payments without the hassle of cash. However, during this pilot, its widespread adoption in a myriad of alternative use cases caused the company to reconsider and relaunch with a focus on ensuring individuals could send money to their families and execute payments.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Whilst things like Apple Pay and Google Pay leverage some interesting technologies, they still rely on the participant being ‘banked’ in the first place. That, and they’re about ten years too late to the party.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Unlike Apple pay and Google Pay, M-Pesa does not need its customers or users to have a bank account.
  • Clearly, there are benefits to virtual currency that physical fiat can’t mirror. Beyond convenience and security (no need to carry cash), the M-Pesa offering allows for remittance across long distances cheaply and without a bank account.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      In addition to being convenient and secure, M-Pesa provides easy solutions for remittance or money transfer across long distances with low cost.
  • M-Pesa has proven that relatively low-tech ‘dumb phones’ can be transformed into tools for better wealth control. The leap from virtual money to cryptocurrency isn’t a massive leap from there. Indeed, tools such as BitSIM (development appears to be stalling, though the concept is simple; overlaying a SIM card with a small sticker so that even archaic phone models can transact in BTC), Samourai’s PonyDirect and CoinText (currently aimed at Bitcoin Cash) facilitate entry into the Bitcoin ecosystem with cellphones.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      M-Pesa is setting the example in how regular phones can be used for virtual money transfer and how this could incorporate in the same sense cryptocurrencies.
  •  
    The organization becomes exceptionally well known among the low-income local area. It furnished people with a simple solution to send money from any location.
  •  
    It's quite fascinating to see that 2% of Kenyan households were lifted out of poverty just because they start using M-Pesa services. I think that M-Pesa has some great potential in dealing with poverty as people get to manage their money more efficiently when they use mobile money.
  •  
    M-pesa was launched in 2007 and it is based on the concept of phone based money. It was established for the main purpose of allowing institutions to distribute and collect loan payments without having to deal with actual cash, yet they were smart and made it a company that has the main goal of giving people the opportunity of making payments and send money.
hichamachir

Executing on Your Immediate Response to FinTech Disruption | Nasdaq - 0 views

  • Financial Services firms may be unaware that their disruption responses are often hindered by internal bias or superficial analysis. That is, Fintechs may not be completely redefining an industry, product, or experience, but rather innovating in certain areas of high-perceived customer value: CX innovation – ease of use and/or reducing friction or increasing speed of the purchase process Product innovation – editing product features or modifications or reducing cost Market innovation – creating entirely new experiences or approaches for solving customer issues
    • hichamachir
       
      Pula can go for a new strategy by offering a new service that makes farmers more attached to them. If Pula creates a new experience for farmers, they would absolutely dominate the market in all aspects.
mehdi-ezzaoui

The perception of poaching in telecommunication firms and its effect on employee morale... - 1 views

  • This study sought to find out perceptions of employee poaching by employees in telecommunication firms and how these perceptions affected their morale. A survey was conducted in which 30 questionnaires were administered and 27 filled. Results showed that 92% of the population had a positive perception of poaching with 8% having negative perceptions. When a regression analysis was done on the data received, in order to test the significance of the relationship between the variables, p-value for significance did not meet the standard which implies that there is not significant relationship between the variables. According to these results, employee perceptions of poaching do not have any effect on morale.
  •  
    Employee branching views and how these emotions impact their morality in telecommunications companies MTN case
mehdi-ezzaoui

https://ajmjournal.com/HTML_Papers/Asian Journal of Management__PID__2019-10-3-16.html - 1 views

  • Anlesinya et al (2014)16 examined whether corporate social responsibility has significant positive effect on the financial performance of MTN Ghana Limited. The study administered questionnaire on 35 management staff of MTN Ghana Limited, employed standard multiple regression and hierarchical multiple regression for the analysis. The research results showed that CSR at the aggregate level did not have significant positive effect on financial performance but community CSR has a positive while environmental CSR has negative effect on financial performance of MTN Ghana Limited. The study however has left key performance indicators of MTN Ghana unexplored lending support for a more comprehensive study in that regard. Vadiraj and Narahari (2014)1 attempted to develop a model that could predict the future trends of average revenue per user (ARPU) so that telecom service providers could formulate a strategy to increase their ARPU. The study using a multiple linear regression has been able to explain that subscriber base; number of operators and percentage of new users added periodically are the main determinants of average revenue per user (ARPU). Rahul and Xue (2012)17 attempted to examine the relationship between some selected factors and their contribution to the revenue of the Telecom industries in China and India. Using time series data collected from secondary sources from 2000 to 2010 on number of subscribers, technology innovation, and government regulation and policies, their granger causality test found no causality running from number of subscribers to the revenue of the telecom Industry in both China and India. They however found a causality running from technological innovation to the revenue of the Telecom Industries in both countries. Shmelev (2013)18 developed a model for calculating Telecom Company’s revenue and margin indicators. The study crafted the model for calculating the revenue of Telecom companies based on the Business Metric Framework (BMF) developed by the TeleManagement Forum, a global non-profit association for service providers in the Telecommunication sector. Examining the relationship between the two categories of KPIs in the BMF, the study concluded that it is possible to  create a function depending on the target KPIs lower levels, to calculate the final financial indicator at given rates and obtain a performance management  tool based on key performance indicators.  
  •  
    Effects of KPI's company on MTN Ghana Ltd's financial results. MTN database with a variety of data was equipped with time series data on commercial KPIs
1 - 20 of 38 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page