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hibaerrai

Blockchain Beyond Bitcoin: Transforming FinTech, Healthcare, And More - 0 views

  • The goal of blockchain is to digitally record information to be distributed but not tampered with. It is an open, decentralized ledger that records transactions and entries that are confirmed by peer-to-peer networks and encrypted. The data is stored into a “block,” or a fixed event that has been approved and locked into place. Each block is then added to the “chain” of events, leading to the methodology’s moniker. Each record is easily verifiable and incorruptible. The network cannot be influenced by a single party nor taken down because it exists in multiple distributed places.  
    • hibaerrai
       
      The use of blockchain strategy in fintech will make the processes more controlled, secure and efficient
hindelquarrouti

Integrated marketing communication and technology adoption : a case of Safaricom's M-PE... - 1 views

  • Safaricom had used IMC strategies befitting their target market compared to its competition to diffuse information on the M-PESA innovation
  •  
    Although There are a lot of companies in Africa, none of them was able to achieve the same success as M-Pesa. And this might be tracked back to the fact that it has incorporated the Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC) strategies which helped it capturing and exploiting customers information in order to use them in the most efficient way.
ayachehbouni

Family Bank, SimbaPay Launches Instant Money Transfer to China Over WeChat - 0 views

  • This is not the first cross border transfer initiative by SimbaPay. The London-based company supports more cost-effective and efficient transfer of funds across Africa and Asia (11 countries – 9 African, 2 Asian). These are Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, Ghana, Madagascar, Niger, India and now China.
    • nourserghini
       
      This article proves that Simbapay is known for its strategic initiatives in international transfers from 11 countries in Africa and Asia.
  • SimbaPay developed a third-party payment aggregator that enables funds delivery between Kenyan merchants and their largest source of imports, China. Through SimbaPay’s international money transfer service, merchants and individuals in Kenya would be able to send money to China’s WeChat Pay users from Family Bank’s PesaPap mobile banking application. This can be achieved through M-Pesa and a USSD service
    • ayachehbouni
       
      This partnership allows for a faster and fa less expensive exchange between China and Kenya.
mehdibella

WooCommerce SnapScan Gateway - WooCommerce - 0 views

  • Key Features Fast and easy signup Simple integration Customers need not re-enter card details Customers scan on a desktop or click to pay on a mobile device Responsive and mobile friendly Payment happens onsite with a trusted mobile payment provider! Why choose SnapScan?SnapScan is the preferred way for South Africans to pay with their phones.You may know the app from your favorite weekend market or local coffee shop, but SnapScan also provides payment solutions for larger merchants. From payments and invoicing for Pathcare laboratories to online checkout for big brands like Superbalist, Spree and Wellness Warehouse, we have expanded rapidly, and our flat rate of 3% (incl. VAT) per transaction is highly competitive.How do I start using SnapScan?To get started with SnapScan, you need a merchant account. No mountains of paperwork! Just mail help@snapscan.co.za and we set you up in no time. The sign-up process takes 10 minutes maximum, then we send you all the information you need.Once a customer has paid, their order is automatically completed and the website updates. As a merchant, your order list displays confirmation of the SnapScan payment, and you can begin the delivery process.
    • samiatazi
       
      I find that SnapScan is very useful as it provides its customers with an easy navigation platform, security, and a 10 min max sign-up process, in addition to many key features. Furthermore, This mobile payment app serves not only small startups and vendors but also larger merchants.
  • SnapScan allows South African customers to check out quicker and more securely with a scan or tap via card details stored on their phone. Customers spend less time in checkout, and more time shopping!
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      SnapScan create efficiency, security, and effectiveness with its QR code method. Since South Africa has a large population, these applications are essential to minimize physical contact.
  • SnapScan Online Checkout
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  • SnapScan is the preferred way for South Africans to pay with their phones.
  • Key Features Fast and easy signup Simple integration Customers need not re-enter card details Customers scan on a desktop or click to pay on a mobile device Responsive and mobile friendly Payment happens onsite with a trusted mobile payment provider!
    • mehdibella
       
      Thanks to SnapScan carrying a mobile phone is equivalent to carrying a digital wallet for e-payments and transactions. Most importantly, customers like this app for being free, safe, easy and convenient simultaneously.
  • From payments and invoicing for Pathcare laboratories to online checkout for big brands like Superbalist, Spree and Wellness Warehouse, we have expanded rapidly, and our flat rate of 3% (incl. VAT) per transaction is highly competitive.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      SnapScan has a competitive flat rate on each transaction of 3% including VAT.
mehdibella

SnapScan positive in face of strong competition from Apple and Samsung - 0 views

  • SnapScan launched in South Africa in May 2014, although the app had been operational since June 2013. The app was launched in partnership with Standard Bank, and the bank ultimately acquired the developer of SnapScan, FirePay, at the end of 2016.
    • mehdibella
       
      I am amazed by the new release of SnapScan which is another installment channel called SnapBeacons through which Clients can basically tap a catch in the SnapScan application to start the exchange through Bluetooth.
  • “What they lack, specifically in Africa, is merchant and business acceptance. As a result, they are reliant on banks to issue card tokens to their wallets and to roll out a merchant acceptance network.” SnapScan, on the other hand, is a potential solution for businesses where card terminals are not cost efficient or appropriate.
mehdibella

AGROCENTA - Make-IT in Africa - 1 views

  • AgroCenta is an agricultural technology platform that focuses on using technology to provide market access to smallholder farmers in Ghana. Their primary objective is to promote and facilitate fair trade for smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa by connecting them directly to larger and structured markets. It thus connects them to large, medium and small businesses in order to sell to breweries, food manufacturers and processing industries without intermediaries. The different digital services the company provides in the fields are “Agro-Trade”, “Agro-Pay”, “Agro-Logistics” and “Agro-Information”. By improving the logistical process and removing exploitative buying from the value chain, smallholder farmers can sell at competitive prices and improve their financial livelihood.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      AgroCenta allows farmers to sell their crops and tools to other businesses and manufacturers in an efficient and effective process. I find it amazing how such a concept can facilitate multiple services for many players.
  • AgroCenta is an agricultural technology platform that focuses on using technology to provide market access to smallholder farmers in Ghana. Their primary objective is to promote and facilitate fair trade for smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa by connecting them directly to larger and structured markets.
    • mehdibella
       
      The different digital services the company provides in the fields are "Agro-Trade", "Agro-Pay", "Agro-Logistics" and "Agro-Information" that allows the farmer to make the best out of the crop
  • By improving the logistical process and removing exploitative buying from the value chain, smallholder farmers can sell at competitive prices and improve their financial livelihood.
mehdibella

M-Pesa : quel miracle pour réussir hors du Kenya ? - Jeune Afrique - 0 views

  • C’est un retour en force aux allures de pari. Quatre ans après avoir retiré M-Pesa du marché sud-africain, l’opérateur de télécommunications Vodacom a annoncé en juillet le lancement d’un nouveau service de paiement par mobile. L’offre sera conçue en partenariat avec Ant Financial Services Group, un groupe chinois qui commercialise le puissant service de mobile money Alipay, créé par le fondateur du site d’e-commerce Alibaba, Jack Ma.
    • aminej
       
      I believe that with the funds and experience of AliBABA they will manage to do great at the international level this time. Chinese are known for their very efficient telecommunications companies so I think that it will be good for M-pesa to gain such knowledge from chinese
  • Cette fois-ci, la filiale africaine de Vodafone tente à nouveau l’aventure sans s’appuyer sur M-Pesa, dont elle est pourtant devenue cette année le coactionnaire aux côtés de Safaricom, afin de justement favoriser son développement.
  • M-Pesa : quel miracle pour réussir hors du Kenya ?
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Est-ce un complexe de supériorité hérité de son histoire kényane ? À Nairobi, M-Pesa a profité, depuis sa création en 2007, de la domination de l’opérateur Safaricom – qui captait plus de 84 % des parts de marché sur le mobile au moment de son lancement, et en détient désormais 87 % – et de la bienveillance du régulateur.
  • Additionnées, les activités hors du Kenya enregistrent donc un succès tout relatif avec un total de 14,7 millions de clients représentant environ 38 % de la base clients totale de M-Pesa.
mehdibella

mobile money made easy by new South African startup | Time - 4 views

  • A free app available for any smartphone, SnapScan works almost like a pocket ATM linked to the user’s debit or credit card account. Instead of handing over a card, customers scan a unique SnapScan logo posted at the cash register with their camera-enabled phone. They enter the amount, type in a pin code (or use touch ID) and a few seconds later the vendor’s phone chimes with a confirmation sent by SMS. It’s quick, painless, and entirely safe, says Ehlers. SnapScan is backed by Standard Bank, one of South Africa’s biggest banks, and uses cutting-edge fraud protection technology. More to the point, he notes, it means that vendors never have access to actual credit card details. “That means no one is noting down your number so he can go shopping later,” says Ehlers.
  • It’s been so long since 30-year-old Cape Town entrepreneur Kobus Ehlers last used his wallet that he’s not even sure where it is. “My car maybe?” he says as he reflexively scans the cheerfully decorated offices of his startup, SnapScan. When it’s pointed out that leaving a wallet in a car in a city infamous for break-ins and carjackings may not be a good idea, he shrugs. He probably doesn’t even have the equivalent of five dollars in it, he says. “I never use cash. Credit cards are over. There are much better ways to pay for things.”As the co-founder of one of South Africa’s most successful electronic payments apps, Ehlers is of course expected to use his own product. But the real reason he isn’t worried about his wallet is because Cape Town is a city seduced by the idea of cashless and cardless transactions, in no small part because of his company’s success. “You can literally wake up in the morning, buy a cup of coffee, go to your dentist, have lunch, pay your bills, take a taxi, go out for dinner, and donate to your favorite cause without using cash or a card,” says Ehlers. “And in none of that is there any risk of your card details getting stolen, or you getting mugged for your cash.”
    • samielbaqqali
       
      SnapScan is an example of Fintech's performance. I assume, however, that these kinds of creative companies need to be sponsored by strong organizations. SnapScan is backed by Standard bank and this bank is powerful financial institution in South Africa. So I think that in order to develop their offerings, Fintechs should use the financial power of banks.
  • It’s been so long since 30-year-old Cape Town entrepreneur Kobus Ehlers last used his wallet that he’s not even sure where it is. “My car maybe?” he says as he reflexively scans the cheerfully decorated offices of his startup, SnapScan. When it’s pointed out that leaving a wallet in a car in a city infamous for break-ins and carjackings may not be a good idea, he shrugs. He probably doesn’t even have the equivalent of five dollars in it, he says. “I never use cash. Credit cards are over. There are much better ways to pay for things.”As the co-founder of one of South Africa’s most successful electronic payments apps, Ehlers is of course expected to use his own product. But the real reason he isn’t worried about his wallet is because Cape Town is a city seduced by the idea of cashless and cardless transactions, in no small part because of his company’s success. “You can literally wake up in the morning, buy a cup of coffee, go to your dentist, have lunch, pay your bills, take a taxi, go out for dinner, and donate to your favorite cause without using cash or a card,” says Ehlers. “And in none of that is there any risk of your card details getting stolen, or you getting mugged for your cash.”
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  • SnapScan may make mobile payments easy for users, says Ehlers, but the reason why the company has been so successful in South Africa is that it makes processing the payments easy—and cheap—for sellers. With traditional credit card systems, and even Apple Pay, vendors have to buy expensive equipment to process the payments—something small businesses can rarely afford. But SnapScan only requires an upfront investment of the less than five cents it costs to print out their Quick Response [QR] Code, a square, camera-readable version of a traditional bar code that resembles a mosaic tile, and tape it to the cash register. “If someone wants to buy from you and you don’t have a credit card machine, and the person doesn’t have cash, our payment system is the difference between closing the sale and not closing the sale,” says Ehlers. Registration is free, and the company charges retailers an average fee of three percent, on par with most credit card companies.
    • samiatazi
       
      Snapscan is very useful for Startups and vendors willing to switch and rely on the digital transformation due to both its low cost and effectiveness. additionally, the platform is practical for cashless consumers.
  • It was that question, of how to bring small businesses that couldn’t afford traditional credit processing facilities into an increasingly cashless environment that inspired Ehlers and his co-founders to develop SnapScan. Like many Cape Townians, Ehlers was a fan of the Big Issue, a South African spinoff of a British charity that prints high quality magazines for homeless men and women to sell at a profit in order to work their way off the streets. Most of the vendors ply traffic backed up at intersections for sales. But because of the risk of carjackings, which have nearly doubled in the greater Cape Town area over the past two years, to 1530 reported incidents, few motorists keep cash on hand. “People stopped buying the magazines,” says Ehlers. “A Big Issue vendor comes up and says ‘do you want to buy a magazine,’ and you say ‘I do, but I don’t have cash with me.’ That was a problem we realized we could solve very easily.”
    • samiatazi
       
      I, personally, think that the best business ideas are the ones solving current issues faced by customers because it would be easier to promote and sell a product to an already existing market. This article points out that the business idea of Snapscan arrised from a simple discussion between a magazine seller and a cashless buyer, now it is one of the biggest Fintechs in Africa. indeed, We should believe in our potential to change others' life.
  • SnapScan customers don’t have to worry about sending their credit card details to online vendors that may not have the latest fraud protection. They just scan the QR code at the virtual checkout like they would in the real world.
  • As a result, SnapScan has been adopted by about 12,000 small and medium businesses in more than 17,000 outlets across South Africa.
  • SnapScan has 150,000 registered users, and processes hundreds of thousands of dollars in payments every day for everything from airline tickets to handcrafted wicker baskets at roadside curio stalls.
    • mehdibella
       
      I am very proud to hear that the African continent is not only following the mobile payments trend and development, but it is also joining as a leader in the space !
  • A free app available for any smartphone, SnapScan works almost like a pocket ATM linked to the user’s debit or credit card account. Instead of handing over a card, customers scan a unique SnapScan logo posted at the cash register with their camera-enabled phone.
  • SnapScan may make mobile payments easy for users, says Ehlers, but the reason why the company has been so successful in South Africa is that it makes processing the payments easy—and cheap—for sellers.
  • For all the talk of a new cashless society ushered in by the likes of Apple Pay in the United States, it’s going to be a while before a swipe of a phone will buy a meal in most cities. But in Cape Town, it’s already happening. I’ve used my phone to pay for parking, cover a medical bill, order take out, buy groceries at my local farmers market and give money to the homeless woman selling the South African version of Street News at the traffic light. Churchgoers use their phones for donations. My facialist just informed me that I could pay for Botox treatments with SnapScan. I’ll take that as her endorsement of an increasingly popular payment service, and not a hint.
    • ayoubb
       
      Snapscan
  •  
    SnapScan is an example of the efficiency of fintechs. However, I believe that these kind of innovative businesses need to be backed by strong institutions. SnapScan is backed by Standard bank and this bank is strong financial institution in South Africa. So I think that fintechs can use the financial power of banks in order to improve their services.
  •  
    I believe that by being easy to use and fast, Snapscan found success. However, what encourages customers to use it even more is its cheap cost.
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    The fact that the company provides an easy-to-use and fast service inspires people to use it.
kaoutarchennoufi

Fawry | Helios Investment Partners | Helios Investment Partners - 0 views

  • Fawry provides users with a secure electronic bill payments solution, connecting consumers, merchants, governments and financial institutions on a consolidated gateway that is accessible through multiple channels, including Point of Sale (POS) machines, ATMs, post offices, online and through mobile wallets. 
    • tahaemsd
       
      how Fawry is pioneering electronic bill presentment and payment platform
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      Fawry is able to connect different types of segments and people from consumers to merchants to government, etc.
  • Fawry provides users with a secure electronic bill payments solution, connecting consumers, merchants, governments and financial institutions on a consolidated gateway that is accessible through multiple channels, including Point of Sale (POS) machines, ATMs, post offices, online and through mobile wallets. 
    • kaoutarchennoufi
       
      Many people are concerned with the level of security of these financial services providers and sometimes they refuse to use them because of this matter. However, Fawry provides its customers with a secure electronic bill payments solution through multiple channels including point of sale which is easy to use and increases efficiency.
chaimaa-rachid

Food for thought - Crop Insurance Gets a Makeover - 2 views

  • Despite the technology underpinning WorldCover being really quite complicated (blockchain technology and machine learning), their product is amazingly simple; a crucial quality when doing business in rural areas where literacy levels are extremely poor. Essentially WorldCover is able to cut through the notoriously bureaucratic insurance claim system by ensuring insurance payments are automatically triggered once certain conditions are met, therefore increasing efficiency and eliminating fraudulent requests.
  • WorldCover is capable of providing premiums at a comparatively low-cost, which, like simplicity, is an essential part of their business model.
  •  
    Worldcover has developed smart contracts using blockchain with the purpose of simplifying the process of insurance.
  •  
    I like the idea of creating smart contracts utilizing blockchain. World Cover has done a good job as it will facilitate the cycle of protection.
mohammed_ab

The Complex Insurance Coverage Reporter - September 2020 - The Complex Insurance Covera... - 0 views

  • Over the last decade, there has been a global increase in the focus on climate change and the risks and dangers associated with it. And for good reason. Damage from climate-related disasters was in the billions of dollars in 2019 alone. California wildfires caused $25 billion in property damage, while Typhoon Hagibis in Japan cost an estimated $15 billion. Other extreme weather events, including rampant brush fires in Australia, widespread droughts in East Africa and severe flooding in South Asia, have had devastating consequences.
  • Like Kin, NYC-based WorldCover was created in response to climate-related disasters. It works to provide drought insurance to farmers in Africa. When first launched, WorldCover was available only in Ghana and covered only one crop: maize. Since then, the company has expanded to multiple markets in East and West Africa, covering four categories of crops: cereals, legumes, root vegetables and perennials. WorldCover uses a combination of satellite imagery and on-the-ground sensors to understand local weather patterns in order to create insurance options for farmers facing some of the world’s worst droughts. The company uses its satellites to monitor rainfall patterns and trigger payouts immediately.
  •  
    I think that the testing phase of WorldCover was very smart. World Cover started offering micro-insurance for only one type of crop which is maize. After a great success with this type of crop, the company started to broaden its coverage to other types of crops and to other markets like East and West Africa. The company uses machine learning and satellite imagery to analyze the weather and the land of the farmers which in my opinion helps the company in being very accurate and efficient.
hichamachir

Prosocial Crowdlending in Kenya - 0 views

  • The crowdfunding industry has emerged in the past few years as one of the most promising alternative financing options. Lending and donating operations accounted for 81% of the crowdfunding industry's $34.4 billion total funding volume in 2015. Kiva Zip, a prosocial program, created an online platform that provides 0% interest peer-to-peer loans and has features in common with lending and donating crowdfunding platforms.
  •  
    I think that delivering a service with 0% interest rate is a brilliant idea from Kiva. Customers always look for cheap and efficient services and Kiva does provide these two components. Kiva has a brilliant future if they can control the social market because it's the future especially after this current pandemic.
kenzabenessalah

AgroCenta: Digital food distribution platform creating shared value for businesses and ... - 1 views

  • AgroTrade makes managing pre-harvest and post harvest activities a breeze. It is effortless monitoring farmers activities right from planting till when commodities get to the warehouses of off-takers.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      What's interesting about AfroTrade is that it minimizes the need for physical contact, which is beneficial for what's going on in the world right now.
kenzabenessalah

Cassava Fintech International Launches Africa's first integrated Social Payments platfo... - 0 views

  • It combines instant messaging, social media and mobile payments into one App which will be available for download on Google Play and iOS app stores from 1 August 2019. A similar social payments platform model is already active in Asia, where payment apps are bundled with e-commerce, chat and ride-hailing services offered by firms such as Alibaba and Tencent in China. Imagine a WeChat of Africa!
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      Instead of having an application for every service, Cassava has one application that contain messaging, payments, and social media. This is more efficient.
mehdi-ezzaoui

Ethiopia' - 0 views

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started by mehdi-ezzaoui on 12 Feb 21 no follow-up yet
kenza_abdelhaq

Private equity investment in leading mobile payments platform | responsAbility - 0 views

  • Fawry is the leading mobile payments platform in Egypt. Through a network of 65,000 agents, mostly small shop owners, Fawry allows 20 million customers to perform a variety of transactions such as utility bills payments, airtime top-ups or merchant transactions. Over the years, Fawry has created a platform connecting all clients’ channels of payments including bank accounts, credit cards and mobile wallets with any of the 23 banks connected to its platform. Fawry’s success has been to build acceptance and usage from clients as well as banks and merchants.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Fawry's services, operations, and network include small shop owners, a variety of transactions, and a platform connecting clients and more than 20 banks.
  • Speaking on behalf of Fawry, Ashraf Sabry, CEO, said: “Our efficient payment platform and network will enable us to provide financial services for sections of the population that have so far been underserved – at costs that will allow the model to be commercially sustainable. At the same, we aim to further spread cashless transaction in Egypt, thereby serving customers as well as commerce.”
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Fawry is targeting customers as well as commerce while focusing on providing financial services to the underserved. The company focuses on financial inclusion while maintaining a certain level of costs to have a commercially sustainable model.
  •  
    "Fawry is the leading mobile payments platform in Egypt. Through a network of 65,000 agents, mostly small shop owners, Fawry allows 20 million customers to perform a variety of transactions such as utility bills payments, airtime top-ups or merchant transactions. Over the years, Fawry has created a platform connecting all clients' channels of payments including bank accounts, credit cards and mobile wallets with any of the 23 banks connected to its platform. Fawry's success has been to build acceptance and usage from clients as well as banks and merchants."
kenzabenessalah

Fawry Banking and Payment Technology Services: About | LinkedIn - 0 views

  • Fawry Banking and Payment Technology Services- a joint venture between HSBC, Arab African International Bank, Bank of Alexandria, EFG Hermes, Raya Holding and Fawry management)- is an electronic bill payment and presentment (EBPP) network that enables the Egyptian public to conveniently and securely pay their bills and topup their mobile phones through the various electronic channels available at banks and a network of retailers.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      This service has helped the Egyptian community secure their bills through new electronic channels that weren't present before.
kenza_abdelhaq

Lumkani - 0 views

  • Lumkani, a Johannesburg-based startup that leverages proprietary hardware and a tech-enabled agent network to provide customers living in informal settlements within South Africa with insurance products that protect against loss of life, shelter, and assets in the case of a home fire. Lumkani, which means ‘be careful’ in Xhosa, originally began as a hardware company, deploying its first fire detector in late 2014. Within the first 18 months, they were able to prove that their technology “in 73 percent of cases was able to reduce the spreading of fires [beyond] the first home.” But it was not enough just to alert the community and stop the spreading of fires.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Starting off as a hardware company that helped low-income families and informal settlements, Lumkani quickly shifted to the new technologies and partnered up with the insurance company Hollard to not only detect fire but to have access to fire insurance.
  • Destructive fires are a regular, and potentially devastating, occurrence for the approximately 10 million South Africans that live in informal settlement communities. These townships are particularly susceptible to the threat of fires due to the use of flammable building materials, the ubiquity of open flame fires, limited space between dwellings, and a lack of road infrastructure for adequate emergency response.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      Such devices are a must have in regions where fires are regular. It was smart to present such a device in South Africa because almost 10 million South Africans are affected by such tragic events.
  • With that problem in mind, Lumkani, partnered with Hollard, a South African-based insurance company, to develop the world’s first hardware-enabled fire insurance specifically designed for informal settlements. To serve clients that had been ignored by traditional financial service providers previously, the company has created an efficient, engaging, and easy to manage experience for its low-income customers.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      Lumkani developed hardware-enabled fire insurance to detect fires in informal settlements and partnered up with the insurance company Hollard to provide this segment with solutions and experience that was not made available to them by traditional financial service providers.
mehdi-ezzaoui

​Belcash Technology Solutions PLC - 0 views

  • Over the last four years, our service has allowed the Ethiopian population to access the following services using their mobile phones: Health advice (HelloDoctor), Market access (HelloMarket / HelloGebeya), Labour market access, (HelloJobs / HelloSera), Legal advice (HelloLawyer / HelloTebeka), Mobile Trade service (HelloBroker/ HelloDelela).
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      BelCash has given an opportunity to the Ethiopian population to conduct their usual services online. This leads to efficient, safe, and less time consuming daily affairs.
  • Belcash Technology Solutions PLC (BCTS) is a registered Value Added Service (VAS) provider legally operating in Ethiopia. BCTS has obtained its licenses from Ministry of ICT and with a signed agreement with Ethio Telecom to provide services to the Ethiopian market.
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      This is important because it emphasizes the safety and legitimacy of the platform. With multiple services, BelCash must have a data protection regulation.
  • The HelloCash Network is the largest financial service network in Ethiopia with 9,900 Service outlets across the country. Currently, within HelloCash network there are over 1,500,000 HelloCash customers. The network is expected to grow to 20,000 service outlets (Agent Network) by end of 2020.  
kenza_abdelhaq

Lumkani Fire Detection - 0 views

  • The device is a heat detector and not an ill-suited smoke detector. In a fire situation, the device will ring alerting the family inside enabling them to be proactive before the fire becomes unmanageable. After 20 seconds the device transmits a signal to all devices in neighbouring homes up to 60 metres away creating a community-wide response to the fire
    • kenzabenessalah
       
      The device not only informs families who are affected, but a signal is sent to the entire neighborhood which I think is a great initiative.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      The device is efficient and has a fast response time as it takes only 20 seconds to alert the whole neighborhood of the fire to create a community-wide response.
  • We have 7000 low-income informal households benefiting from our networked fire technology. Approximately 30 000 people are protected by our technology each day across South Africa's largest cities and rural communities.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      The growing numbers of households and people protected thanks to the device.
  •  
    "Lumkani has built the world's 1st off-the-shelf, networked early warning device & system designed for people living in dense urban slums.The device is a heat detector and not an ill-suited smoke detector. In a fire situation, the device will ring alerting the family inside enabling them to be proactive before the fire becomes unmanageable. After 20 seconds the device transmits a signal to all devices in neighbouring homes up to 60 metres away creating a community-wide response to the fire"
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