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mohammed_ab

How Can FinTech Companies Gain Agility by Setting a Cloud Strategy - The PNR - 0 views

  • Cloud computing allows financial institutions to optimize IT resources and remove development constraints based on IT’s capacity to deliver (Cofran, 2011, p. 1). Financial institutions can respond faster to needs of customers by reducing development cycles for new products and scale products as needed because of the flexibility of the cloud (Sriram, 2011, p. 4). Furthermore, cloud computing helps financial institutions standardize applications and infrastructures which simplify the overall enterprise architecture. According to Courbe (2013), having a common infrastructure already in place worldwide enables a system to serve customers more efficiently and effectively globally.
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    Cloud computing has a lot of benefits on financial services. M-Pesa which is a fintech that offers mobile payment solutions to the unbanked population could really benefit from cloud computing. By using cloud computing, M-Pesa could improve its system reliability as it allows you to have higher data protection and recovery. It will also allow M-Pesa to optimize its IT infrastructure.
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
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    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.
mohammed_ab

Mobile money platform Pngme raises $3M to expand across Africa - 0 views

  • Africa-focused but U.S. based unified financial data platform Pngme this week announced its successful seed funding round raised $3 million.
  • Pngme hopes to tap into the burgeoning mobile money market in Africa that was kicked off with M-Pesa in 2007. Launched in Kenya, M-Pesa is a mobile banking service that allows users to store and transfer money through their mobile phones, largely targeting a massive population of unbanked citizens in the sub-Saharan region.
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    Pngme has been able to raise $3 Million to expand its operation on mobile money into Africa. This competitor could acquire more market shares from M-Pesa if it succeeds to penetrate the African market using the right strategy.
kenza_abdelhaq

Safaricom Launches MPESA Bill Manager For Businesses With Automatic Reminders - 0 views

  • M-PESA Bill Manager empowers thousands of Kenyan businesses, especially schools and landlords, to digitise their businesses beyond just collecting payments at no additional cost. The service will equally empower millions of M-PESA PayBill customers with better record keeping by providing digital receipts for each payment. Our ambition is to empower both businesses and our customers easily manage and keep track of payments
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      M-Pesa PayBill customers can keep records of their transactions as digital receipts will be generated for each payment.
  • Schools for example can use the Bill Manager platform to customize different type of fees such as tuition, lunch, transport, school trips and among others. Property agents can send rent payment reminders and reconcile any received payments. Utility providers like water and internet providers will be able to automatically bill their customers who in turn will have a way to easily view and manage pending bills.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      The target includes schools, property agents, and utility providers among other businesses or utilities with repeat payments.
kenza_abdelhaq

Safaricom is Testing a Standalone M-PESA App - 0 views

  • Safaricom appears to be developing an M-PESA app following the publication of a similarly named app in Google Play Store. The app, which has been downloaded more than 10K times, is anything but what you already seen in the current mySafaricom app.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      The development of M-Pesa application by Safaricom.
kenza_abdelhaq

How to reverse a wrong M-PESA transaction - HapaKenya - 0 views

  • There are a few ways in which you can reverse the transactions when they happen, and a good chance to get your money back.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      There are many ways to reverse any transaction on the M-Pesa platform.
nourserghini

How M-Pesa, Kenya's mobile money banking, transformed the lives of the poor - Vox - 0 views

  • That’s how mobile money accounts first came about. Mobile money apps don’t require a brick-and-mortar bank, but they otherwise end up functioning a lot like a bank account and debit card would for an American — meaning your average person in Kenya with such an account now has access to most of the same financial services a person in the US does. Mobile money got off the ground early in the developing world, where people used texting-based services before smartphones became common. There were early attempts to set up such systems in the 2000s in South Africa and the Philippines. But the breakthrough was the extraordinary early success of Kenya’s M-Pesa, which actually predates apps like Venmo. (“Pesa” is Swahili for money; the “M” stands for “mobile.”) The project that became M-Pesa started in 2002 when phone companies noticed that they had unintentionally invented something that almost resembled a currency.
    • nourserghini
       
      Mpesa started in 2002 with the huge success of mobile money apps in the developing world as many individuals were unbanked or underbanked and this was the early breakthrough for them to perform important transactions.
sawsanenn

The Story of M-Pesa | TechChange | The Institute for Technology and Social Change - 0 views

  • the popular mobile money transfer program, came to be in Kenya. It’s narrated by Michael Joseph, the managing director of mobile money at Vodafone and the program’s founder.
    • ghtazi
       
      m-pesa is a popular mobile money transfer program, that was created by Micheal Joseph who's the managing director of mobile money at Vodafone.
  • The animation was produced as part of a series of online courses designed and delivered by the USAID Mobile Solutions Team, QED, and TechChange, a DC-based organization that specializes in online training for international development.
    • sawsanenn
       
      this excerpt shows organizations that collaborate with M-pesa about the transfer money program
chaimaa-rachid

Value Addition in Mobile Money Transfer Services in Kenya: The Case of M-Pesa - 0 views

  • M-PESA is a very popular service among Kenyans as it serves to increase money circulation in the economy by offering a fast and secure mode of transferring money, making payments and also borrowing and repaying loans.
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    In the positioning strategy, they replace the attractive contributions that suit the rivalry. M-pesa is personalized with a substance that interests customers and a built reliability.
kaoutarchennoufi

Kenya's M-Pesa sees consumer, business services opportunities in COVID-19 - 0 views

  • The growth of cloud computing is a trend that M-Pesa hopes to exploit. Servers that are accessed via the internet and are located in data centres are referred to as the “cloud”. Using them means that companies don’t have to manage their own servers or run software on their own machines.
    • kaoutarchennoufi
       
      M-Pesa hopes to increase its use of cloud computing in the next coming years. This is a very efficient strategy since it will enable it to Back-up and restore data, gain more reliability, and of course reduce costs.
kaoutarchennoufi

Okoa Stima, Kopa Stima, Safaricom Okoa Stima Service - Safaricom - 0 views

  • You can now get electricity when you need it then later pay later! Okoa Stima allows you to borrow any amount based on your pre-determined credit limit. This limit is based on your historical relationship with Kenya Power. The loan comes at a facility fee of 10% and is payable in 7 days. Your M-PESA account will be deducted with amount of top plus facility fee so there is no delay. You will be able to register up to 3 meters and tokens purchased/Bill paid cannot be used on another meter except the 3 you have registered. To take advantage of this great service just dial *885# from your mobile phone.
    • kaoutarchennoufi
       
      This is the first time I realize that there are such favourable and valuable facilities in Africa. Okoa Stima has allowed kenyans to borrow a speciafic amount to pay their electricity Bill and then repay it in 7 days. The amount is taken from one's M-Pesa account. I hope that there will be more similar solutions in Africa.
mohammed_ab

How M-Pesa changed banking in Africa - CNN - 0 views

  • The service will face stronger competition in the coming years. The Kenya Bankers Association -- representing 46 banks -- is introducing its own mobile payment platform that will allow convenient transfers between accounts at different banks, and the group hopes this will eat into M-Pesa's market share.
    • tahaemsd
       
      the next decade will bring new challenges for the mobile payment system
  • The system was launched by Vodafone's Safaricom mobile operator in 2007 as a simple method of texting small payments between users. Today there are 30 million users in 10 countries and a range of services including international transfers, loans, and health provision. The system processed around 6 billion transactions in 2016 at a peak rate of 529 per second.
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    This article explains how M-Pesa, a small mobile money transfer using SMS has grown over the past 10 years, which enable the company to reach a level of success that was unpredictable. Today, the company has expanded its service & product offerings making the volume of transactions reaching a level of 529 per second. I think that this service could expand to all African countries, Morocco included, and it could have some great benefits to unbanked people in Morocco.
nourserghini

M-PESA Beats Parent Company as Kenya's Top Superbrand - 0 views

  • Safaricom’s M-PESA has been named as Kenya’s top superbrand.The mobile money product was also ahead of its parent company, Safaricom, in the last survey.Safaricom was placed second during this period’s review.The announcement implies that M-PESA’s continues to be solidified, and continues to play a key role in the running of SMEs.
    • nourserghini
       
      M-pesa has been extremely performant in Kenya to the point that its usage has surpassed its parent company Safaricom's usage.
nourserghini

Kenya turns to M-Pesa mobile-money to stem the spread of COVID-19 | TechCrunch - 0 views

  • M-Pesa has 20.5 million customers across a network of 176,000 agents and generates around one-fourth ($531 million) of Safaricom’s ≈ $2.2 billion annual revenues (2018). The company has held nearly 75% of the mobile-money market share in Kenya for nearly a decade and the country has the highest mobile-money usage rates in Africa.
    • nourserghini
       
      The fact that M-pesa has dealt with 75% of the mobile money transactions in Kenya and that the country itself is a leader in mobile-money usage in the continent shows how popular the service is and how low the competition will be during this decade.
nourserghini

M-Pesa to send cash direct to China's WeChat users - Business Daily - 0 views

  • The partnership between Family Bank Limited and London-based financial technology firm SimbaPay will enable the 23,946,174 active M-Pesa users in Kenya to send money to over 1 billion active WeChat subscribers in China.
    • nourserghini
       
      Besides the previously mentioned 7 million of Kenyans, Simbapay is targeting an extra 23,946,174 Mpesa users to use its platform for further money transfers and this can only increase its value in the market.
mohammed_ab

Creating a Strategy for the New FinTech Ecosystem - Belatrix Software - 0 views

  • 1. Millennials squared – a parable of a digital wallet and beer moneyEarlier this year Sam Crowder stood up at a televised baseball game, and held a sign asking his Mum to send him “beer money”. He included his Venmo account information. Thousands of people sent him money, as his sign went viral. Beyond sharing this story as advice in case you ́re ever thirsty and leave your wallet at home, what it reflects is how the use of new technologies may start with digital natives, but then rapidly spread to other generations. It reflects the inter-generational adoption of, and use of, FinTech technologies.So, when looking at the potential of new services, it is important not just to consider the young people who will adopt it. But what will happen when they introduce the technology to their friends and family. Millennials are the earthquake that shakes companies, and adopt new tech and services at lightning speed. The rest of us are the tsunami of adoption that follows and lead to exponential growth.
  • 2. Facebook, Amazon, Google or Ant Financial will become the largest retail bank in the worldIt’s 2020 and to apply for a loan, instead of going to your local bank branch, you quickly ask Facebook for approval. This is far from fanciful thinking. Even as of today, PayPal is arguably one of the largest retail banks — it has more money in deposits than all but the largest 20 US banks, and offers services from payments, to loans and credit cards (albeit currently via partners). But we believe that one of the major tech companies, whether that is Facebook, Amazon, Google, or Ant Financial (the financial arm of Alibaba) will not only transform retail banking, but rapidly become the largest retail bank in the world.“Some bankers and analyststhink that Google, Facebook, Amazon or the like will not fully enter a highly regulated, low-margin business such as banking. I disagree. What is more, I think banks that are not prepared for such new competitors face certain death”Francisco González, CEO, BBVA
  • hese major tech companies have the platform and the scale to upend retail banking. They already have a digital wallet which underlies the services that enable users to buy and sell on their platforms, such as Google Wallet and Amazon Payments. Facebook Messenger Pay is already available in the US while it recently received an e-money license from the Central Bank of Ireland. This means European users will be able to store and transfer money, and make online purchases. The transition to becoming the largest retail bank in the world will be swift and brutal for traditional banks.
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  • 3. Regulators finally make the pivot to supporting the FinTech ecosystemBitX, a bitcoin startup in Singapore, was looking to enter the UK and European markets. Instead of having an arduous journey gaining the required licenses and approvals as it would have expected in the past, BitX was accepted into the regulatory sandbox of the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority. This enabled it to test its services and build its product with the backing of the regulator. This kind of thinking reflects how in the past few years we have seen regulators move from hindering innovation and new services, to proactively supporting and strengthening the FinTech ecosystem.It is a challenging line to take, particularly in the
  • world of finance – to help create the framework and environment for innovation, while also protecting consumers and businesses. However, increasingly we see regulators getting this blend right.For example, the European Union’s Directive on Payment Services (PSD2) will create an EU-wide single market for payments. This will drive new opportunities and innovation in the payment sector, because it will force financial institutions to provide secure access for a third-party service provider to a customer’s online account. Meanwhile, we have seen regulatory sandboxes emerge not just in the UK, but in locations from Singapore to Australia. The US Treasury meanwhile recently announced it will start issuing special purpose national bank charters to FinTech companies.In the future, expect to see the emergence of “RegTech”. This will enable real-time interaction and analysis between regulators and financial institutions. Indeed, thi
  • ch as in New York, London or Singapore. So, although the UK dominates the world of fintech (generating an estimated £6.6billion in FinTech related revenue), leading organizations are looking for inspiration among the innovative services, products and ideas being created from Guadalajara, to Laos, to Kenya.In many cases we can see that the unique financial environment of these locations is resulting in novel ideas. For example, Guadalajara based start-up Kueski uses a person’s digital footprint to assess their credit worthiness – a particular challenge in Mexico where credit is not available to large swathes of the population. In Latin America Tigo Cash is a mobile financial service which already handles more cash than many financial institutions in the region. We will see markets and services emerging which are currently not on anyone’s map, and become some of the most important financial organizations in the world.
    • samiatazi
       
      this article points out 4 expectations for the fate of FinTech and Financial services. However, I think that the most interesting one is the last one which states that The effect of FinTech advancement is frequently made and experienced outside the usual Hub of Finance, for example, New York, London or Singapore. Giant Companies are searching for inspiration among innovative and creative products, items and thoughts being made from Guadalajara, to Laos, to Kenya. I really like this part too, stating that We will see markets and administrations arising which are as of now not on anybody's guide, and become the absolute most significant Fintechs on the planet.
  • software platform between itself and the banks, so it can view and analyze information in real-time.4. Look beyond the hubs to find innovative ideasAcross Kenya, mobile money has become ubiquitous – being used by at least one person in 96% of Kenyan households. But what is the real impact of mobile money in such countries? One study estimated that M-PESA, the Kenyan mobile money system which enables money to be stored on a phone and be sent via text, has helped lift 2% of Kenyan households out of poverty.What this example demonstrates is that the impact of FinTech innovation is often created and experienced outside of the usual hubs of finance su
  • In the past few years we have seen the rapid evolution of FinTech from generating novel ideas which solve customer problems, to offering core financial services. We have seen the shift from digital startups, characterized by a lack of financial wherewithal and which operated on the edge of tightly regulated markets, to the emergence of mature financial digital organizations at the heart of the traditional financial world.We can describe the development and maturing of FinTech in 3 main waves:The early emergence of digital startups helping consumers. Originally FinTech solutions were the preserve of B2C markets which solved specific customer problems such as offering home loans faster and easier. They used new technologies such as mobile and cloud computing, and were characterized by a laser focus on the customer with all the hall-marks of a digital Silicon-Valley style start-up.Transition to B2B markets. Today FinTech plays a role at the core of B2B innovation in financial markets, and industry observers widely expect B2B FinTech revenues to dwarf those in consumer markets within the next couple of years. Organizations such as Currency Cloud (cross border B2B payments), Payoneer Escrow (escrow services), and Hummingbill (B2B invoice platform) all reflect a maturing industry.The creation of an ecosystem between FinTech and traditional players. FinTech organizations are realizing that the required go-to-market investment, economies of scale, and regulatory needs, means it makes sense to partner with traditional financial institutions. On the other side, established players recognize the value, innovation and potential of FinTech in a world which is increasingly mobile-first. These financial institutions are also adopting many of the methods that FinTechs use so successfully, from a focus on the customer, to using Agile software development, to holding hackathons, and forming accelerators and innovation programs.
    • sawsanenn
       
      This excerpt is important because it shows the three waves that each fintech companies go through. Currently, most companies are still in b2b markets which an new innovative role in the financial markets; howver, not all companies are doing the same thing. Some of them still need a real bank ( Not virtual) to make transactions and don't trust softwares.
  • ch as in New York, London or Singapore. So, although the UK dominates the world of fintech (generating an estimated £6.6billion in FinTech related revenue), leading organizations are looking for inspiration among the innovative services, products and ideas being created from Guadalajara, to Laos, to Kenya.In many cases we can see that the unique financial environment of these locations is resulting in novel ideas. For example, Guadalajara based start-up Kueski uses a person’s digital footprint to assess their credit worthiness – a particular challenge in Mexico where credit is not available to large swathes of the population. In Latin America Tigo Cash is a mobile financial service which already handles more cash than many financial institutions in the region. We will see markets and services emerging which are currently not on anyone’s map, and become some of the most important financial organizations in the world.
    • ghtazi
       
      What this example shows is that beyond the usual finance hubs, such as in New York, London, or Singapore, the influence of FinTech innovation is also generated and experienced.
  • It’s 2020 and to apply for a loan, instead of going to your local bank branch, you quickly ask Facebook for approval. This is far from fanciful thinking. Even as of today, PayPal is arguably one of the largest retail banks — it has more money in deposits than all but the largest 20 US banks, and offers services from payments, to loans and credit cards (albeit currently via partners). But we believe that one of the major tech companies, whether that is Facebook, Amazon, Google, or Ant Financial (the financial arm of Alibaba) will not only transform retail banking, but rapidly become the largest retail bank in the world.
  •  
    This article explains how the big e-commerce giant Amazon and the dominant social media platforms will become the largest retail banks in the future. I think that M-Pesa could benefit from strategic alliances or partnerships with these big giants.
nourserghini

Nigeria's Paga acquires Apposit, confirms Mexico and Ethiopia expansion | TechCrunch - 1 views

  • As it grows abroad, Paga faces greater competition in Nigeria. For the last decade, South Africa and Kenya — with the success of Safaricom’s  M-Pesa product — have been Africa’s standouts in digital payments.But over the last several years, Nigeria has become a magnet for VC and fintech startups. This trend reached a high-point in 2019 when Chinese investors put $220 million into Opera owned OPay and Transsion backed PalmPay — two fledgling startups with plans to scale in Nigeria and broader Africa.
    • nourserghini
       
      Paga's competitors in its origin country Nigeria and broader Africa are M-pesa and PalmPay.
  • With its Apposit acquisition and continued expansion, PayPal may become more than a model for Paga.Founder Tayo Oviosu sees big fintech players, such as PayPal and Alipay, as future competitors with Paga’s plans to move into more emerging markets.
    • nourserghini
       
      Competition in emerging markets for Paga are big fintechs such as PayPal and Alipay.
hindelquarrouti

M-PESA: Progress and Prospects - 0 views

  • This is a good example of a service whose time had come and whose implementation occurred in the right context.
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    The features of the local mobile telephony and banking sectors contributed greatly to the effectiveness and success of M-pesa. A combination of unbanked people with access to mobile technology.
ayoubb

M‐pesa: A Case Study of the Critical Early Adopters' Role in the Rapid Adopti... - 0 views

  • M‐pesa: A Case Study of the Critical Early Adopters’ Role in the Rapid Adoption of Mobile Money Banking in Kenya - Ngugi - 2010 - THE ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES - Wiley Online Library M‐pesa: A Case Study of the Critical Early Adopters’ Role in the Rapid Adoption of Mobile Money Banking in Kenya - Ngugi - 2010 - THE ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES - Wiley Online Library
    • ayoubb
       
      MPESA
mohammed_ab

Cryptocurrencies in FinTech - Don't Ignore It | Avatrade NG - 0 views

  • A whole range of companies within the banking and FinTech industries are starting to explore ways through which they can take advantage of the electronic ledger technology that powers cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin
  • A whole range of companies within the banking and FinTech industries are starting to explore ways through which they can take advantage of the electronic ledger technology that powers cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum. This distributed system stores data chronologically in segments known as “blocks” which allow for the information to be processed and transferred almost instantaneously. Among the benefits of the blockchain technology, that make it so attractive to FinTech companies and other large institutions, is the lowered risk of fraud since the technology is notoriously difficult to hack, its speed and the fact that it eliminates intermediary steps between parties in a transaction.
  •  
    I think that M-Pesa could implement cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin or Etherum in their service. I think that their customer will quickly shift their usage to cryptocurrencies as they offer higher protection from fraud. It could be life-changing for a mobile payment application like M-Pesa.
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