Mobile banking 19% cheaper than traditional banking

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: According to a research, when compared to traditional bank services, mobile banking services are on average 19% cheaper. It has also been found that the lower the transaction value, the cheaper mobile banking is, in comparison with formal banks.

Mobile banking is also found out to be 54% cheaper than informal options for money transfer. It has also been revealed in the research that the price gap between branchless banking providers and banks was not as large as expected.

Mobile banking services were found to be only 19% cheaper on a medium deposit size of $69 while formal banks proved the significantly cheaper option for high” deposits of $207.

M-Pesa launches in UK (Kenya)

Vodafone’s group company, Safarikom has launched m-pesa, it’s mobile money transfer and payment service at selected outlets in the UK.

Kenyans in the UK  can now send money to their friends and family in Kenya through M-pesa UK, direct to their mobile phone wallets.

Western Union, Provident Capital Transfers and KenTv were involved in a small pilot before the commercial launch of this service.  A total of 19 outlets with high local kenyan population were selected to trial this service.

To send money using M-PESA, the sender in UK will be required to identify themselves and furnish the agent with the recipient’s name, Kenyan mobile number and the amount being sent in Sterling Pounds. This will be converted at current rates and sent in Kenyan Shillings.  Neither party is charged a registration fee.

A transaction fee ranging from £4 to £6.90 will be charged though.

Following authorisation by the Central Bank of Kenya, Safaricom shall be increasing the locations in the UK from which money can be sent to M-pesa customers as well as launching services across other popular remittance corridors

Currently, the maximum amount that can be sent internationally per transaction through M-pesa is £250 while the total allowable per month from a single sender in the UK is £1,000.

The successful take-up of M-PESA in Kenya has clearly demonstrated the demand for easily accessible, secure cash payment services in emerging markets,” said Nick Hughes, Vodafone’s Head of International Mobile Payments. Our partnership with Western Union allows M-PESA subscribers to receive international remittances and builds on the demand we have already seen domestically in Kenya.”

This program aligns a global leader in money-transfer services, the world’s largest mobile operator group, and arguably one of the most impressive success stories in mobile money,” said Matt Dill, Senior Vice President, Western Union Digital Ventures.  In offering M-PESA users the opportunity to receive funds from abroad for the first time, these three companies are changing the way money moves around the
globe.”

Safaricom CEO Michael Joseph said: We wish to invite Kenyans living in the UK to take advantage of this service, which presents a real innovation on our M-pesa menu. Through strategic partnerships with Western Union, Provident Capital and KenTV we are giving them an opportunity to convert across two currencies into M-pesa and send money affordably without any hidden costs directly to the mobile phone of the recipient.”

Mobile industry in Africa satisfying key consumer needs

While Western mobile companies scratch their heads about how to replicate or adapt the widespread adoption of mobile data services in Japan and Korea, Africa provides another example of how people respond to a great need not new technology. Currently WIZZIT Bank is providing a mobile banking initiative to fulfil the needs of the 14 million South Africans who have no proper access to banks or other financial services. Analysts estimate that up to 60% of the 22 million mobile phone owners would be without bank accounts or easy access to money transfer systems and that WIZZIT would provide these mobile consumers with a significant benefit in becoming economic citizens.

WIZZIT is essentially a new bank that provides its customers with the ability to carry out transfers, pay standing orders, top-up mobile phone credit and take out money. Security is via the usual four digit codes used by other banks and they have relationships with other banking chains allowing you to still do things the usual way. They already have what they call a “cult following” and have set up accounts for farmers to allow the mto send money home or to other family members much more easily.

This kind of banking operation has been made illegal in England and, looking at some of the details more carefully, it is clear that WIZZIT is, if anything, not a business model to follow in all its details, even if it suits the needs of its current target market. First of all, the bank carries out no credit checks, something obviously impossible for some of the citizens who have no credit to check. It takes only 2 minutes to set up an account and the service is also available to schoolchildren, which makes it universal and, to Western minds, inherently suspicious. Uniquely, WIZZIT has a policy to only employ unemployed people and uses them as salespeople to demonstrate and spread their knowledge of the service. You’d be hard pressed to find many people who could have faith in a bank in England or America who followed a similar policy.

It remains to be seen if this service can remain popular and secure but it fundamentally fulfils a glaring need for its customers. It is also just another example of how Africans in general are some of the highest users of WAP technology to access the internet, in particular using their mobiles to access world news sites such as the BBC. Poor fixed-line networks and the high cost of computers have made internet access far more more appealing on mobiles. Fast adoption of 3G Networks and the effciency of cellular network companies as opposed to the government-run telecoms companies have made WAP an internet standard in Nigeria and South Africa.

Again this model is unrepeatable in its details, given the high development and penetration of broadband in Western companies, whcih effectively raised the bar for mobile phones and cannibalised the potenital market. What is noticeable is that in both cases mobile phones have fulfilled needs otherwise uncatered for or under-provided through other media (Banking and News-provision respectively). It is this aspect of recognising useful gaps in the market that needs to be worked on by operators in developed economies, where data aservices are more likely to enhance or improve existing habits and behaviours rather than create new needs.

Once networks provide this kind of longed for service to their customers they are likely to see increased goodwill and loyalty that has previously eluded them. As an unlikely example of this relationship developing, witness the woman in Sierra Leone who named her new-born son “Celtel” after the local mobile operator that allowed her to contact a midwife in time to deliver her baby. Admittedly, this is unlikely to happen in Europe (“We’ve decided to call her “Orange”!”) but at least we can get to the stage where we don’t resent or ignore them.

Source- http://www.w2forum.com

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