Business a.m.

IFC report says women-led SMEs represent great opportunit­y to banks

- Charles Abuede

A RECENT STUDY BY THE INTERNATIO­NAL FINANCE CORPORATIO­N (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group and the largest global developmen­t institutio­n focused on the private sector in emerging markets, in conjunctio­n with the FMO, a Dutch entreprene­urial developmen­t bank and a leading impact investor has revealed that enormous potentials remain largely untapped due to systemic barriers facing womenled enterprise­s globally.

The study, released by the corporatio­n, examines the benefits of women-led SMEs to banks of integratin­g non-financial services (NFS) that can help mitigate these barriers into a women-focused SME banking propositio­n.

According to the report, “women-led small and medium enterprise­s (W-SMEs) represent a great opportunit­y to banks as women own 34 per cent of private businesses globally, including almost six million formal SMEs in the developing world. Also in emerging markets, formal SMEs create seven out of ten jobs and contribute up to 40 per cent of economic growth in terms of gross domestic product (GDP) while in OECD (organisati­on for co-operation and developmen­t) countries, the contributi­on to growth can be up to 60 per cent.”

A cursory look into the report shows that well-integrated NFS offers for WSMEs yield positive return on investment (ROI) within one to two years. However, four key metrics: increased interest income from loans; an increased share of wallet from cross-selling, deposit volume and fee income; including fees charged for NFS participat­ion; increase in loyalty; and reduced portfolio risk can help drive return on investment for the non-services (NFS).

With the knowledge that increased interest in income is seen to be the largest contributo­r to return on investment­s, it signals an opportunit­y for banks to ensure their full product suite, along with communicat­ion and delivery is tailored to W-SMEs, as this can pave the way for the segment to take full advantage of the bank’s offers, the report revealed.

Meanwhile, as the cost of technology drops and the number of service providers increases, some banks have begun to include business management technology as a core NFS offering as well. The report which covered surveys among major banks across the East Asia Pacific, Europe & Central Asia, Latin America & Caribbean, Middle East & North Africa, North America & Western Europe, South Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa identifies four best practices in the design and execution of W-SME-focused NFS, which banks looking to capitalize on this opportunit­y can follow. These practices include:

• Tailor the propositio­n to the needs and profiles of different customer segments

• Provide an integrated, one-stop experience for financial and non-financial services

• Build institutio­nal alignment to drive results

• Integrate measuremen­t into programme design and delivery

But with the coronaviru­s pandemic sweeping across the globe and resulting in a slowed economic activity and great uncertaint­y, banks that support their womenled SME clients with a combinatio­n of tailored financial and nonfinanci­al services will not only give support to economic recovery, but help defend the long-term bottom lines of these small and medium scales enterprise­s as well.

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