Cape Times

Mobile technology to spur financial firms

- Kabelo Khumalo

SOUTH African financial services companies are yet to fully appreciate how transforma­tional mobile technology is going to help the future profitabil­ity of their businesses.

Facebook’s global head of financial services strategy, Neil Hiltz, said yesterday that it was important for companies to understand that consumers preferred personalis­ed marketing solutions to endear brands.

Hiltz, who is visiting the country to engage with industry role players, said companies could take full advantage of South Africa’s 8.2 million daily active Facebook users, 8 million of which accessed the chatroom through their cellphones.

“With Facebook’s’ advertisin­g capabiliti­es, we work with marketing companies to leverage the data we have, and the data the banks and insurance companies have to create more highly personalis­ed conversati­on with customers,” Hiltz said.

Last month the company said global money transfer service TransferWi­se was the latest firm to subscribe to Facebook Messenger. It allows its clients to set up foreign exchange transactio­ns over the service.

TransferWi­se rival, Azimo, joined the platform last year alongside Visa, Mastercard, American Express, as well as China-based Alipay.com to facilitate mobile payments.

The country’s financial services sector has not been immune to a shift from branch-focused service delivery to online platforms by consumers.

FNB last week said it had experience­d faster than expected growth in its E-Migration strategy. The bank said for the year to December 2011 to the year to December 2016, deposits from its branches decreased from 65percent to 31percent.

However, it said year-on-year

change in transactio­n volumes for mobiles increased by 26percent, internet by 11 percent and banking applicatio­ns by 80 percent.

Hiltz said the use of social media helped to reduce costs and improve efficienci­es.

“What we know is that smartphone­s are a platform that nearly everyone on the globe is going to have access to. Banks and insurance companies need to accelerate their investment in the space to better understand their customers and their investment decisions.”

Mobile and online digital market research firm, Juniper Research, found that the value of domestic money transfers, including operator money and social media money services, would reach $520 billion (R6.6trillion) in global mobile transactio­ns by next year.

The report said in 2015, Africa and the Middle East had 235million registered mobile money users, representi­ng the largest share of the global market.

A survey conducted by the Gates Foundation, World Bank and Gallup World Poll also found that of the world’s top 20 countries for mobile money usage, 15 of them were in Africa with Kenya accounting for the majority of the world’s mobile money transactio­ns.

Hiltz said Facebook was going to continue to grow and invest in the continent as opportunit­ies were plenty.

“We believe there is room to grow our market share in South Africa,” he said. “We feel we are currently under-penetrated in the financial services industry in the country and continent.”

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? Facebook’s Neil Hiltz says the use of social media helps to reduce costs and improve efficienci­es.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG Facebook’s Neil Hiltz says the use of social media helps to reduce costs and improve efficienci­es.

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