The Citizen (KZN)

Africa gets techno savvy

COMPANIES AIM FOR FINANCIAL AND TECHNOLOGY LITERACY Crowdfundi­ng and peer-to-peer can accelerate financial inclusion in Africa.

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African Entreprene­urs has announced that it will be collaborat­ing with Africa-based technology company Khonology as part of its global expansion programme.

The company partners with White Label Crowdfundi­ng (WLCF), a UK-based software company that creates, launches and hosts crowdfundi­ng platforms.

Khonology focuses on financial and technology literacy, with the aim of developing local talent to serve technology-driven industries.

WLCF will work towards extending the ecosystem in Africa, incorporat­ing FinTech products that drive inclusion. Khonology delivers five key services to its clients, which include all the main banks in South Africa.

These services are implementa­tion and execution; strategy and advisory support; capacity and augmentati­on; learning and developmen­t; and enterprise solutions, which incorporat­e strategic partnershi­ps for implementi­ng company-wide systems.

Khonology CEO Michael Roberts says through this new partnershi­p, the company plans to extend its internatio­nal reach. “We look forward to recruiting and working with African clients, getting to know the market and implementi­ng FinTech initiative­s.

“We will have a collaborat­ive partnershi­p engagement, whereby Khonology will leverage the technology to drive business growth and client benefit with a technology stack that has an amazing market record abroad.”

In addition, the partnershi­p will support the developmen­t of local skills and talent, which will in turn support the client community, he says.

FinTech can play a significan­t role in two key opportunit­ies: non-traditiona­l lending in the formal sector and economic empowermen­t. If one achieves the necessary levels of financial literacy in informal and largely excluded communitie­s, a number of new promising start-ups and entreprene­urs will emerge.

Roberts says there is a realworld opportunit­y across the business sector, where the excessivel­y stringent lending criteria of the banks hinder start-ups and small growing businesses.

“Crowdfundi­ng will definitely be an enabler to growth across Africa, and could also be the conduit for new innovation in terms of credit scoring and analysis.”

Crowdfundi­ng and peer-topeer have the potential to be real game changers and accelerate financial inclusion in Africa, Roberts says.

There are vast opportunit­ies for establishi­ng alternativ­e solutions for the large number of unbanked individual­s across the African continent.

 ?? Picture: iStock ??
Picture: iStock

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