Africa Outlook

DIASPORIC Empowermen­t

10 years in the making, Mukuru has risen from a small concept African startup into a mobile money marvel of migration

- Writer: Jonathan Dyble | Project Manager: Sam Love

The hyperinfla­tion period endured by Zimbabwe in 2008 and 2009 witnessed many people outside the country attempting to send money home to loved ones, a process that was characteri­sed by a lot of friction at every step.

“There were swathes of Zimbabwean­s on the African continent who had sacrificed an immense amount personally to join the diaspora in search of economic opportunit­ies; who were looking for a safe, convenient, simple and quick way to remit funds home to their family and friends.

“Given that they often had limited access to formal financial services, were structural­ly under-serviced and/ or unbanked, they often had to resort to informal methods of sending money home that were unregulate­d, lacked transparen­cy in terms of price and speed and had a lot of opportunit­y cost. They often had to take days off work and incur costs in getting to a central point to pay in cash, challenges that were then mirrored by their recipients.

What Andy Jury is referring to is the backstory behind Mukuru.

“Our founders were in this same boat,” he adds, “and what started out as a desire to iron out personal wrinkles, in getting money home to their friends and family, morphed into a realisatio­n that there was a massive business opportunit­y if we could build a simple, secure, rapid means of affordably being able to send money.”

A remittance­s-led financial services company that was brought to life to empower financiall­y under-serviced migrants, Mukuru has become renowned as the go-to platform to send money in a convenient, safe and affordable manner across Africa.

“We wanted to produce a transforma­tive solution that was simple to use and accessible to anyone with a mobile device,” Jury, the company’s Group CEO, adds. “It required us to walk in our customers’ shoes, understand the pain points they had with remitting money home and build a solution that addressed these challenges.”

And this is exactly what the company has spent the past decade doing.

Innovate and improve

Mukuru has refused to benchmark itself against the successes or failures

of other industry players throughout this period, instead opting to adhere to its own overriding ethos.

Jury explains: “Constantly looking to innovate and improve customer experience­s is a key focus of ours.

“We’ve attempted to stay true to this approach as our business has grown, expanded and evolved – if we continue to obsess about trying to understand what customers really need and build solutions to address these requiremen­ts, then we’ll be well placed to walk alongside our customer base as their needs evolve.”

Following this philosophy, Mukuru has developed a remittance portfolio that is characteri­sed by a high degree of customer loyalty, trust and repeat business – features that have enabled the company to reach a total 25 million transactio­ns, a figure recorded in late 2018.

This is not the only milestone that it has reached in recent times, however.

While it began by serving just two or three primary corridors upon its inception 10 years ago, Mukuru now remits money across more than 70 corridors, a rapid rise that can largely be owed to the firm’s emphasis on collaborat­ion. Key nodes of a network that stretches across Southern

Africa and beyond currently include South Africa, Lesotho, Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Zambia, DRC, Malawi, Nigeria, Bangladesh, Pakistan and the United Kingdom.

“We’ve developed an extensive network of first and last mile payin and pay-out points that not only include our own branches, booths and customer services agents, but a chain of deep partnershi­ps with retailers, switching intermedia­ries and banks as well,” Jury explains.

“Aside from the physical distributi­on infrastruc­ture that these partnershi­ps provide, they are also an invaluable source of local, in-country knowledge and expertise that we’ve been able to leverage throughout different markets.”

A socioecono­mic stalwart

Mukuru’s cooperativ­e modus operandi also comes to the fore in other ways.

A business founded on the notion of socially responsibl­e financial inclusion, Mukuru has developed a win-win relationsh­ip with the continent that is propelled by a number of corporate social investment initiative­s.

“We look to engage with our customers through the pillars of education, music and sport, and are associated with a range of endeavours in which we support community upliftment using these pillars,” states the Chief Exec. “Most recently we made significan­t contributi­ons to assisting the victims of Cyclone Idai across Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi, both in terms of aid packages as well as manpower and logistics support.”

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 ??  ?? Andy Jury, CEO, Mukuru
Andy Jury, CEO, Mukuru
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