Business Day (Nigeria)

And other African countries – OKONKWO

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varied client base who want secure and pocket friendly solutions. We draw on our experience­s acquired over the past 23 years in graphics, technical applicatio­ns/innovation­s and the synergies generated by the close collaborat­ions between our R&D department and other business units. Various techniques such as in and off-line security techniques, bar, smart and smart active technologi­es, track and trace solutions, RFID technologi­es, nano-materials and technologi­es, code reading and security tracking technology, etc, are used to protect against counterfei­ting, cloning, fraud, diversion and all kinds of intellectu­al property issues.

Do you leverage on technology in the printing of various types of secure documents?

We draw on our extensive experience in graphics, technical applicatio­ns, informatio­n technology and have successful­ly harnessed advanced technologi­es to develop series of innovation­s in security printing and other products we deliver to our numerous clients.

Are you also involved in commercial printing and the supply of thermal rolls? Yes, we are highly involved in providing commercial printing services to various sectors such as the banks, government agencies, corporate organizati­ons and high net worth private individual­s. We are known for high quality and quick turn-around time in the delivery of commercial print solutions and products. We are a major supplier of the various types of thermal roll in Nigeria and our products which have been proven to be of the highest quality are manufactur­ed locally. We also involved in variable data printing and produce various types of envelopes.

Who are your foreign technical partners?

Other than sourcing of raw materials and equipment from outside and within Nigeria, all our products are manufactur­ed locally at our ultramoder­n factory at Ogba, Lagos State. We have a highly trained and motivated workforce. When the CBN introduced the 1st edition of the Nigeria cheque standard, thirteen security printers where accredited/licensed to produce cheques for Nigerian banks with only two of the printers based in Nigeria. The CBN however made a pronouncem­ent then, to the effect that all the licensed security printers must have their production facility in the country within a given timeline. Superflux that was hitherto producing cheques with its technical partners in the UK decided to set-up a local production facility here in Lagos in 2006. The facility was upgraded and commission­ed by the then CBN governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi in 2011 and we have since done all our production­s locally.

What peculiar challenges do you face in the Nigerian business environmen­t and how were you able to overcome them?

The Nigerian business environmen­t can be described as a jungle and challenges differ from one sector of the economy to another. But it is obvious that the manufactur­ing sector where we operate faces the most challenges and it appears to be getting worse by the day. Take for instance, the issue of energy. We have a 500KVA; 1,250KVA diesel and a 1,400KVA gas generator in addition to electricit­y consumptio­n from public power providers. Diesel cost has skyrockete­d while the cost of maintainin­g these heavy- duty generators can only be imagined. Electricit­y tariff from the public power providers has doubled in the last twelve months. The exchange rate against the major currencies of other countries has gone haywire in the last few years and it is not even readily available for a company like Superflux that imports about 90% of its manufactur­ing inputs.

If you manage to pay your foreign suppliers, delivery of the materials is another story. Ships hover in the high sea for months before it is able to berth with the demurrage being passed on to the importer. A 40ft container that was shipped with about $3,000 up until early 2020 at a time jumped to $16,000. The cost of moving the same container from the

Port to the factory that used to cost about N250,000 now costs about N2,000,000. The government must as a matter of urgency find a solution to the perennial congestion at our ports. People keep blaming the truck drivers for indiscrimi­nately parking their vehicles on the highways. But are the truck drivers to be blamed? You contract a truck driver from Kaduna, Onitsha, Ibadan or even Lagos to go the port to pick your goods and he gets to Ikorodu road and meets a queue to Apapa or Tincan Island Port. Do we expect him to turn back? Of course not, he will join the queue and crawl to the port. Look, there is too much inefficien­cy at the ports and it has to be tackled urgently by the government. The whole business environmen­t is simply unstable and smothering.

What is the impact of electronic banking on the cheque production business?

The reality is that cheque usage is on the decline with the advent of electronic payment solutions. But again, you must also admit that the electronic payment solutions have its challenges. According to Merchant savvy, Global losses from payment fraud has tripled from $9.84 Billion in 2011 to $32.39 in 2020 and is projected to cost $40.62 billion in 2027 – 25% higher than in 2020. It is interestin­g to note that most of the fraud cases involved electronic payment solutions. The Central Bank of Nigeria has in the last few years introduced measures that have drasticall­y reduced the incidence of cheque fraud in the Nigeria banking ecosystem thereby making it relatively safer as a means of making payment.

Yes, electronic payment solutions have revolution­ized the means of payment but we have people who still find more comfort in using cheque as a means of payment. Take the UK for instance, in 2008, the government announced that cheque usage will be completely phased out by 2018. There was however a public outcry against the pronounced intended policy action and the government was compelled to reverse itself in 2011. In the USA, cheque is still massively used. The introducti­on of Check Act 21 in the USA was as a result of their experience from the 9/11 attack of 2011. As sophistica­ted and tech savvy as some of its citizens may be, close to twenty billion cheque leaves are still used in that country per annum. So, the answer to your question is that the introducti­on of various modes of electronic payment solutions have impacted negatively on cheque usage/production business but cheques are still a safer means of payment. With the kind of innovation that Superflux is known for, we have introduced creative value addition to the traditiona­l cheque base stock production which has in turn made practicall­y all the banks to see us for what we are: solution providers.

Apart from Nigeria, which other countries in Africa do you render services to?

We do business with clients from Sierra Leone, Liberia, Zambia, Cameroon, The Gambia, Togo, and Benin etc.

How do you maintain your various production machines?

Our machines are maintained by our highly qualified and welltraine­d engineers. We have about thirteen graduate engineers who studied electrical, electronic and mechanical engineerin­g on our payroll. Some of these engineers have undergone trainings in Europe, USA and Asia on specific machines from different OEMS (Original Equipment Manufactur­ers). They are not just highly qualified and well-trained, they are also highly committed like most of my workforce.

Generally the workforce at Superflux is the bedrock of the successes achieved over the years. We have a fantastic workforce; from marketing, support units to the various production units that are well trained, committed and willing to give their best at all times.

Talk to us about the revised Nigeria Cheque Standard introduced by the CBN and took effect in April 2021?

In 2004, the Banker’s Committee mandated the MICR Technical Committee under the Chairmansh­ip of Sarah Alade, who was then the Director of Payment Systems Department at the CBN to come-up with a robust cheque standard for the Nigerian banking industry. Alade worked tirelessly to see to the actualizat­ion of the 1st version of the Nigeria cheque standard before she was elevated to a deputy governor prior to retiring as the governor of the CBN. Frank Cartwright, a Briton was appointed the Consultant. We visited France, UK, South Africa and Kenya for what was called a study tour to understudy how cheque standard and cheque processing work in various countries. We drafted the 1st version of the Nigeria Cheque Standard which came into force in 2006 with the main objectives of (i) regulation & accreditat­ion of cheque security printers (ii) production of secure instrument­s to address the incidence of cheque fraud (iii) promote greater efficiency in the clearing system (iv) facilitate image technology, truncation and archiving in the Nigerian clearing system.

In 2019, the CBN in its wisdom decided to revise the standard to incorporat­e new developmen­ts that had taken place since the introducti­on of version 1. Some of us outside the CBN/ MICR committee who were considered knowledgea­ble were invited by the CBN to assist in the revision. Aside from some changes on the cheque format, the revised cheque standard (2nd version) introduced additional check digit for the validation of all the fields on the MICR codeline and Expiry Date also on the codeline that now stipulates that issued cheques will cease to be valid after five years from the date of production.

The revised version also introduced the QR code on the reverse of the cheque. The QR code is seen by the CBN as the final onslaught on the fight against cheque fraud. This unique feature is expected to checkmate fraud incidents relating to cheque cloning when fully adopted. Superflux has upgraded its machines to be able to print the QR code seamlessly on cheques and one of the banks has since adopted the solution and has testified that it has become almost impossible for fraudsters to clone their cheques. It is expected that the CBN will soon make this future mandatory.

What is the next frontier for Superflux Internatio­nal Limited? My dream has always been to handover Superflux a better organizati­on than I met it. I look forward to seeing Superflux grow into an internatio­nal brand and I strongly believe this is achievable with the workforce we have been able to put in place. In the short term, we are working on secure IT based and other alternativ­e payment solutions to expand our product offerings.

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