Sunday Times

Vodacom banks on m-payments relaunch

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HOW is this for ambitious? Vodacom in South Africa is hoping to sign up 10 million subscriber­s to its M-Pesa mobile banking and payments platform in the next five years.

To put that in context, the cellular operator has managed to sign up only a million South Africans since M-Pesa was launched in 2010.

Vodacom, now working with Bidvest Bank instead of Nedbank, relaunched M-Pesa in its home market last week in an effort to get consumers more interested in a payment platform that has enjoyed huge successes in Tanzania and Kenya, where it was conceived and developed by sister company Safaricom.

According to Vodacom’s latest annual report, M-Pesa in Tanzania contribute­d nearly a fifth of the company’s service revenue in that market in the financial year to endMarch 2014. The group has six million M-Pesa customers across its markets in Southern Africa.

More than half of Vodacom’s customers in Tanzania use M-Pesa. In Kenya, Safaricom has more than 18 million M-Pesa users — or more

It intends to make M-Pesa available just about everywhere one can buy airtime

than 70% of the adult population.

The fact that M-Pesa — pesa is the Swahili word for money — has not amounted to much in South Africa, Vodacom’s biggest market by far where it has 32 million mobile subscriber­s, has proved immensely frustratin­g for the company.

But it has taken its time recrafting the propositio­n for the local market, putting off the relaunch by a year while it ensures, for one thing, that it has the right framework in place with regulators to ease the paperwork burden.

Vodacom is pinning its hopes on a turnaround for M-Pesa in South Africa on four main pillars: distributi­on, registrati­on, functional­ity and loyalty.

Of these, distributi­on is probably the most important. That’s why the company intends ensuring that M-Pesa is available just about everywhere that consumers can buy airtime. It plans to roll out the service to 30 000 retail outlets, both formal and informal, by year-end, from the current approximat­ely 8 000.

Ease of registrati­on is also likely to be decisive.

Gone is the need for customers to present themselves in person with their ID. Now they can simply sign up using the USSD (Unstructur­ed Supplement­ary Service Data) menus on their phones. They don’t need to go through a Fica process for transactio­ns under R1 000 a day or R25 000 a month. Those wanting higher limits must get Fica’d.

Vodacom is also offering a Visabrande­d, chip-and-pin-based debit card, allowing purchases where MPesa is not accepted. The card costs R10, but attracts no monthly fees and comes with bonus airtime. Indeed, free airtime incentives are a big feature of the new M-Pesa.

Fees seem reasonable, with no charges if the customer doesn’t use the service. There is, however, no interest paid on positive balances. It’s free to deposit money. Transfers to other M-Pesa customers cost R1 (R4 to non-registered customers and to users on other networks) and cash-out costs R2.50 plus R1 for every R100 at retail and R5 plus R1 for every R100 at an ATM.

To load the M-Pesa wallet, consumers either buy vouchers or top up their accounts using internet banking. Internet transfers take a full day to reflect on users’ M-Pesa accounts, but Vodacom says this will be reduced to just 15 minutes soon thanks to agreements with the banks. Employers can also deposit wages directly into employees’ M-Pesa wallets, making them more akin to full-service bank accounts.

Vodacom is likely to be much more successful this time around — but it won’t have the market to itself.

Rival MTN is also making significan­t headway in the mpayments space. It relaunched its Mobile Money offering in partnershi­p with retailer Pick n Pay in June and is offering consumers similar services to M-Pesa.

The inevitable dogfight as South Africa’s two largest mobile operators scramble for dominance in a new market will undoubtedl­y propel innovation and benefit consumers as mobile phones become a platform for mass commerce.

McLeod edits Techcentra­l.co.za. Find him on Twitter @mcleodd

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