The Mercury

Vodacom launches new Funeral Cover 4 You

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VODACOM has launched a new funeral insurance product following the successful launch of its insurance business more than four years ago.

Vodacom said the Funeral Cover 4 You and Your Family came as a result of interest from its subscriber­s.

Andrew Culbert, the managing executive at Vodacom’s Telcosuran­ce, said: “With the launch of the Funeral Cover 4 You and Your Family products, we have seen a significan­t spike in interest from consumers with up to 7 000 new customers viewing the product a day.

“We are delighted with the take up from early adopters and expect that the general market will adjust to this new and innovative way to get and pay for funeral cover in the not too distant future.

“We expect to grow our policyhold­er base to at least 50 000 customers over the next two years,” he said.

The launch of the new

requiremen­ts.

Since October, about 18 million subscriber­s across the group were disconnect­ed to comply with subscriber regulation­s. MTN was hoping to turn the tide.

In Nigeria, MTN expected product follows the successful launch of its insurance business in April 2012, which has generated more than R1.5 billion since its launch.

The company said its funeral cover would offer customers options to pay weekly or monthly when they recharge using their cellphones.

Vodacom said since the launch of its insurance cover more than a million Vodacom customers had signed up for a range of insurance policies, which include cellphone, laptop, life and funeral cover, adding on more than 13 000 new customers a month.

The insurance business has a compound annual growth rate of 20.31 percent, according to Culbert.

Peter Takaendesa, a portfolio manager at Mergence Investment Managers, said: “The key challenge for the South African telecoms companies at this stage is that the overall market is now largely mature as data revenue growth is largely

growth from data and said it had secured forex for the rolling out of 3G and LTE networks in key cities, such as Lagos and Abuja, in the next six to eight weeks.

In South Africa, the group saw a decline in subscriber­s due offset by declines in traditiona­l voice revenue.

“As a result they either have to grow by stealing market share from competitor­s or find new revenue streams. We believe it is less about diversific­ation at this stage, but more about finding additional revenue streams to at least help cover growing cost bases.”

Takaendesa said telecoms companies were diversifyi­ng as the markets in which they operated were saturated.

He said Vodacom was now looking at identifyin­g material non-core additional revenue streams for telecoms companies in the local market as shown by the failure of mobile money (M-Pesa) ventures.

“The growth targets now appear to be other mobile financial services, such as insurance and digital content such as TV streaming on mobile devices,” Takaendesa said.

“Telecoms have very wide distributi­on networks that they use to distribute airtime

to strong competitio­n. It struggled with poor network quality, which led to two instances were subscriber­s could not make calls or connect to the network.

MTN SA chief executive, Mteto Nyati, said it planned to improve its network quality by and handsets.

“It is these networks they are trying to leverage to generate new revenue streams.

“It is still early to tell if these potential revenue streams will become material given the failure of mobile money and Vodacom’s reasonable success in insurance is largely in mobile devices cover so far.

“MTN is also targeting growing its presence in digital services (financial and e-commerce), but primarily focusing on the rest of Africa and the Middle East where markets are not as developed as the South African market,” he said.

Culbert added: “All Vodacom insurance is fully underwritt­en by the wholly owned registered insurers within the Vodacom group. Vodacom insurance has rapidly become a substantia­l business that pays out an average of R1 million per day in claims.”

Vodacom shares fell 0.75 percent on Friday to R158.25. – Sandile Mchunu

the end of the year. “We have eight cities where we plan to ensure that by the end of the December we are on a better level. We are targeting freeways to ensure zero dropped calls.”

MTN shares fell 2.79 percent on Friday to R129.82.

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