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Contributed to DFS Lab Blog by Andrew Mutua, Founder of PesaKit

Kenya is a global leader when it comes to mobile money services. In 2007, the telecom operator Safaricom launched its mobile money service M-Pesa as a simple way to text small payments between users. A decade later, the platform enables almost 30 million people to pay for crucial services, access loans, and send money all over the world. M-Pesa has become the world’s most successful mobile money service.

Digitizing and disbursing cash is enabled by a network of physical access points, or agents. In most cases, an agent is the most convenient way for customers to deposit or withdraw cash from their mobile money accounts.

Even with the M-Pesa revolution, digitizing and disbursing cash still has inherent limitations. The majority of agents consistently turn away customers because they don’t have sufficient e-float with a mobile money provider to facilitate a deposit transaction or enough cash to facilitate a withdrawal transaction. Additionally, agents incur a high cost of maintaining liquidity during e-float top-ups and fragmentation of the agent e-float if an agent is serving multiple providers which results in increased cash-flow pressure.

In Nairobi, Kenya, there’s a new kid on the block. PesaKit. PesaKit’s mission is to empower every mobile money agent on the planet to achieve and deliver more.

PesaKit is focused on agents because they are a core part of the operational infrastructure of mobile money. According to the GSMA state of the industry 2016 report, agents represented 94.8% of mobile money’s physical cash-in and cash-out global footprint whereas ATMs represent just 4.2% and bank branches represent 1.0%. In December 2016, 30 markets had 10 times more active (30-day) agents than bank branches. The expansive reach of agents is a hallmark of mobile money; with more than 4.3 million, or approximately 1.2 agents per 1,000 adults, of which 2.3 million are active.

For every 100,000 adults in Kenya, there are 11 ATMS, 6 commercial bank branches and 538 mobile money agents. This prompted Andrew Mutua, Founder of PesaKit, and his team to conduct a qualitative study to examine the potential of machine learning-based liquidity recommendations to help mobile money agents manage and improve their operations.

The study conducted in May and June of 2017 begins in Nairobi’s Dandora estate, a sprawling low-income residential area. It hosts the largest dump site in Kenya and one of the most dangerous informal settlements in Nairobi. We meet Tobias Okusimba, in an 18sqft partition of his 100sqft home where he runs his mobile money agency business offering M-Pesa and Airtel money services. He also vends consumer durables. He has been an agent for the past two years, open 12 hours a day, six days a week. His primary motivation to start the agent business was to earn transaction commissions.

With a transactional value of nearly Kshs 40,000 ($400) per day he has to convert cash to e-float daily. This means walking a kilometer to the nearest bank. He fears insecurity during transit to the bank and running out of e-float during business hours.

We interviewed and collected data from four more agents in Nairobi then moved to Thika and Bomet, two other towns in Kenya.

225 KMs Northwest of Nairobi is Bomet — a bustling, fast growing, rural, agricultural town. There we meet Daniel Mugambi, owner of Classic Mobile Solutions, located at the heart of the town. His shop is illuminated by the various television screens displayed on the shelves along with other electronics and telecommunication products. He says business in the area is great, especially during harvest seasons. His mobile money business is a complimentary revenue generator. However, to extend his business reach and expand his customer base, he decided to open another electronics shop and mobile money agency some 25 kilometers away in a town called Mulot. Most of his customers are residents of the larger Bomet County from the agricultural farmlands. His main setbacks are e-float management and overseeing the shop in Mulot from afar.

Our findings
Through our study we aimed to understand the urban and rural agent profiles. What are PesaKit’s agent training and educational needs since we are using a smartphone app which is different from the common SIM toolkit agents use? How can PesaKit resolve the agent’s liquidity problems? What do they do when their e-float is depleted? How often do they use the top up and top us method? Can agents use an app to manage their operations? What is the value they see in PesaKit? Who are competitors and alternatives to PesaKit’s service? How do we validate our user interface design and app experience?

In total, we engaged 16 agents. Some of the patterns we observed from our study were:

  • 70% of the mobile money agents interviewed have more than one agent location.
  • 50% have a working capital between Kshs. 50,000 — Kshs. 100,000 ($500-$1,000).
  • 40% of the agents do transactions in the range of 40–60; 30% do transactions in the range of 20–40; 20% in the range of 10–20; and 7% do between 60–100, while 2% do above 200 transactions per day.
  • 60% of our respondents said the major challenge they face is the depletion of float; 20% said the major challenge is fraudsters; 10% say it is inadequate customers, while 5% list low commissions as their major challenge.
  • 80% of the agents said their major motivation to be an agent was the transaction commissions while 10% said that it is a strategy to attract more people into their stores and shops.
  • 50% of our respondents have a smartphone and have used mobile banking or mobile applications before. This indicates our smartphone based model would reach at least half the market.
  • 70% of our respondents would consider borrowing float from PesaKit while another 20% would use the merchant services.
  • 90% of the mobile money agents that we interviewed did encounter issues with their float being depleted daily, meaning they miss revenue opportunities on a daily basis.
  • 100% of our respondents would love to receive liquidity management recommendations.

E-float data overview from some of the participating agents
Source: Compiled by the author (2017)

Transactions and e-float relationships

E-float after withdrawal transactions:
When the agent performs a customer withdrawal transaction, the rise in e-float value indicates the amount being withdrawn or sent by the customer from their mobile money account into the agent’s account and in return the agent gives the customer cash.

E-float after deposit transactions in June:
When the agent performs a customer deposit transaction, the decrease in e-float value indicates the cash being deposited, or given to agent, by the customer to top up their mobile money account and so the agent’s e-float is deducted and sent to the customer’s account.

Graph 1
The graph below shows the changes in e-float as the agent performs withdrawal, deposit and e-float top up transactions during the month.​

Graph 2
The graph below shows the transaction points where e-float is affected.

Graph 3
We observed one of our agents for three months (June, July and August) and witnessed similar patterns. Her e-float went below Ksh 1,000 (Approx $10) 97 times.

What is PesaKit?

PesaKit is an AI powered digital/robo assistant for mobile money agents. It helps agents to know, manage, and control their liquidity (e-float and cash) through predictive analytics by forecasting their inventory needs for the next hour, day, week or month.

The agent’s experience

90% of the mobile money agents that we interviewed get their e-float depleted daily and have to turn away customers. This is an inconvenience to the customer, and a missed revenue opportunity and reputational risk to the agent.

We shared the PesaKit app prototypes with agents showing the different features available. Most agents liked the simplicity and intuitiveness of the app. They requested a Swahili version of the app. Two features dominated most of the conversations, the robo assistant and borrowing e-float.

All the agents loved the robo assistant with its various recommendations or insights. The recommendations are simple text styled messages, like how much e-float or cash an agent needs, projected customers and much more. They also appreciated the interactivity; being able to ask questions and getting advice in real time.​

PesaKit’s User Interface

From the study, 70% of the agents said they would consider borrowing e-float from PesaKit. They appreciated PesaKit scoring and seeing the amount they qualify to borrow. This gives them peace of mind knowing they have e-float on-demand. They loved that the fees are clear and easy to understand.

Creating value through data

PesaKit’s ability to continuously transform mobile money agent data points to valuable and actionable insights will enable the agent to improve their operations, reliability, credit-worthiness and profitability resulting in enhanced convenience, better financial services and lower costs for unbanked poor and under banked low income earners in urban and rural areas.

To learn more about PesaKit, visit www.pesakit.co.ke or email; andrew@pesakit.co.ke

PesaKit’s study was aided in part by Digital Financial Services Innovation Lab (DFS Lab), a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation-backed accelerator that supports fintech startups in the emerging markets of South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.

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As a daily M-pesa customer, I regularly need to top up my account to pay bills, send money to the village?? (back home) or to relatives in need. I’m sure many of us have been in the unfortunate situation where a family emergency arises and you need to first top up your M-pesa account in order to send cash. Back in April 2017, my cousin had a boda boda accident and the private hospital she was taken to on Mombasa road needed money to attend to her. Since she didn’t have enough cash on her to be assisted, she reached out to me in a time sensitive situation.

I had to go to seven (7) different mpesa agents to complete a deposit of Ksh 25,000! Imagine the frustration each time the agent told me “sina float” or “float haitoshi”. Heading back home after 40 minutes of anxiety and frustration got me thinking; How can I solve this systematic issue? Given my personal frustration, I set out to explore how agent networks operate.

My motivation was to try eliminate the anxiety I went through to help a loved one and knowing I didn’t want to go through that s#!t again! If I put my design and tech skills to work, then no one else should experience the same.

My mission, now PesaKit’s mission is to empower every mobile money agent on the planet to achieve and deliver more digital financial services to the underbanked.

Agents without float are perennially frustrating to mobile money providers and their customers alike.

After a year of private beta, I am excited to launch our public beta on July 22nd to ease liquidity (cash & float) pressures for the next 10,000 agents.

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How do we succeed in the ‘new normal’? https://pesakit.ai/how-do-we-succeed-in-the-new-normal/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-do-we-succeed-in-the-new-normal https://pesakit.ai/how-do-we-succeed-in-the-new-normal/#respond Thu, 04 Apr 2019 07:47:51 +0000 https://pesakit.ai/?p=3893 ...

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COVID-19 is driving a major shift in customer behavior in Africa as in the rest of the world. How do fintech startups in Africa adapt, thrive, and leapfrog digitally?

Andrew Mutua, Founder and CEO of PesaKit

COVID-19 is driving a major shift in customer behaviours in Africa as in the rest of the World — with a rapid increase in the use of digital payment models, and online product and service channels. It has also shifted how businesses operate, with many of them accelerating investments in digital channels and related enablers in order to meet customer needs.

Meet Grace

Grace has been a loyal PesaKit customer for over a year. Like many of our customers, Grace experienced ~50% decline in her agency business due to the curfew, lock down and other losses associated with Covid-19 between April and June 2020.

Mobile money agents such as Grace represent the physical backbone and face of the mobile money industry. To ensure that they recover in the post-COVID era many factors need to fall into place. Insufficient consumer protection, lack of financial and digital literacy, unequal access to digital infrastructure, and data biases need to be curbed to attain an inclusive recovery. Therefore, it is of utmost importance that we support our customers in minimizing the negative economic impact and emerge stronger from this pandemic.

Our COVID-19 Response for mobile money agents

We stepped up our efforts to help our customers protect themselves and navigate this difficult period in ways that secures their income, boosts their financial resilience and helps them sustain their businesses.

Our responses included:

  1. A Safety & Anti-misinformation Campaign
  2. COVID-19 Hospital Cash Insurance
  3. Float Exchange

To learn more about PesaKit’s Covid-19 responses visit our COVID-19 subsite covid-19.pesakit.co.ke

The PesaKit Strategy

The COVID-19 pandemic prompted us to accelerate our product roadmap which aims to serve mobile money agents and transform last mile digital commerce. Our target was to become a digital-first and data driven business within 6 months, and we achieved it.

Mobile money is the most popular financial service in Sub Saharan Africa. In Kenya, the mobile money transaction volume constitutes nearly 50% of our GDP. As the uptake of mobile money services and e-commerce continues to grow, the expansion and evolution of the agent network becomes all the more critical to ensuring high quality services. Winning and retaining the trust of customers, including those who are low income earners or new to the technology is central to the success of all stakeholders.

There is a mobile money agent for approximately every 231 people in Kenya, a country of ~ 12 million households. These agents are able to reach large volumes of the population via a real human touchpoint, at a scale no other organizations can compete with. However, customer expectations are evolving regularly. Instant gratification has become the norm due to enhanced internet penetration and customers now expect companies to anticipate their needs.

Unfortunately, individual agents like Grace often struggle to adequately meet customer demands for withdrawals or deposits due to lack of cash on hand and/or e-float. As such, they miss opportunities to earn commissions and to serve their customers.

At PesaKit, our mission is to empower Grace and other mobile money agents throughout Africa and the communities they serve to grow and prosper. The PesaKit platform therefore equips agents with the right financial tools, technology and data insights required to rebuild their businesses and thrive in this ‘new normal’.

We focus our efforts on improving the financial health of agents and customers they serve thereby fostering financial and digital inclusion.

The New PesaKit App

The new PesaKit App screenshots

The recently launched PesaKit app will help over 200,000 mobile money agents in Kenya access digital financial services and unlock access for millions of customers that are currently underserved and unserved.

The app increases the number and variety of financial services that Kenyans living in peri-urban and rural areas can access via their local trusted agents. We enable mobile money agents to grow their business, better manage their liquidity, increase revenue, and with time improve their overall financial health.

Our supply-side intelligent platform creates new markets for financial and ecommerce service providers. It enables them to expand their reach, consumer base and expand last mile distribution through our API.

Through our platform we continue to support Grace and other micro entrepreneurs, thus making them reliable and efficient last-mile access points for financial services and digital commerce in Africa.

With the launch of our new app, we are getting closer to revolutionizing last-mile access to financial services and digital commerce for everyone, everywhere through mobile money agents.

And to all fellow entrepreneurs; Be nimble, keep innovating and trust the process. ‘New normal’, new rules?

To learn more about PesaKit, visit https://www.pesakit.co.kehttps://cdn.embedly.com/widgets/media.html?src=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fembed%2FzS4wRHzercI%3Ffeature%3Doembed&display_name=YouTube&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DzS4wRHzercI&image=https%3A%2F%2Fi.ytimg.com%2Fvi%2FzS4wRHzercI%2Fhqdefault.jpg&key=a19fcc184b9711e1b4764040d3dc5c07&type=text%2Fhtml&schema=youtubeAn introduction bout the PesaKit Platform

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