A staggering amount of cash is paid to retail merchants worldwide -- around $19 trillion out of a total of $34 trillion in payments. What will it take for digital payments to beat cash?
Digital Financial Services for Cocoa Farmers in Côte d'IvoireCGAP
Smallholder farmers, even those in structured value chains such as cocoa farmers in Côte d’Ivoire, are largely unable to access banks, microfinance institutions and other formal financial institutions. Providing meaningful financial services to these customers in an affordable and sustainable manner is a great challenge. In Côte d’Ivoire, transitioning from cash to digital payments may alleviate some of these challenges
This presentation details a digital financial services pilot project – implemented over 22 months by Advans Côte d'Ivoire with the support of CGAP – which has shown promising results.
This presentation covers the credit card business and highlights the many different types of credit cards available, how credit cards are processed and the major credit card issuers.
apidays LIVE Singapore - Open Banking: A foundation for the new world by Bhar...apidays
apidays LIVE Singapore - Connected Commerce
Open Banking: A foundation for the new world
Bharat Bhushan, CTO - Banking and Financial Markets, EMEA, Technical Leadership Team, IBM Academy of Technology
Digital Financial Services for Cocoa Farmers in Côte d'IvoireCGAP
Smallholder farmers, even those in structured value chains such as cocoa farmers in Côte d’Ivoire, are largely unable to access banks, microfinance institutions and other formal financial institutions. Providing meaningful financial services to these customers in an affordable and sustainable manner is a great challenge. In Côte d’Ivoire, transitioning from cash to digital payments may alleviate some of these challenges
This presentation details a digital financial services pilot project – implemented over 22 months by Advans Côte d'Ivoire with the support of CGAP – which has shown promising results.
This presentation covers the credit card business and highlights the many different types of credit cards available, how credit cards are processed and the major credit card issuers.
apidays LIVE Singapore - Open Banking: A foundation for the new world by Bhar...apidays
apidays LIVE Singapore - Connected Commerce
Open Banking: A foundation for the new world
Bharat Bhushan, CTO - Banking and Financial Markets, EMEA, Technical Leadership Team, IBM Academy of Technology
The ‘A Deep Dive into the BNPL Ecosystem’ report analyzes the rapidly evolving BNPL sector across the world and the factors fueling BNPL payments. Read this report to learn about the drivers, partnerships, business models, regulatory landscape, and future trends impacting the BNPL ecosystem.
Aeromexico and Adyen - Transformation of E-Commerce PaymentsBrian Gross
Aeromexico implemented the Adyen payments gateway, leading to revolutionary improvements in both acceptance rates and the customer experience. Presented at Airline & Travel Payments Summit (ATPS), Berlin, May 2017
Credit Summit 2015 - Nostrum Group presentation by Richard Sunman, Head of Commercial, 26-3-15
An overview of the impact on the lending industry of the advent of digital finance.
Deloitte and Tulip Retail unveiled Retail’s Omnichannel omnichallenge, a survey that looked at the plans, perceptions and challenges faced by Canadian retailers.
Use of Articificial Intelligence and technologies in providing financial services is what fintech does. Whether it is Payment gateway, insurance, banking, lending, stock trading, taxes.
How Fintech evolved over the years in the World and Indian Economy.
Indian Fintech Companies under different categories
Common Fintech practices adopted by Fintech Companies with better flexibility, convenience and accessibile financial products and services
Smart mobility in the financial sector has helped financial institutions to reach millions of customers through mobile services. Mobility adoption has helped financial industry to provide enhanced services to their customers like mobile banking, mobile money, mobile payment of utility bills, and much more.
AI powered Decision Making in Banks - How Banks today are using Advanced analytics in credit Decisioning, enhancing customer life time value, lower operating costs and stronger customer acquisition
An Introduction to Digital Credit: Resources to Plan a DeploymentCGAP
This is a workshop/course offering guidance in developing new digital credit products. This content is designed for a broad audience of banks, mobile operators, lenders, and fintech firms. It may also be of interest to regulators, policy makers and investors/donors.
With any comments or to request more materials (including the financial model [Excel] or original PPT presentation with detailed presenter notes), please write to cgap [@] worldbank.org.
White-label Neobank. Turnkey solution for Enterprises, Banks, and Startups.
Launch your own comprehensive Neobank under your brand in a short timeframe by utilizing our network, licenses, permissions, certifications, and software.
Learn more - https://optherium.com/digital-banking/
Digital Banking - Industry Trends for Customer ServiceGianluca Ferranti
Consumers’ attitude and benefits of digital banking
Importance of real-time customer interaction in digital banking
Video Banking goes Prime Time
The opportunity for video-enabled interaction to transform retail banking
5 Things to Know About Retail Payments in 2015Nikki Baird
Apple Pay, NFC, mobile payments, digital wallets, EMV, payment security and fraud - retailers are being hit from all sides by a host of new challenges related to payments. Here are 5 things retailers - and the solution providers who serve them - need to know.
The ‘A Deep Dive into the BNPL Ecosystem’ report analyzes the rapidly evolving BNPL sector across the world and the factors fueling BNPL payments. Read this report to learn about the drivers, partnerships, business models, regulatory landscape, and future trends impacting the BNPL ecosystem.
Aeromexico and Adyen - Transformation of E-Commerce PaymentsBrian Gross
Aeromexico implemented the Adyen payments gateway, leading to revolutionary improvements in both acceptance rates and the customer experience. Presented at Airline & Travel Payments Summit (ATPS), Berlin, May 2017
Credit Summit 2015 - Nostrum Group presentation by Richard Sunman, Head of Commercial, 26-3-15
An overview of the impact on the lending industry of the advent of digital finance.
Deloitte and Tulip Retail unveiled Retail’s Omnichannel omnichallenge, a survey that looked at the plans, perceptions and challenges faced by Canadian retailers.
Use of Articificial Intelligence and technologies in providing financial services is what fintech does. Whether it is Payment gateway, insurance, banking, lending, stock trading, taxes.
How Fintech evolved over the years in the World and Indian Economy.
Indian Fintech Companies under different categories
Common Fintech practices adopted by Fintech Companies with better flexibility, convenience and accessibile financial products and services
Smart mobility in the financial sector has helped financial institutions to reach millions of customers through mobile services. Mobility adoption has helped financial industry to provide enhanced services to their customers like mobile banking, mobile money, mobile payment of utility bills, and much more.
AI powered Decision Making in Banks - How Banks today are using Advanced analytics in credit Decisioning, enhancing customer life time value, lower operating costs and stronger customer acquisition
An Introduction to Digital Credit: Resources to Plan a DeploymentCGAP
This is a workshop/course offering guidance in developing new digital credit products. This content is designed for a broad audience of banks, mobile operators, lenders, and fintech firms. It may also be of interest to regulators, policy makers and investors/donors.
With any comments or to request more materials (including the financial model [Excel] or original PPT presentation with detailed presenter notes), please write to cgap [@] worldbank.org.
White-label Neobank. Turnkey solution for Enterprises, Banks, and Startups.
Launch your own comprehensive Neobank under your brand in a short timeframe by utilizing our network, licenses, permissions, certifications, and software.
Learn more - https://optherium.com/digital-banking/
Digital Banking - Industry Trends for Customer ServiceGianluca Ferranti
Consumers’ attitude and benefits of digital banking
Importance of real-time customer interaction in digital banking
Video Banking goes Prime Time
The opportunity for video-enabled interaction to transform retail banking
5 Things to Know About Retail Payments in 2015Nikki Baird
Apple Pay, NFC, mobile payments, digital wallets, EMV, payment security and fraud - retailers are being hit from all sides by a host of new challenges related to payments. Here are 5 things retailers - and the solution providers who serve them - need to know.
Subscribed 2019 - Going Global: Demystifying International PaymentsZuora, Inc.
Going global is a key strategy to drive company growth, but setting up and managing international payments can be very complicated. Join us at this session to understand payment operation requirements for multi-geography expansion and the Zuora configurations that will help you take your business anywhere in the world.
Accelerate cash flow and reduce costs with digital paymentsEmagia
Accelerate cash flow and reduce costs with digital payments
https://www.emagia.com/resources/ebooks/accelerate-cash-flow-and-reduce-costs-with-digital-payments/
eWallets
Easy and secure to use, this
is quickly growing payment
method becoming
increasingly popular across
all sectors. Consumers can
either use stored value or
take funds from a payment
type linked to their eWallet,
giving them choice and
convenience.
eInvoices
When using eInvoices,
consumers can pay for
goods after delivery,
without sharing credit card
or bank details.
It can be as simple as
entering their email
address and postcode to
make a payment.
Beyond Payment - E-Commerce Trends and Payment Challenges for Online Merchant...Lawrence Cheok
Written with e-commerce finance professionals in mind, this paper provides insights and recommendations for businesses interested in expanding their e-commerce operations internationally. It relates to online merchants needing to look beyond the web front-end and consider additional factors like back-office operations and banking infrastructure. Payment options discussed include e-wallets and mobile wallets, e-banking, and escrow payments, which are gaining favor in developing markets like China
CH&Co. eYeka Misys digital money white paper May 2015Patrick Bucquet
Banking tomorrow is going to be totally different from banking today, with payment being a clear illustration of the kind of major changes that could happen.
This white paper provides an overview of the payment industry and the move towards digital money.
Cashing in on Mobile Payments with a Winning StrategyPerficient, Inc.
Is your organization ready to execute on new thinking in payments? Does your infrastructure accelerate time-to-market for new services? The boom in smart phone sales and mobile usage is changing the way consumers pay for products and gain access to new banking services.
Perficient will help you navigate these paradigm shifts and address the technologies reshaping the payments ecosystem that will drive your digital strategies. You'll learn about:
A holistic view of the payments value chain - banking and retail
A technical review of evolving payment architectures
How you can provide innovative service utilities for greater consumer adoption
Framework enablers to support rapidly growing transaction volumes
Adapting your existing payment models to support the omni-channel experience
Though digital credit has been in Tanzania for years, there have been few analyses of the country’s digital credit market. Existing studies raise important concerns about digital credit’s impact on customers. To help fill this knowledge gap in Tanzania, CGAP and the Busara Center for Behavioral Economics, at the request of the Bank of Tanzania, analyzed data from three digital credit providers and built a first-of-its-kind, data-driven picture of the digital credit market’s evolution and current state. In total, we looked at transactional and demographic data for more than 20 million loans disbursed over 23 months.
This playbook discusses the various value-added services (VAS) that could increase uptake of mobile retail payments in Tanzania and similar emerging markets.
Wallet and Over-the-Counter Transactions: Understanding Financial IncentivesCGAP
How well do financial incentives encourage customers to opt for wallet transactions instead of over-the-counter transactions? To find out, CGAP looked at four diverse markets in Africa and Asia: Bangladesh, Ghana, Pakistan, and Tanzania.
Real-Time Customer Interactions via SMS (Juntos and Mynt)CGAP
Myntpartnered with Juntos to impact customers’ financial behavior. Phase I was focused on driving GCash transactions and the purpose of Phase II was to engage customers on topics of credit and the Instaloan product.
Alternative lending options have grown rapidly over the past 10 years. This deck offers an overview of digital credit and key takeaways from contexts around the world.
Global Landscape Study on P2G Payments: Summary of in-country consumer resear...CGAP
For this study on P2G (Person-to-government) payments, Rwanda was selected as a focus country given the potential reach and varied nature of two key initiatives: the IREMBO e-government platform and the Tap&Go smartcard for public bus transport. Digital payments for school fees and utility payments were also studied. Tap&Go is privately managed but offers P2G learnings for other countries where public transport is government-run.
The research sought to answer questions across three key areas:
1. How well did digital P2G payment solutions reach and address the needs of the financially excluded?
2. What were effective and sustainable business models between actors, and how were they set up?
3. How do current and planned solutions support and work with the evolving digital payments ecosystem in Rwanda?
Digital Rails: How Providers Can Unlock Innovation in DFS Ecosystems Through ...CGAP
This document explains the concept of “Open APIs” in digital finance services (DFS), how they enable increased innovation, and the role they can play in expanding DFS ecosystems.
Saldazo, a Visa debit card product co-branded with Banamex bank, has made Mexico’s largest corner store retail chain – OXXO – the country’s number one transactional account supplier. This presentation provides a Mexican market overview and shares key success factors, challenges and insights from this project.
Smartphones & Mobile Money: Principles for UI/UX Design (1.0)CGAP
CGAP holds that Smartphone interfaces are likely to become the main interface for mobile money use. A well-designed interface will drive growth, profitability, and a much improved user experience. This presentation outlines 21 principles for UI/UX design.
Customer Segmentation: Design and Delivery (Webinar)CGAP
This webinar, recorded in September with SPTF, covers the design and delivery of customer segmentation work. Included are example cases from CGAP's work, sharings by webinar participants, and a preview of CGAP's forthcoming Customer Segmentation Toolkit. The webinar recording is available at https://youtu.be/RJfthuKif80
Why Star Ratings Matter for Financial InclusionCGAP
Using the example of MercadoLibre, this presentation details the ways in which e-commerce sales data--not typically available for credit scoring--can enrich existing scoring models and improve their predictive power, with positive implications for the financially excluded.
Services Financiers Numériques pour les Producteurs de Cacao en Côte d’IvoireCGAP
Les petits exploitants agricoles, même ceux des chaines de valeur structurées comme celle du cacao en Côte d’Ivoire, n’ont généralement pas la possibilité d’accéder aux services des banques, institutions de microfinance et autres institutions financières formelles. Fournir à ces segments de clients des services financiers adaptés qui soient abordables et durables constitue un défi majeur.
L’un des nombreux défis en Côte d’Ivoire est de sortir du système de paiement en espèces pour qu’ainsi un lien soit établi entre ces exploitants agricoles et les institutions financières. Le canal mobile offre une opportunité unique pour effectuer cette transition du cash vers les paiements numériques mais la proposition de valeur pour les exploitants agricoles doit être attractive.
C’est ce défi qu’Advans Côte d'Ivoire s’est engagée à relever et les résultats du projet pilote – mis en œuvre au cours des derniers 22 mois par Advans avec l’appui du CGAP - sont prometteurs.
Digital Finance and Innovations in Education: Workshop ReportCGAP
CGAP’s Digital Finance Plus initiative convened a workshop in Nairobi on 7 April 2016 aimed at bringing together stakeholders interested in the opportunities for digital finance to improve the affordability of education for low-income households. This document captures themes from the workshop presentations and design thinking session.
Many ways to support street children.pptxSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Presentation by Jared Jageler, David Adler, Noelia Duchovny, and Evan Herrnstadt, analysts in CBO’s Microeconomic Studies and Health Analysis Divisions, at the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists Summer Conference.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Russian anarchist and anti-war movement in the third year of full-scale warAntti Rautiainen
Anarchist group ANA Regensburg hosted my online-presentation on 16th of May 2024, in which I discussed tactics of anti-war activism in Russia, and reasons why the anti-war movement has not been able to make an impact to change the course of events yet. Cases of anarchists repressed for anti-war activities are presented, as well as strategies of support for political prisoners, and modest successes in supporting their struggles.
Thumbnail picture is by MediaZona, you may read their report on anti-war arson attacks in Russia here: https://en.zona.media/article/2022/10/13/burn-map
Links:
Autonomous Action
http://Avtonom.org
Anarchist Black Cross Moscow
http://Avtonom.org/abc
Solidarity Zone
https://t.me/solidarity_zone
Memorial
https://memopzk.org/, https://t.me/pzk_memorial
OVD-Info
https://en.ovdinfo.org/antiwar-ovd-info-guide
RosUznik
https://rosuznik.org/
Uznik Online
http://uznikonline.tilda.ws/
Russian Reader
https://therussianreader.com/
ABC Irkutsk
https://abc38.noblogs.org/
Send mail to prisoners from abroad:
http://Prisonmail.online
YouTube: https://youtu.be/c5nSOdU48O8
Spotify: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/libertarianlifecoach/episodes/Russian-anarchist-and-anti-war-movement-in-the-third-year-of-full-scale-war-e2k8ai4
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
This session provides a comprehensive overview of the latest updates to the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost Principles, and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards (commonly known as the Uniform Guidance) outlined in the 2 CFR 200.
With a focus on the 2024 revisions issued by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), participants will gain insight into the key changes affecting federal grant recipients. The session will delve into critical regulatory updates, providing attendees with the knowledge and tools necessary to navigate and comply with the evolving landscape of federal grant management.
Learning Objectives:
- Understand the rationale behind the 2024 updates to the Uniform Guidance outlined in 2 CFR 200, and their implications for federal grant recipients.
- Identify the key changes and revisions introduced by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in the 2024 edition of 2 CFR 200.
- Gain proficiency in applying the updated regulations to ensure compliance with federal grant requirements and avoid potential audit findings.
- Develop strategies for effectively implementing the new guidelines within the grant management processes of their respective organizations, fostering efficiency and accountability in federal grant administration.
A process server is a authorized person for delivering legal documents, such as summons, complaints, subpoenas, and other court papers, to peoples involved in legal proceedings.
What is the point of small housing associations.pptxPaul Smith
Given the small scale of housing associations and their relative high cost per home what is the point of them and how do we justify their continued existance
2. CGAP 2016
Introduction & Overview
• Digital Financial Services (DFS)
providers increasingly sense a
key opportunity in digital retail
transactions, or merchant
payments
• Early ventures into the space
have however shown that
achieving adoption at scale is
difficult even for large players
• This deck gives a high level view
of what CGAP sees as some of
the key challenges in merchant
payments
• It also outlines several ideas for
providers to try out in order to
overcome those challenges
• The deck is accompanied by
several more detailed outputs to
help generate further ideas
3. What is the opportunity
for DFS providers in
merchant payments?
Key question
4. CGAP 2016
A staggering amount of cash is paid to retail merchants worldwide
$0
$10
$20
$30
$40
Total size of payments
$34
trillion
$0
$5
$10
$15
$20
Electronic Cash & Check
$15
trillion
$19
trillion
Source: Innovation in Electronic payment adoption: The case of small retailers, IFC
Micro, Small and Medium
Retailers (MSMRs) made and
accepted around $34 trillion
worth of payments in 2015
More than half the
payments were in
cash or by check
5. CGAP 2016
The majority of these cash and check payments in retail are made
in low and middle-income economies
Mostly markets with low card penetration but widespread mobile phone
use, meaning they could leapfrog directly to mobile payments
Source:InnovationinElectronicpaymentadoption:Thecaseofsmallretailers,IFC
6. CGAP 2016
To put this in perspective, the value of cash payments in retail is over
100x more than all payments made on all MM platforms worldwide
$5.9b
$8.2b
Source:GSMASOTIR2016.FiguresforthemonthofDec2016.
GSMA estimates the total value of circulating and outbound mobile
money transactions globally is ~$14b per month or $170b per year
7. CGAP 2016
For MFS providers, merchant payments also offer an opportunity for far
greater engagement with their customers
7
Greater engagement also generates more data that can be used to
support other products, including digital financial services
Source:GSMASOTIR2015
transactions
per month11
8. CGAP 2016
• The World Bank estimates that there are 400m micro, small and medium
enterprises (MSMEs) in emerging markets
• These contribute over 60% of total employment and up to 40% of national
income (GDP) in emerging economies
• But as many as 70% of these companies lack access to formal credit. The
credit gap for SMEs is $2.6 trillion; with the micro segment included, it’s
likely to be larger still
• A central barrier to access is lack of information due to informality, which
makes assessments on credit worthiness difficult for banks
• Digitizing merchants’ payments directly helps to overcome this barrier by
providing detailed, time series data on cashflow
Merchant payments could also help unlock access to capital for informal
retailers, which is one reason CGAP finds this topic important
8
This could be a significant opportunity to expand financial inclusion
and presents a new revenue opportunity for DFS providers
Source:WorldBank
9. CGAP 2016
But merchant payments are proving more difficult than expected and
uptake is still low, even for leading DFS providers in mature markets
The provider has built a network of
say 100,000 merchants, but only 15%
of them are using the service at least
once a month
The provider has >5m active
wallet users but only 10% of
them are making digital
merchant payments
A big DFS provider has pursued
merchant payments for e.g. 2 years
Below is a stylized example of what have seen in various markets
10. CGAP 2016
This mirrors the global picture: digital merchant payments account for
only 5% of mobile money transactions worldwide
Global product mix in mobile financial services, 2016
Source: GSMA SOTIR 2016
12. Why are providers not
seeing more traction on
merchant payments?
Key question
13. CGAP 2016
A thriving digital retail payments market needs active buy-in from both
merchants and customers. They both have to:
• Sign up for (the same) payments service (acquisition)
• Have a functioning payment/acceptance instrument
• Customer account with a positive balance
• Customer authentication mechanism
• Merchant acceptance hardware + power + connectivity
• Want to use the payments service (incentive/value)
• Remember to use the payments service (top of mind)
• Know how to use the payments service (education/UX)
• Potentially be willing to pay for the service
Part of the answer is that merchant payments is a two-sided market
Merchants are very different from agents, who get paid for their services
13
The value of the service to one side of the market is directly dependent
on uptake from the other side of the market. Hence, providers need to
create real value for both sets of users
14. CGAP 2016
So what exactly is the value offered to customers?
Typical value proposition providers cite:
1. Digital is more convenient than cash
2. E-money is safe from theft or fire
3. Digital is cheap, efficient and cool
Talking to customers, it turns out:
• Most people receive their income in
cash—depositing it on an account
requires time and effort on their part
• Even active users don’t tend to leave
much of a balance on their account
• Most merchants don’t accept mobile
money, so users must still carry cash
• This creates a headache to decide
how much to carry in cash vs digital
• If users get that balance wrong, they
must take the time to find an agent,
plus pay a cash-out fee
• Paying digitally may cost users a fee,
while cash is perceived as free
Thus people do pay digitally—
but mainly as a fallback option
15. CGAP 2016
So what is the value offered to merchants?
Typical value proposition providers cite:
1. Merchants’ customers who want to pay
digitally can do so
2. Merchants can use digital payments to pay
their own staff and suppliers
3. E-money is safe from theft or fire
4. Digital is cheap, efficient and cool
Talking to merchants, it turns out:
• Very few customers ask to pay digitally
• Merchants’ existing business processes
are based on cash and paper; adding
digital may create a minor headache
• Suppliers don’t have mobile money—
they want cash or a bank transfer
• Staff often don’t want to be paid with
mobile money—they tend to prefer cash
• So if they collect revenue digitally, to
pay staff or suppliers in cash merchants
must close shop, find an agent, pay fee
• On top of that, merchants are typically
charged a transaction fee to take digital
payments—but cash is seen as free
Thus merchants do sign up—
but mainly as a fallback option
…and what exactly is the value offered to merchants?
16. CGAP 2016
Is paying with mobile money really more convenient?
Many first generation merchant payments products use a laborious USSD menu
*150*00# A customer walking up to the counter to pay with
mobile money typically starts with dialing a short code
1. 2. 3. 4.
355363
3.
1000
4.
Select payment to
a merchant
Figure out which
menu item to pick
Find and input the
merchant’s till
number
Enter the total
amount to pay
17. CGAP 2016
Is paying with mobile money really more convenient?
Many first generation merchant payments products use a laborious USSD menu
****
5.
1
6. 7.
Enter the pin Confirm the
transaction
Are we done?
No - now we
wait for the
confirmation SMS.
This can take
seconds or
minutes – or not
arrive at all.
This works for remittances, where alternatives are expensive or slow, but not in retail
20. CGAP 2016
Depending on the fee structure, digital payments can be cheaper for
merchants in the vast majority of retail transactions
The costs of cash increase
with the amount paid, but
those for digital payments
do not. Hence digital is
always cheaper above a
certain threshold
This threshold depends on
transaction fees for a given
payment instrument and on
cost levels in the economy
The example here is from
Canada, so figures would
be lower in an emerging
market—but the principle
remains the same
Source: Bank of Canada (2010) Merchant cost of accepting payments - Is cash the least costly?
21. CGAP 2016
…but merchants still tend to feel that cash is cheaper
When asked to rate which
payment methods they
perceive to be more costly,
merchants often think
that cash is cheaper
This is because they aren’t
aware of the total costs of
cash in the economy, but
see only the direct costs to
themselves—and may even
under-estimate those
Large retailers tend to have
a better sense of the costs
of cash, but may still under-
estimate them compared to
the costs of card payments
Source: Bank of Canada (2010) Merchant cost of accepting payments - Is cash the least costly?
22. CGAP 2016
Cash has many other advantages over digital payments in retail
Ignoring or underestimating them is a sure path to failure
• “Free” to use
• Accepted everywhere
• Used by everyone
• Fast to exchange
• Intuitive to use
• Anonymous
• No pre-requisites
• Reliable
Cash payments
• At least one side pays
• Not all merchants accept digital
• Not all customers use digital
• Often slow to use
• Often complex to use
• Not anonymous
• Requires special accounts, non-
zero balances, hardware, software
• Subject to network, device, power,
transaction failures
Digital payments
Cash in retail works just fine for both merchants and customers
To win, digital must be significantly better in some way
23. CGAP 2016
We can see this even in the US, where cash use endures—checks are
the payment instrument displaced by card and electronic payments
Source: A.T. Kearney (2016) “How to Increase Debit Card Revenues in Today’s Complex Payment Environment”
24. If what you are offering to
merchants and their
customers is to fix their
cash problem - don’t bother.
They don’t
have a cash
problem.
26. So is the merchant
payments opportunity
impossible to seize?
Key question
27. CGAP 2016
Many of the challenges in the first generation of merchant payment
offerings will be resolved as markets mature
• Some merchants do have cash pain points (security, distance, making
change) and they may go digital despite the drawbacks
• Customers will keep larger balances on mobile wallets as trust grows,
service offerings broaden, and digital payments become more widely
accepted
• Menu interfaces will improve as smartphone ownership grows
• The introduction of contactless technologies like QR codes and near-
field communication (NFC) is making the transaction process simpler
and faster
• Transaction flows that require customers to do nothing but enter their
PIN for authentication will make payments easier, faster, and less
fraught with concern about making mistakes
Don’t despair: There is a case for digital payments in retail
28. CGAP 2016
Don’t despair: There is a case for digital payments in retail
It is perfectly possible to give merchants and their customers stronger
reasons to prefer digital payments
• The cumulative costs of cash in the economy are substantial.
The problem is merchants and their customers aren’t taking those
costs into account when making payment decisions
• Conversely, digitization opens up new revenue opportunities for
providers. But merchants and their customers don’t get a share of
that revenue, so have no reason to care
• If we want merchants and their customers to choose to pay digitally,
providers must give them a stake in that choice
• By tapping into the revenue and cost-savings potential, providers can
generate the resources they need to reduce fees and other hurdles as
well as to incent users through offers, discounts or loyalty rewards
Providers must realize the gains of digitization from the start and
distribute them to align incentives on both sides of the market
29. The real value to
users from digital retail
payments lies beyond
the payment itself.
Conclusion
30. How can we offer
enough value for
merchants to prefer
digital payments?
Key question
31. CGAP 2016
Value Added Service (VAS) powered by digital payments can help address actual
merchant pain points and build a value proposition that is genuinely compelling
Small retailers across the world consistently identify the same types of pain points
where a digital solution linked to payments could add real value:
If providers offer some of these VAS features, merchants typically say
they would use digital payments - and pay for it
• Working capital
• Inventory
management
• Paying suppliers
• Paying staff
• Monitoring staff
• Managing fraud
Operational
Challenges
$
• Customer
relationship
management
• Loyalty
• Promotions
• Store credit
• Layaway
Customer
Relationships
• Sales tracking
• Accounting
• Peer statistics
• Forecasting
• Tax reporting
• Customer
feedback
Business
Intelligence
32. CGAP 2016
VAS: Working Capital – The Challenge
The single most common complaint from merchants is lack of access to capital
• 45% of MSMEs in Africa
cite access to finance as
big growth constraint
• In many countries, its
likely even higher
• MSMEs in developing
countries face a financing
gap of up to $2.6 trillion
• The main barriers cited
are informality and lack of
collateral and credit
history
Pain points
• Some retailers can
access microfinance
loans
• Most try to borrow from
friends and family
• Some are forced to go to
loan sharks
• In exceptional cases,
suppliers can provide
inventory on credit
Current solutions
• The microfinance industry
hasn’t scaled enough to
cover all MSMEs that
need loans
• Microfinance loans can
be expensive, laborious
and time consuming
• Friends and family don’t
always have money to
lend, and it costs social
capital
• Loan sharks are very
expensive and risky
• Very few suppliers are
willing to give credit
Challenges
33. CGAP 2016
• Digital payments generate a data trail that
can be used for credit scoring
• Digitizing even a small share of
transactions provides enough information
for a working capital loan
• Such digital loan products have been
successfully deployed in the US as well as
in East Africa
• The features of these products are
strikingly similar
• All appear to be profitable for providers and
loved by merchants
• There is evidence they disproportionately
benefit groups underserved by banks
VAS: Working Capital – The Opportunity
Merchant payments can help rapidly scale up access to formal capital for merchants
• Auto credit scoring based on
digital transactions
• Credit limits based on a
percentage of monthly cash
flow
• No collateral required
• Apply instantly on phone app
based on credit limit
• One time fee with no late
fees or hidden costs
• No maturity or due date
• Continual repayment as % of
transaction value
• Merchant chooses % of
transaction value to repay
• Fee depends on % chosen
Potential solutions
34. CGAP 2016
The merchant can pick a
preferred repayment rate,
with a lower total cost for a
faster repayment rate
VAS: Working Capital – The Opportunity
An industry standard product is already emerging, with examples in Africa and the US
Repayment as % of transactions
has several key advantages:
• Incentivizes merchants to
promote digital to customers
• Better cash flow, easier risk
management for providers
• Merchants feel “it repays itself”
Loan limit is based on
observed sales volume
and expected future
receivables
35. CGAP 2016
VAS: Customer Relationship Management – The Challenge
The fundamental weakness at the heart of many small businesses
• Retail is a highly
competitive space
• Margins are thin
• Merchants have few
competitive strategies
• The relationship with the
customers is what most
cite as strength
• They have few tools to
manage customer
relationships well
• Driven merchants use
manual systems
Pain points
• Be a “nice guy”
• Keep a paper log of top
customers and their
phone numbers
• When a top customer
hasn’t come in for a
while, call them
• Send top customers SMS
greetings
• Let top customers buy on
credit sometimes
Current solutions
• Manual processes take
time and effort
• Records must be kept
consistent or value falls
• Must remember to review
the record regularly,
make calls
• Hard to remember more
than 20-30 top customers
by face and name
• Employees don’t know
who top customers are or
use the log
• Calls and SMS messages
cost both time and money
Challenges
36. CGAP 2016
One-click
marketing or offers
to absent top
customers
One-click thank
you messages to
loyal customers
Auto-flag the best
25% to get to know
not just your top ten,
but your top hundred
customers
VAS: Customer Relationship Management – The Opportunity
Giving merchants the tools to know and engage their customers
Automatic
record of
transactions
and contacts
37. CGAP 2016
VAS: Customer Relationship Management + Basic Analytics
Helping merchants see how their business is doing, over time or compared to peers
Sales volume and
value by month, this
year and last year
Sales growth in the last
month, for you and
similar merchants in
the neighborhood
38. CGAP 2016
VAS: Customer Relationship Management + Basic Analytics
Showing merchants clear, concrete opportunities and simple ways to seize them
Here’s how much revenue
you’re missing out on due to
absent former regulars
Here’s the response
your peers are seeing
to digital marketing
One-click call
to action
39. CGAP 2016
VAS: Store Credit for Customers – The Challenge
There are several ways to help merchants deal with store credit pressures
• Most merchants get
requests from some
customers to offer
sales on credit
• They generally dislike
extending store credit
• Yet they often feel
obliged to extend it to
top customers
• It is an important part
of their otherwise
sparse CRM toolkit
Pain points
• Many merchants
extend store credit to
their best customers,
even though they
don’t like it
• Customers spend time
and effort to cultivate
relationships with
merchants to be able
to ask for store credit
in times of need
Current solutions
• Merchants have scarce
capital to begin with
• Credit risk assessment
is not a skill they have
• It’s hard for merchants
to say no to good
customers
• Conversely, due to a
lack of relationship,
merchants don’t lend to
customers who would
in fact repay
• Reminding customers
to repay takes time and
incurs social stress
Challenges
40. CGAP 2016
VAS: Store Credit for Customers – The Opportunity
There are several ways to help merchants deal with store credit pressures
• Help merchants keep track of
store credit, including who borrowed
what and when repayment is due,
as well as the total amount
outstanding
• Remind the merchant when credits
taken are due for repayment
• Issue automatic reminders to
customers for repayment, relieving
merchants of the social friction
around such reminders
• Enable instant repayment from
customers’ digital wallets, perhaps
as a pre-authorized automatic direct
debit
Credit management
• Builds up a database on credit
taken and repaid by customers, like
an internal credit reference bureau
• Advises merchants on credit risk
by showing whether a prospective
borrower is in good standing
• Helps merchants avoid bad debt
and gives them an external reason
to say ‘No’ to risky borrowers, saving
them social capital in customer
relations
• Enables merchants to extend credit
to customers they know less well,
which expands their business, welfare
and financial inclusion
Credit information
41. CGAP 2016
VAS: Store Credit for Customers – The Opportunity
There are several ways to help merchants deal with store credit pressures
• Third-party lenders underwrite the credit on a merchants’ behalf
through a backend partnership with the DFS provider
• Underwriting activates when a customer has a proven track
record of good repayment from multiple loans in the system
• Eases pressure on scarce working capital for merchants and
reduces their risk of capital loss
• Merchant data on customers reduces risk for digital credit
providers by providing credit history, just like credit bureau data
• Since high losses on new clients are a major driver of costly credit in
current digital models, this can lower overall credit costs,
benefitting the customer
• Establishes a formal credit history for the customer by replacing
an informal store credit with a loan from a licensed financial institution
Credit underwriting
44. CGAP 2016
We tested the impact of VAS with Kopo Kopo, a merchant aggregator in
Kenya, which offers a suite of services to its merchants
45. CGAP 2016
Kopo Kopo merchants who use these VAS are indeed expanding the volume of
digital transactions faster than similar merchants who do not
▲22%
Higher growth in transaction
volumes among merchants
who used the Payments Hub
Source: CGAP and Kopo Kopo analysis
• Allows a Kopo Kopo merchant to settle from her merchant account in real
time to almost any bank or mobile-money account in Kenya
• This resolves one of the key constraints merchants cite: the funds
collected are stuck and must be cashed out (at cost) to be useful
• Kopo Kopo merchants can pay their suppliers digitally for new inventory,
which is what merchants tend to spend the bulk of their revenue on
46. CGAP 2016
• Unsecured loan of up to $50,000, no collateral needed
• No interest rate but a fixed fee depending on various factors, such as
platform history, transaction volumes and repayment rates
• Repayment is made as % of each transaction. Merchants decide what %
to use, which also affects the fee
• No due date, late fees or penalties. Loan is outstanding until paid
• Merchants must have been active on the platform for at least 3 months
Kopo Kopo merchants who use these VAS are indeed expanding the volume of
digital transactions faster than similar merchants who do not
Source: CGAP and Kopo Kopo analysis
▲42%
Higher growth in transaction
volumes among merchants
who used the GROW loans
47. CGAP 2016
Source: CGAP and Kopo Kopo analysis
There is also qualitative evidence that these VAS are strengthening Kopo Kopo’s
engagement with their merchants
• Merchants love the speed, efficiency and flexibility of the product
• The lack of a due date and continual repayment from transaction flow
relieves the stress of the loan: “With GROW, you hardly feel the burden of
repaying”
• The majority of loans are repaid faster than expected, across sectors,
geographies and tenures on the platform
• Reuptake is very fast: the median time between GROW advances for
repeat merchants is just three days
48. Merchants can help
drive the shift to
digital payments
…if there is value in
it for them.
Conclusion
49. CGAP 2016
Visit CGAP.org for a playbook of
detailed VAS concepts and get
ideas for building a better value
proposition for merchants,
employees and customers to
use mobile payments in the
retail space.