Title: Malith Gunasekara
1Increasing access to finance using mobile banking
services What are the factors MFIs should
consider before engaging in m-banking solutions?
Malith Gunasekara Senior Consultant
2Introduction to ShoreBank International
SBI advises its partners all types of financial
institutions in emerging economies in
inclusive finance
3Presentation Overview
How can MFIs successfully prepare for entering
the mobile banking market?
4Review Landscape
5Market Research
- What is the need? What is the demand?
- Long term success will require developing
products that help consumers build and save
wealth - Consider the portion of the population without a
bank account and with access to mobile phones - Consider the current costs and convenience of
financial transactions - What is the value add?
- For customers
- For the financial institution
- What is the best way to conduct market research?
- Focus groups are often more effective than
- a quantitative survey
6Internal Capacity
7Resources and Investment
- Mobile banking/ agent banking requires committed
investment, both internally and from outside
investors - Ex KBS in India expanding branchless banking
services required a strong backend system - New initiatives require buy-in from top
management, but resources may come from outside - Ex In Pakistan, a MFB wanted to acquire software
that costs 6-7 million to do branchless banking,
but its Board rejected this - The amount of investment required can be very
high - An MNO-led model in East Africa spent 30 million
scaling their service - Another telco in Uganda has spent 10.5 million
8Technology Requirements
- MFIs need to be able to understand the technology
and have the capacity to negotiate flexibility
for functionality with the vendors - What technology is appropriate?
- Flexibility, functionality, and cost effective
- Consider and weigh vendor options
- Early negotiations are crucial, as mobile banking
services are often locked into a specific vendor - Off-the-shelf solutions vs. ability to cater to
MFI and products
Technology is not a panacea for all issues and is
only as good as the people using it and
benefiting from it its value to the MFI and
customer is related to their trust and its
functionality
9Develop Market Strategy
- Developing a go to market strategy requires
understanding of the product, placement, pricing,
and promotion - Marketing strategy can include phased roll outs
with different market segments - Institutional platform needs to be developed for
effective marketing - Leveraging another platform financial
institution, telco, or third party operator can
help expand reach - The agent network itself is a key part of
marketing, messaging, and branding - Must protect FIs clients and personal client data
10Business Case
- Can mobile banking be a profitable business?
- Can a FI form a profitable partnership with a
larger bank or Telco? - Ex A leading provider in East Africa charges
fees that are too high for MFIs to profitably
partner - Ex Large telcos may buy a bank
- How large does an MFI have to be to do it alone?
- Ex MFB in Pakistan debated partnering v.
individual provision (requires investment in
network and platform)
11Products
- Development of products depends on the business
case - Complementary products can leverage mobile
banking data and clients mobile banking and
MFIs are not competing - MFIs can leverage an existing mobile banking
platforms to disburse its own loans - Ex MFIs in East Africa can leverage existing
platforms - MFIs are strong in providing credit, and mobile
banking can offer other services - Currently, m-banking providers do not provide
credit but allow for transfer and savings, so
they are not competing with the MFIs - Ex A bank in Pakistan (transfer, storing money)
and an MFI that SBI is working with (can bring in
new users as credit clients)
12Marketing and awareness
Creating awareness among the target market about
the available services and products is an
important cornerstone for success
- Branding
- Reaching the unreached
- Your local bank at your doorstep
- Marketing delivery channels
- Village meetings
- Sponsorship of local events
- Marketing van with audio-visual capabilities
- Print, television, billboards
13The Potential of Mobile Banking Financial
Inclusion
- Outreach of Mobile Banking Providers (From CGAP
FN 66) - In eight branchless banking pioneers, 37 (on
average 1.39 million) of active clients were
previously unbanked. - In five of the eight cases, the branchless
banking provider reaches more previously unbanked
people than the largest MFI in the same country
on average 79 more. - The same five providers grew rapidly, needing on
average three years to acquire more unbanked
clients than the largest MFI in the same market. - Mobile banking is cheaper than traditional
banking, but the price advantage may not be as
wide as one might anticipate. On average,
branchless banking is 19 cheaper than comparable
products offered by banks via traditional
channels.