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See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by MarvinZulu: 2:29am On Jul 02, 2016
Recent developments are making it increasingly clear that the very fundamental privileges that have helped traditional banks retain their century-old dominance of the sector is about to come to an end.

From San Francisco to London to South Africa, giant tech startups such as Google, Apple, Facebook, and far less known financial technology innovators such as Simple Pay have begun introducing digital financial products and services so innovative that traditional banking along with its many service offerings have now begun to pale excessively when compared with the former.

Actually, it didn’t start today. Two decades ago, telcos such as Telstra and software goliaths like Microsoft began to realize that the financial services sector needed a technological makeover and since the tools the banks needed to make that happen lied largely in the tech innovators’ hands, a race to take over banking from banks began. This was a time when the banks’ major competitors—especially in developing countries— were mattresses in poor people’s homes. The banks understood what this meant. They would now either innovate or perish. Quickly, the banks fixed what needed to be fixed.

When the dust eventually settled and it was obvious that customers elected to take sides with banks—most of who had earned the trust of their numerous savers at a time when borrowers had little option outside banks— the lesson was not lost on the banks.

But that was two decades ago—a time when Africa had little or no tech startup eyeing the admittedly little economic pie the banks that existed at that time had almost exclusively to themselves, but today both savers and borrowers now have a thousand and one other options. Unfortunately, technology is back again and is already forcing major banks in many places to undergo major seismic transformations or quietly take its place in the dustbins of oblivion.

On Your Mat, Set, Disrupt

From bitcoin to blockchain to Google Pay to payment options that allow for free credit card-to-credit card transfers without leaving the Facebook environment, one doesn’t need the brain of an astronaut to see where all these are headed— the once-separate worlds of smartphones, internet and money are fast converging to birth such innovative possibilities that now make traditional branch-based banking more and more irrelevant.

In a report published in February, David Furlonger agreed that globally, revenue from digital banking products and services is estimated to grow to almost half of banks’ revenue over the next 5 years. He also admitted that financial technology innovators (fintechs) and challenger banks often have an IT cost per user that is 10% that of traditional banks. It didn’t therefore come as a surprise when Brett King, CEO of Moven, said “In five years, the biggest banks in the world won’t be banks, they’ll be tech companies.” while addressing Singularity University’s Exponential Finance conference in New York.

After what happened in Kenya with M-Pesa and in a few other States, it became altogether clear that the technological fix banks need to remain relevant is far more than their current concern of having their apps installed on a few million mobile devices or starting a remittances arm. If traditional banks must survive, something seismic must change concerning the inherently costly infrastructure of branches, regulatory capital and vast teams of employees which presently are largely seen as unsustainable in the long run. The bank of the future must be both lean and downright technology-driven and innovative.

Are African Banks Buying It?

There seems to be an agreement among experts that African banks would be disrupted faster that their European and American counterparts owing to the large amount of unbanked population which numbers in excess of tens of millions coupled with the fact that there is yet to be a regional legal tender for the continent.

In Nigeria, where the banks are admittedly late to the fintech party, it is a completely different ball game altogether. Instantly motivated with the success of M-Pesa in Kenya, and leveraging on access to a whopping 39.7% of the unbanked adult population, local telcos soon began warming up for a disruptive kill. It didn’t take long for the Central Bank to step in, read them their right, and bam—telcos were effectively barred from driving mobile money they had much hoped for.
Where telcos failed, fintech startups blossomed. In a short while, a flurry of fintech startups such as Cash Envoy, Simplepay4u, VoguePay, Quickteller, Etranzact, Paga, Ready Cash, Cowrie Pay and a host of others flooded the landscape and begun rolling out much needed services, wooing both individuals and SMEs alike.
While most Nigerian banks are busy falling over themselves in a race to key into the ecommerce boom by establishing ecommerce stores, Guarantee Trust Bank, one of the most innovative of the pack, has begun both investing in innovations and partnering with startups which has led to a recently commissioned service that allows customers conduct transactions by just dialing Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) codes from any dumb mobile phone.
In South Africa, Barclays Bank looks to home-grown startups to figure out innovative solutions. In December 2015, it opened the first African branch of Rise, its global network of innovation spaces.
Standard Chartered on the other hand has begun—or is at least considering— leveraging the power of blockchain. In a LinkedIn post made in mid-2015, its Chief Innovation Officer had argued blockchain could open up access to financial services to millions of Africans who can’t currently afford them by simply slicing off the bulk of the costs associated with money transfers, credit cards, remittances, etc.
After months and months of theoretically experimenting with the idea of how bitcoin could be the magic wand needed to fix the Zimbabwean economy, Savannah Fund finally made a brave move to invest in the Zimbabwean bitcoin startup, BitFinance after the collapse of the country’s national currency gave rise to adoption of over nine currencies including US dollars.
Whether policymakers and governmental financial and banking supervision agencies are willing to quickly switch from their current extremely inflexible and complex regulation and control of all possible banking and market risks—as seen in places such as Nigeria— to present-day-realities-reflecting method of active monitoring of financial platforms remains to be seen.
One thing, however, is sure: disruption is here and only the smart ones will survive it.

Link: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/fintech-disruption-are-african-banks-ready-for-the_us_57771aece4b0746f5647f84e

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by DTalented(m): 2:37am On Jul 02, 2016
I see

1 Like 2 Shares

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by chachanga: 3:11am On Jul 02, 2016
All these are welcome developments burr dey should back it up with intuitive customer care service and loyalty reward systems
You're already holding their money, people don't give a shyt how techie you get if that techie can't serve them as and when they want it, hitchfree!

11 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by shadelek(m): 7:09am On Jul 03, 2016
Its a good development but these bank workers should attend human relation seminars. Most of them don't know how customers are to be addressed forgetting that customers are their real employer.

18 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by BazyLastard: 7:09am On Jul 03, 2016
GTB's *737# is a bit of a scam. You get charged the transaction fee even if the transaction fails. Theives, they should just wait...

Anyway CBN's decision to bar the telcos from using airtime for transactions was painful sha, even though it was not unfounded. They were trying to avoid the creation of a shadow currency in the country which they would be unable to control, since airtime is as ubiquitous as the naira.

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Nobody: 7:10am On Jul 03, 2016
'While most Nigerian banks are busy falling over themselves in a race to key into the ecommerce boom by establishing ecommerce stores, Guarantee Trust Bank, one of the most innovative of the pack, has begun both investing in innovations and partnering with startups which has led to a recently commissioned service that allows customers conduct transactions by just dialing Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) codes from any dumb mobile phone'. undecided

3 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Nobody: 7:10am On Jul 03, 2016
Click like if you didn't understand the topic

178 Likes 5 Shares

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by ychris: 7:10am On Jul 03, 2016
everybody is entitle to their own opinion...

so why shld tht be my concern?..

nonchalant mhey!
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by millionboi(m): 7:11am On Jul 03, 2016
Na wash
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by davodyguy: 7:12am On Jul 03, 2016
I'm sorry but this looks like a GT indirect sponsored article, especially that paragraph that singled GT bank out in the entire post

24 Likes 1 Share

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Zico5(m): 7:12am On Jul 03, 2016
Ok
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by parzdor(m): 7:12am On Jul 03, 2016
d
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Nobody: 7:12am On Jul 03, 2016
.
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by pendusky(m): 7:13am On Jul 03, 2016
I like Sterling Bank as well with their seamless transactions using USSD even with your Nokia touch phone you can make successful transactions via their USSD codes

*822# just simple as that...

even check your balance
*822*6*Nuban#

and most times you can check your account number using
*822*5#

Technology is taking over...

8 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by jojothaiv(m): 7:13am On Jul 03, 2016
okay
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by timidapsin(m): 7:14am On Jul 03, 2016
Who didn't read this?

4 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by EternalBeing: 7:17am On Jul 03, 2016
Happy Sunday friends. A must-read Thread: 10 Proofs From 10 Different Scientists That Heaven Exists
https://www.nairaland.com/3202948/10-proofs-10-different-scientists#47154812
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Scatterscatter(m): 7:22am On Jul 03, 2016
Na them sabi jere undecided

All this grammar is for them to keep stabbing our money. lipsrsealed

2 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by buchilino(m): 7:22am On Jul 03, 2016
Donariok:
Click like if you didn't understand the topic

I didn't understand one hike of a thing d OP was saying

5 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by shadelek(m): 7:23am On Jul 03, 2016
Donariok:
Click like if you didn't understand the topic
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by ReabridCharles(m): 7:24am On Jul 03, 2016
GT at work...

Plz tell them to update their crap mobile application.....

And plz stop deducting the money in my account...

Nigerian banks robbing me since I was born

2 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Nobody: 7:24am On Jul 03, 2016
You should understand this one grin Happy sunday. smiley
buchilino:


I didn't understand one hike of a thing d OP was saying

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by eleojo23: 7:25am On Jul 03, 2016
GTbank's online transactions are very easy and reliable.
Been using their card for online transactions and it has never failed.

2 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by miqos02(m): 7:25am On Jul 03, 2016
seen
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by AngryNigerian(m): 7:25am On Jul 03, 2016
Can someone explain all these in simple English?

1 Like

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by AZeD1(m): 7:26am On Jul 03, 2016
BazyLastard:
GTB's *737# is a bit of a scam. You get charged the transaction fee even if the transaction fails. Theives, they should just wait...

Anyway CBN's decision to bar the telcos from using airtime for transactions was painful sha, even though it was not unfounded. They were trying to avoid the creation of a shadow currency in the country which they would be unable to control, since airtime is as ubiquitous as the naira.
CBN didn't bar telcos from using airtime for transactions( they don't have that right), they barred the telcos from mobile money and have the licences to banks instead which was a wrong move.

1 Like

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Jobabori(m): 7:26am On Jul 03, 2016
It is quite unfortunate that most Nigerian do not read " long essay " no matter how rich and informative. Be brief while written to them.

2 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by buchilino(m): 7:29am On Jul 03, 2016
SillyeRabbit:
You should understand this one grin Happy sunday. smiley

OK, one question, is Jesus now part of d banking system??
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Rahym001(m): 7:31am On Jul 03, 2016
Story 4the gods
Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by Adesiji77: 7:31am On Jul 03, 2016
Lol @ "any dumb mobile phone"

2 Likes

Re: See What Huffington Post Says About Gtbank And Some Other Banks by francizy(m): 7:31am On Jul 03, 2016
Donariok:
Click like if you didn't understand the topic


Will the likes get you a masquerade job from Lie Mohammed?

7 Likes 1 Share

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