Africa is one of the lynchpins of Fintech’s origins – key origins being Zopa’s invention of P2P borrowing/lending in 2005 and mPesa’s mobile money+ in 2007. In this episode we take a look at more recent innovation in Nigeria, Africa’s largest country with a population of over 200 million. Piggyvest who launched in 2016 and […]
Africa is one of the lynchpins of Fintech’s origins – key origins being Zopa’s invention of P2P borrowing/lending in 2005 and mPesa’s mobile money+ in 2007. In this episode we take a look at more recent innovation in Nigeria, Africa’s largest country with a population of over 200 million. Piggyvest who launched in 2016 and […]
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Africa is one of the lynchpins of Fintech’s origins – key origins being Zopa’s invention of P2P borrowing/lending in 2005 and mPesa’s mobile money+ in 2007. In this episode we take a look at more recent innovation in Nigeria, Africa’s largest country with a population of over 200 million. Piggyvest who launched in 2016 and whose only round to date was a $1.8m seed now have an amazing 4 million customers saving and investing via their app. In 2021 alone, the platform paid out over $582 million to its users
Eweniyi.jpg">Eweniyi-150x150.jpg" alt="" width="150" height="150">In this jolly episode (we could do with an injection of Nigerian positivity and humour in Europe right now) Odun, co-founder and COO, guides us through an introduction to Nigeria, her entrepreneurial career and the background to Piggyvest, the seminal role of a wooden box (!) as well as the future.
Africa in a world beset by American “wokism” is all too often seen at an insanely low resolution as if it were a place rather than a continent of a billion people and some 50+countries. We will cover Fintech in Africa per se in an upcoming episode but first we start with no generalisations just an great tale of entrepreneurship and a prime example of how the digital revolution in FS is worldwide, needing just the right amount of tinder and entrepreneurial spark to enable better deals for not just the over-served global zilllionaires but for every smaller sums of money – in Piggyvest’s case one can save and invest from as little as 20 US cents.
Topics discussed include:
- the three main peoples of Nigeria – Yoruba, Igbo and Hausa and their geographical distributions
- in total an amazing 180 languages are spoken in Nigeria
- broadly Christian in the South, Muslim in the North with many traditional religions/practices
- Nigeria is the world’s 6th largest country and 3rd largest speaker of English (education is all in English)
- the majority of tribal groups marry in-tribe although in Lagos there is more intermixing
- advice I was given in the early days of the podcast about Nigerians
- the spirit of Nigerians around the world
- Nigerians as having a great sense of humour unaffected by US/European puritanical wokism
- Odun’s career journey starting as an entrepreneur right out of university with some friends
- the origin story of Piggyvest amazingly involving New Year’s Eve, twitter and wooden boxes ( I joketh not)
- “digital wooden boxes”
- two weeks later the MVP for Piggybank, as was
- the change from Piggybank to Piggyvest once investment became added to the service list
- the background of Nigerian banking – high costs and hassle, low speed et al
- 22 banks in 2016 – all identical processes
- Nigerian millennials’ expectations
- difficulty/impossibility of young people getting loans
- Nigeria lacks a credit system – examples of how such a system works
- the economics of young tech folk in Lagos
- challenges of savings and investment
- investment minimum ticket size for traditional brokers was ~$2k
- acquiring a micro-finance licence
- the challenge of booting up a business from marketing to banking services
- the key role of a lead investor
- 700 users in the first year – painstaking start
- snowballing from focusing on great client service
- creating trust in a low trust environment
- the importance of retaining a human face and the founders being known
- never over-promised and so never under-delivered
- the development of FS regulation in the UK and in Nigeria
- challenges of engaging with regulators especially in a changing environment for FS
- the key to succeeding
- income distribution in Nigeria and the practical addressable marketplace for Piggyvest
- 47% of Nigerians live in extreme poverty by World Bank standards ($3 per day or less income)
- the narrowest submarket for Piggyvest is around 20 million people
- the key to growing using only a tiny amount of capital
- 70 staff at present
- dynamics of raising capital in Nigeria
- where does a successful West African Fintech expand next – geographically, within Africa by population, overseas in countries with similar economic characteristics?
- pan-African or emerging markets?
- what other successful Nigerian Fintechs have done
- Nigerians anywhere can use the app
- Piggyvest are currently raising a Series A
- shoutout for partners
And much much more
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