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Tekedia Mini-MBA Edition 6 Begins, Registration Continues

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Greetings. Tekedia Institute invites you to register for the 6th edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA which begins on Sept 13 to end Dec 6, 2021. Tekedia Mini-MBA is an innovation management 12-week program, optimized for business execution and growth, with digital operational overlay. 

It runs 100% online. The theme is Innovation, Growth & Digital Execution – Techniques for Building Category-King Companies. All contents are self-paced, recorded and archived which means participants do not have to be at any scheduled time to consume contents. We also have optional thrice weekly Zoom sessions. Register here via any of the means noted; registration continues and ongoing.

Our Faculty members come from MTN, Shell, Microsoft, Amazon, Flutterwave, Nigerian Breweries, KPMG, Amazon, Infoprive, Bank of Industry, Kendor, Trusbanc Capital, etc, and are coordinated by Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe. Our Learners come from 39 countries and have great things to say about our world-class program here.

Tekedia Mini-MBA remains $140 (or N50,000 naira) per person and we have many payment options (bank transfer, Paypal, Flutterwave, etc). Register here today – https://school.tekedia.com/course/mmba6/ and also enjoy our additional benefits which include books, free cybersecurity courses, and more. Every participant receives a certificate at the end of the program. 

Tekedia Team

MasterCard Acquires CipherTrace to Deepen Cryptocurrency Operation

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A global leader in payment services, Mastercard is aiming to expand its blockchain-based services. The New York-headquartered company announced Wednesday, an agreement to acquire CipherTrace, a leading cryptocurrency intelligence company with insight into more than 900 cryptocurrencies.

The acquisition will enable Mastercard to extend its capabilities deep into the field of digital assets with an agreement to As digital assets, including cryptocurrencies and non-fungible tokens (NFTs), become more intertwined with everyday activities — from the way people pay and get paid to how they invest — trust and security will be critical enablers to ensure broad adoption and scale, the company said in a statement.

Mastercard embraced cryptocurrency early in the year, and has since been looking for ways to accommodate innovative products that have come along with it, including the NFT. The payment outfit has partnered with companies such as Uphold, Gemini and BitPay to create crypto cards.

The company noted that these new technologies will require new solutions and more powerful intelligence to ensure that the crypto economy is instilled with the same trust and peace of mind that consumers currently experience with more traditional payment methods.

With the technical exigencies following each of the new innovation, especially in the area of security, Mastercard wishes to leverage the integrated offering to build on CipherTrace’s suite of digital assets and Mastercard’s cyber security solutions to provide businesses with greater transparency to help identify and understand their risks and to help manage their digital asset regulatory and compliance obligations.

“Digital assets have the potential to reimagine commerce, from everyday acts like paying and getting paid to transforming economies, making them more inclusive and efficient,” said Ajay Bhalla, president, Cyber & Intelligence at Mastercard. “With the rapid growth of the digital asset ecosystem comes the need to ensure it is trusted and safe. Our aim is to build upon the complementary capabilities of Mastercard and CipherTrace to do just this.”

Terms of the agreement were not disclosed, and the transaction is anticipated to close before the end of the year, pending certain conditions.

Cybersecurity concern in the cryptocurrency industry has heightened overtime due to increasing cases of fraud. Thus, investors need assurance that their investment and transactions is safe. And for that sort of assurance, CipherTrace has proved its mettle.

CipherTrace’s innovative platform helps customers enhance their security and fraud monitoring activities for crypto-related programs. They provide solutions for some of the largest banks, exchanges, and other financial institutions in the world due to their industry leading data analytics and algorithms to help customers convert on their opportunities across 7,000+ cryptocurrency entities.

“We help companies – whether they are banks or cryptocurrency exchanges, government regulators or law enforcement to keep the crypto economy safe,” said Dave Jevans, CEO, CipherTrace. “Our two companies share this vision to provide security and trust throughout the ecosystem. We are thrilled to join the Mastercard family to scale CipherTrace’s reach across the globe.”

Mastercard said in a statement that the deal will enable it to combine the technology, AI and cyber capabilities of both companies to differentiate its card and real-time payments infrastructure, allowing customers and stakeholders globally to build upon and benefit from the solutions to protect their consumers and comply with regulations, as they build their own virtual asset offerings.

CipherTrace will also help drive continued innovation with a diverse range of partners, like fintechs, crypto-wallet providers, governments, etc., while also allowing the company to deliver on the principles it has established for all blockchain-related programs.

“The acquisition is part of Mastercard’s strategy in the digital assets space to help provide customers, merchants and businesses with more choice in how they move digital value. It follows a number of investments the company has made, including partnerships with Uphold, Gemini and BitPay to create crypto cards, the creation of new platforms to test and support Central Bank Digital Currencies, programs to support the broader use of blockchain technology and NFTs, and the potential to support select stablecoins directly on its network,” Mastercard said.

Early Registration Benefits for Tekedia Mini-MBA End Today – REGISTER Now

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Welcome to Tekedia Institute. We run an amazing business school which has attracted professionals and students from 39 countries. The next edition begins Monday, Sept 13, 2021. It is a great academic festival, and one that is nurturing a generation of leaders, innovators and change makers. Tekedia Mini-MBA is serving Africa through educating on the tenets of entrepreneurial capitalism.

Our Faculty members come from Microsoft, Shell, Flutterwave, Nigerian Breweries, Jobberman, Coca Cola, and other great organizations. Thrice weekly, I personally coordinate live Zoom sessions on the mechanics of business systems. We bring our Faculty and Guests on those sessions, covering industries and business domains.

Our impacts are huge because most young founders are passing through our program. Just today, I connected one with a Mastercard Director to further his vision.

The deadline for early registration with the huge benefits is today. It remains N50k naira or $140.  REGISTER today and join us on Monday .

Flutterwave Strikes Partnership Deal with MTN MoMo to Deepen Payment Penetration in Africa

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CEO of Flutterwave

Not quite long after attaining unicorn status, Flutterwave is in the news again for good. The boisterous fintech company, that has taken the world of payment by storm, announced on Thursday it’s partnering with Africa’s largest network provider, the MTN Group, to facilitate mobile payment across Africa.

The partnership will enable Flutterwave to onboard MTN’s mobile money platform, MTN MoMo, which provides consumers and businesses with an electronic wallet, enabling electronic transfers and payments as well as access to digital and financial services.

Besides acquisition, Partnership with existing payments platforms has become another viable strategy for fintech companies seeking to expand to new markets. Many of them in the African market have partnered with mobile network providers who offer mobile money services, as it is an easy way to reach the underserved.

With their customer-base counting to millions of users, mobile money operators offer fintech companies such as Flutterwave, a sort of already-made customers to incorporate into their networks.

This new partnership will enable Flutterwave to offer MTN Mobile Money as a payment method to its business customers, the company said in a statement.

MTN MoMo which had 48.9 million active users and 581,514 merchants as of June 2021, will help Flutterwave to integrate markets in many African countries where MoMo services are operational.

“As we progress on our journey to becoming the largest fintech platform in Africa, we will empower millions of businesses to embrace e-commerce in our markets to accept digital payments from MoMo consumers. We believe this is an enabler to accelerating digitized payments in Africa. Building strong ecosystems through partnerships is central to our platform strategy and we will continue to invest in expanding the reach of our platform to consumers and businesses in Africa,” Serigne Dioum, MTN Group Chief Digital and Fintech Officer said:

The partnership will allow businesses integrating Flutterwave in Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia to receive payments via MTN Mobile Money. The company said it will enable them to expand on its previous collaboration with MTN, beyond Uganda and Rwanda – with the potential of deepening adoption of digital payments and e-commerce in Africa.

The fintech and mobile telecom industries in Africa are both witnessing a boom, presenting opportunities for future economic growth that strategic partnership between players in the industries will help to achieve.

This year, Africa is projected to hit the half a billion mark of unique mobile subscribers and the continent will reach 50% subscriber penetration by 2025, according to the GSMA. Data from Statista also noted that Sub-Saharan Africa alone is responsible for more than 45% of the world’s mobile money accounts with the number of account holders exceeding half a billion by 2020.

Flutterwave said its partnership with MTN will positively contribute to this trend by increasing mobile money usage and penetration in Africa to improve local economies and livelihoods as well as create opportunities for individuals and businesses across the continent.

“Africa has one of the highest growth rates for mobile money adoption and e-commerce in the world. It makes sense that we help provide a seamless payment method to support and ensure African businesses reap the full benefits of the e-commerce boom in the region. Our goal has always been to grow a new wave of prosperity in Africa by creating more avenues for businesses in Africa to accept payments. With this partnership, we can achieve this while creating endless possibilities for our customers,” Olugbenga “GB” Agboola, Founder and CEO of Flutterwave, said.

A Response On My Article on Noor Takaful’s Insurance Playbook in Nigeria

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I wrote this article where I noted how an insurance company in Nigeria, Noor Takaful, returns “surpluses” after settling claims  to its customers or selected charities, dealing with the insurance business conflict (any denied claim is profit). Ignorantly, I said the company copied US-based Lemonade on the playbook. 

But over the last few hours, many people including professionals from Indonesia have educated me that Lemonade indeed copied what has been practiced in most countries under Islamic tradition. Yet as that debate was going on, some traditional insurers have reached out to me that my post could poison their brands (imagine that for a village boy!). 

According to them, there is an inherent risk if people expect that surpluses on premiums could be returned to them or distributed to chosen charities under all scenarios. To provide a balanced perspective, I call everyone’s attention to this comment by “Babatunde” who submitted it in the comment section.

The comment provides a balanced and nuanced perspective which makes it clear that even the Noor Takaful playbook may not be without cons just as the traditional insurance playbook has its own cons. That is the beauty of free markets: may the best idea win!

—–The Comment from Babatunde——

Dear Prof.
Thank you for your article on the Noor Takaful profit sharing playbook. I have chosen to respond via inmail here rather than on the comment section to avoid the controversial reactions my review may bring, and most important, to avoid being seen as attacking the strategy of Noor Takaful by some onlookers.

Having reviewed some comments from the readers it shows that their might have been some gaps in the article that they do not take into consideration or do not know at all before providing their comments. Hence, this my review.

While the strategy of Noor Takaful sounds great they aren’t practicable in the conventional Insurance companies. Do not forget that Noor Takaful is strictly an Islamic based organization which is guided by the business ethics of Sharia laws.
For one, Noor Takaful does not provide coverage for all types of risks which the conventional insurance companies do. Noor only deals in risks which are supported by the Sharia laws. For instance, Noor Takaful can’t write risks from a Tobacco company or some none approved business concerns. Hence this has limited the options available to the buyers.

Two, I supposed some of the fundamentals on which Noor pays out the profit-sharing were on the premise that there could not be some long-tail claims which may likely be reported months or year after the profit sharing.

I am saying these simply to ensure that the ordinary buyers (who were probably unwilling except for compulsory insurances) do not assume that they were being shortchanged by their present (conventional) insurers who do not participate in the surplus sharing playbook.

As I have indeed mentioned in one of your posts about insurance operations in Nigeria, the fundamentals of pricing for the insurance products, as it with most public goods in Nigeria,  are wrong. Let’s example some of the issues here.

First, most consumers of insurance products see the product from the perspective of prices rather than, as it should always be with insurance products, the scope of coverage. The buyer looks into the cheapest insurance products to buy and on the basis of whether it’s compulsory to buy not necessarily because he/she values the benefits being purchased. That’s why you see ordinary Nigerian purchasing a TPO policy from the licensing office for even a lower price than the regulated price of the TPO Insurance coverage. Most of the insurances sold at the licensing offices are either complete fake or issued by insurers who had no plans to honour any resulting claims from such products. They expect that those who bought such products have no intention to make claims on the policy or do not have adequate knowledge of the benefits derivable from the product purchased. The mainstream insurers have long ceased issuing/selling their insurance coverage through those licensing offices due to extreme chances of issuing fake. My point, such buyer of the TPO have no intention of making use of the benefits of the insurance products purchased but just to pass the police checks whenever demanded on the road. Hence, this category of buyers would never buy a comprehensive insurance policy on their vehicle as they do not see the need for it!

Two, the insurance products pricing in Nigeria  is fundamentally wrong! I believe we do not charge appropriate rates for the level of risks being carried. For instance where the level of claims on a risk portfolio or from a particular client is high it’s more difficult for the insurers to charge higher rates at the next renewals. This is due to many factors. You are blackmailed with the relationship with the client. Your competitors are lurking around the corners just to take over the business at a lower rates not with or without the knowledge about the performance of the portfolio with the existing insurers. Hence, the insurer is yet forced to maintain the existing rate even on a bad portfolio. If the managing broker on the account is only about the business rather than the mechanics of pricing, then the woes of the insurers are compounded.
The fluidity at which market can adjust its rates is much lower compared to reducing the rates at the request of the client or broker. In the international market which I also have substantial knowledge of how they operate, the mere fact that a loss incident was reported on a major insurance policy is sufficient enough to justify increase in the rates and review of the coverage terms at renewal. It doesn’t matter whether the loss incident eventually leads to a successful recovery or not! The fact that an incident related to the insured risk was reported was enough for the market to react with hardening of the terms. It doesn’t matter whether a particular client has ever made a claim or not. It’s a market portfolio that counts not individual client’s claims activity. I hope we get there quickly in Nigeria. In Nigeria, despite the humongous claims paid so far arising from the #EndSars violent protests of 2020, the market rates are yet to adjust so much/that’s if at all to this losses. So that’s the kind of market an average insurer operates in here in Nigeria.

As an international broker of repute and one who believes in data, I know which insurer I dare not approach to place a business of my client. I know the insurers that I can hold to their words when a claims occur to pay. I know insurers that I would have to threaten or support with prayers to get my client’s claim paid.

Let me make two analogies quickly. One, in the London market when a broker presented a broking slip (that’s the document that contains the details of the risks to be insured and presented to insurer/s for their review and terms) to one underwriter and gets a quote, do the same thing to a second insurer, then a third insurer. After the third insurer such broker or any other broker who presents similar risks (whether using same slip or a different one) would never get terms from any other insurer. They would tell him the risks details are already in the market and refer him to the previous insurers who had presented terms on the risk. If the broker insisted that the new insurer make a quote, such insurer would never quote lower or better than the previous insurers. However, in Nigeria the information sharing is so poor that you can easily set off a pricing war among the insurers with one slip! Two, due to the recent violent uprising in South Africa, in July precisely, the market had so much reacted to the losses that all the risks presented for renewals as at that period were adequately marked-up to reflect the existing market situations. Even a major Nigerian Telco with presence in South Africa took in a large increase in property and cyber renewal premiums even though the risks are here in Nigeria but because the insurances are priced centrally. The Nigerian market is yet to have the nerves to take such bold steps!

The purpose of my thesis above is to show that Noor Takaful isn’t playing the book on the same data as its other competitors in the Nigerian market and it’s important to review it’s business model to avoid providing skewed views to the Nigerian insurance buyers.

Another Comment from LinkedIn Feed

Ndubuisi Ekekwe i read your initial post subject matter.
E.g Both Noor Takaful Insurance Limited insurance and the traditional insurance companies under the comprehensive motor insurance ask that the insured pays an annual premium. The insuring public therefore usually ask we sales people the question of “what happens to my money if I don’t have an accident in an entire year”…..this question got answered by the Islamic insuring model by way of returning whatever is left in the portfolio after all associated cost is deducted which includes claim payment.
This question from the insuring public is out of the sense of filling that they are wasting money on motor insuring when they don’t claim over a period of time,well the discount for not claiming is insignificant.

Here is the fair solution to both the insuring public and the insurers, Pay-U . This insurance mobile App charges a user per minute,hence you pay for what you use and you don’t end up filling you’ve thrown away money.
So if you drive a NGN2,000,000 car,you’ll pay less than 2naira per minute while driving and 70kobo while parked,you have the option of turning OFF your insurance when you’re parked.