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Jumia Is A Better Payment Company Than Ecommerce As JumiaPay Skyrockets

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In the history of the African commerce, no one has ever succeeded in ecommerce, financially. From Mocality to Kalahari, Konga to Jumia, Efritin to OLX, the end-results have been predictable: massive losses. Unlike in other emerging markets like China, India and Brazil, African ecommerce pioneers did not build double play payment products at inceptions, missing a critical profit engine to fund logistics-related expenses. Alipay powered China’s Alibaba just as PhonePe was helping Flipkart in India.

But that may be changing as Jumia has gone all payments with JumiaPay: “Jumia saw record volume with its payment platform JumiaPay, which reached 2.1 million transactions and 32 million euros in total payment volume, nearly double the year before.”

Looking at the Q3 2019 financials, Jumia is a better payment company than an ecommerce. JumiaPay has better numbers and growing just fine. Indeed, in the real scheme of things, there is nothing like an ecommerce company in Africa when your marginal cost is still all physical with expensive parallel logistics solutions in places with no national postal systems.

Jumia said marketplace revenue on the platform rose 52.1%, to 18.9 million euros, but overall revenue ticked up just 19.1%, to 40.1 million euros, or $44.1 million, as it saw nearly flat growth from its first-party e-commerce business. That was below analyst estimates of $51.9 million.

Jumia saw record volume with its payment platform JumiaPay, which reached 2.1 million transactions and 32 million euros in total payment volume, nearly double the year before. Gross profit in the quarter rose 45%, to 18.1 million euros, but its operating loss continued to expand, widening 34.6%, to 54.6 million euros.

Co-CEOs Sacha Poignonnec and Jeremy Hodara said:

We are making significant progress in the usage and relevance of our platform for consumers and sellers and are firmly positioning Jumia as the digital destination of choice for everyday needs in Africa. In parallel, we continue to make great strides in our payment and fintech business with JumiaPay showing very strong growth momentum on both volume and transaction metrics.

 

But despite the progress on JumiaPay, it is still a long night for Jumia as TC Daily notes:

JumiaPay has released its financial report for the third quarter of 2019 and it’s a bit of a mixed bag. The good – JumiaPay, its financial service is the company’s fastest-growing category. It represented an equivalent of 11.6% ($35.2 million) of Jumia’s entire GMV during Q3 2019. The bad – Jumia is still losing cash. Its operating loss in Q3 2019 stood at $55 million about $10 million higher than Q3 2018.

The full earnings call transcript is available here.

Jumia stock has lost significant value since its IPO

Is Your Startup Co-Founder Mentally Balanced?

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If you’ve ever stopped abruptly in the middle of a breakfast, a project review or a cofounder’s meeting to wonder what might happen if a colleague puts a bullet in her head, you’re not alone.

For Entrepreneurs working with a cofounder, or more, to start and run a high growth business, employee suicide is just one kind of workplace challenge that they’re vulnerable to; cofounder suicide is another.

As John Arnold, a guest writer at the Entrepreneur writes in Preventing Startup Suicide. Literally, “You would think that depression among entrepreneurs is tied to failure, or perhaps workload and stress. But the truth is that many entrepreneurs struggle with mental health issues in all types of entrepreneurial situations.”

While you might be immune to depression and thoughts of suicide, your cofounder might be wallowing under its grip.

If she’s constantly expressive about killing or harming herself, whether through speech or social media posts; if she constantly compares her current emotional situation to that of suicide victims; if she’s always talking about her death and seems unusually withdrawn, isolative and sad after surviving a traumatic incident; then she might be suicidal.

When you lose a cofounder to suicide, the effects can be very devastating for you, for the mental health of other team members and on your company’s ability to remain competitive.

Your ability to concentrate on work objectives, to perform at an optimal level in the same workspace that you shared without momentary mental distractions on the tragedy or to keep the business running while you’re empathizing with her loved ones or seeking a new cofounder will be severely tested. This can lead to higher stress levels and declining performance.

But that’s not all.

Your team is likely to be emotionally affected too. Your workers and cofounders closest to her might find it hard to keep the fire of entrepreneurship aflame especially if there’s a lot of media attention and scrutiny on the tragedy.

How to help a suicidal cofounder.

If you have fears that a cofounder is suicidal, then you should trust your gut and act. Here are certain tips, which I’ve culled and adapted to fit this situation from a guide on how Managers can respond to suicide warning signs among employees by the Cigna Corporation that you can adopt to help your cofounder.

1. Meet your cofounder and ask her questions to determine the next steps.

  • Once you become aware of the warning signs, find the cofounder and don’t leave her alone.
  • Take her to a quiet, private place to have a conversation to determine next steps.
  • Be direct and let her know what you’ve learned. You might start with, “I’ve heard you say repeatedly, ‘My life is not worth living.'”
  • Ask your cofounder if she’s had thoughts of ending her life. Research shows that most suicidal people feel relief, not distress when asked this question.
  • Give your cofounder a chance to explain. Listening is the most important thing you can do at this time.
  • Let your concern and support shine through your attitude. Be compassionate, even if you feel angry or upset about what she is considering.
  • Don’t challenge her values or minimize their pain. For example, avoid saying things like, “You don’t want to do that,” or “Think about what it would do to your family.”
  • You can offer hope that, with the right help, solutions can be found for the problems that are leading her to feel suicidal. But avoid the urge to question the employee about their problems. Don’t give advice or suggest solutions. Stay in the present.
  • Protect her privacy as far as is practical, but do not promise to keep the matter confidential. Rather, say you’ll do everything you can to protect their privacy and will only share information as necessary for their safety.

2. If your cofounder is telling you that she intends to harm herself.

  • Call the Nigerian suicide prevention initiative helplines: +234 806 210 6493 or +234 809 210 6493. You can also call the police. Her safety should be your priority. Also, never transport her to the hospital yourself. This could be dangerous for both of you.
  • You can say to her, “Given what you’ve told me, I have concerns about your safety. I have a responsibility to make sure you get immediate help. Your safety is the most important thing right now.”
  • When calling for help, give all the details that your cofounder has shared with you and any statements she reportedly made to others.
  • When the emergency responders arrive, they will talk to your cofounder to assess further and determine next steps.
  • You can also call for help in situations where your cofounder works offsite or has not reported to work and is not reachable. If the information you have presents an urgent concern, it’s better to call immediately to do a welfare/safety check than wait another day to see if your cofounder will report to work.

Bike Hailing Service in Nigeria – The Mistakes of the Startups Involved

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Two months ago, I made a post to express my concern about Opay’s scalability.

Now back to the real discussion and I want you to learn a lot from this post. Opay is a fintech service with an app where you can transfer funds and this start-up came into the market with a 50 million dollars funding.

The day I heard about this, I quickly converted to Naira and discovered it was a whopping eighteen billion naira. That’s really huge right? There’s so much to spend till the business becomes stable right?

About a week ago, professor Ndubuisi made his own post about Oride and I decided to make it the perfect time to share some lessons.

As analysed, Opay is a payment service and in order to get people to use their payment service, they came up with Oride, O-boat, O-food etc.

I want you to note this somewhere as we begin this analysis journey;

“If the goal of Opay is to use these other strategies to get people to use their app for payment, then there is an issue”

Let us pick these services one after the other and analyse them to see if the use of Opay service will be a success in the long run.

O-Ride

I must give them kudos at first on how they made entry into the market and disrupted the whole market. The bike hailing industry contained two other startups who had also raised some funding, Gokada and Max.ng.

These start-ups had lesser funding compared to O-Ride anyways. I made a post a few months back when Gokada was shutting down temporarily to analyze the bike hailing industry.

I feel O-pay did a perfect job because at first they got the need of the market right.

Before launching a business into the market, there’s a need to make a proper research of the needs of the market before developing your unique selling point. I don’t think Gokada did a good job on that.

We are talking about bike hailing and I will list down reasons why people will want to use bikes. Mind you, I don’t mean the regular bikes, I mean why will a person need to go through the stress of downloading an app in order to get a bike to move distances?

The reason I needed to be specific was to make a clear distinction that anyone can always come out of their houses to get any bike going from one place to the other. However, this time,I’m referring to patronizing the bike hailing services.

  1. Flexibility in transportation: Due to the regular hold-ups on the ever busy, never free Lagos roads (using Lagos as a general example), and the popular track record of getting stuck on the road for hours, these bikes offer better flexibility in navigation than the vehicles.

A bike man can always maneuver his way around the heavy trucks, the tight blocks and still get through.

  1. Time saving: Time saving is very important in Lagos. If there’s any city where time is being wasted on the road in Africa, Lagos might be listed as the first. The honest truth is that sitting down on a bus filled with so many passengers in a Lagos traffic can be so discomforting that you will never have the time to work on personal projects.

People outside Lagos might be wont to think that they can maximize the time on a bus by reading or listening to some podcasts but I tell you, it’s not as easy as you think.

  1. Cost: Why take an Uber and get trapped in hours of delay when you can take a bike and save time? I mean when you get to consider both options, most times you will rather take a bike to save more expenses even while you’re saving time.

Uber is for the middle class and the rich and it’s expensive. It’s expensive to the lower class. The issue here is while saving time, I can save money.

…..

Now let’s analyse some basic things here and I’m still on why Gokada didn’t understand this market very well and why I give Kudos to O-Ride. I will still explain why O-pay also made a huge mistake.

We have 3 basic reasons why people will want to use a bike from an app.

The fact that you can stay at a spot and call a bike to come pick you up directly is in itself a good selling point where you don’t need to go through the stress of describing location because your bike man should know the routes at least 50%.

In order to create a unique selling point, we need to begin to analyze the different solutions these bike services are offering and rank them in order of urgency or priority.

My own take is that if Gokada did this, they wouldn’t go through the whole stress of spending so much in branding their bikes, getting expensive ones, doing a lot of spending on just customising.

Let me quickly talk about, I want you to put on your business thinking cap.

You want to go from point A to point B, and you’re fully aware there might be hold-up on the road. At this point, if you’re a middle class or higher class who can afford Uber conveniently, you totally discard the idea of Uber because you want to save time.

Right?

So time is the first most important unique selling point. Because you want the bike to come down to the front of your house, you’d get the mobile app of any of these bike services.

Now, pay attention. The next consideration is safety. Nobody wants a risky bike so it pays more to get an experienced rider who has a spare helmet to a rider whom you don’t know and you cannot trust.

All these are factors that plays in the mind of the user which is you and I before we make a move to either download the app or use it.

Now, with these two factors, Gokada has a very good market and O-Ride shouldn’t have had any reason to disrupt the market. However, there’s one key factor that can override a lot of other factors.

That is purchasing power; PRICE.

Now, a little bit of diversion once again to establish another point. I must say that as a business strategist working for a research company here in Nigeria, I have come to agree to the truth that if a business does not invest into research, such business may never go far.

In my company, we help companies both locally and internationally make detailed market research that will help come up with the buying decision analysis and other key consideration to put in place.

Nigerian companies must spend money, I mean good money on research. That’s by the way.

I had to divert to talk on that so that you’d be able to understand the next point.

Gokada had safety as one of their unique selling points which is good. The fact that it is a flexible means of transportation which will save time is also good. Matter of fact, that is the most important unique selling point.

However, this is Nigeria, a very price sensitive market. What this means is that Nigerians buy with their pockets and purses in front of their faces.

Pay attention;

Gokada came out with all their bikes customized and all their riders trained to guarantee safety. Then they set a price to meet this service.

O-Ride on the other hand had an app and made it available for other riders to come on board. This means that they are not spending so much money on branding bikes.

Just come with your bike, get our devices and equipment and keep working.

Customising all bikes will have cost so much and this will reflect in the service charges which obviously did for Gokada.

Now let’s talk about something really important here which is psychology. How do people see bikes in Nigeria?

Nigerians obviously do not perceive bikes to be a luxury service. The unique selling point for Uber are, class, comfort, privacy.

However, for bikes, class is not psychologically perceived. Neither is comfort. All these do not come to mind when people go to use bike services, whether rich or poor.

Two major factors are psychologically perceived

  1. Speed (time saving); How do I get to my destination on time
  2. Safety; Hope this wouldn’t be my last day on Earth with these reckless riders

If comfort was a unique selling point, then people will rather go for Uber services than bike services. This means spending to provide comfort is actually not totally necessary.

Does this cancel out the helmet and overall?

No, the helmet falls under the security category. The raincoat falls under the comfort category.

Most times, the raincoat isn’t really considered a factor. Although, no dispute, it will be needed during rainy seasons.

However, excessive spending on these by the startup itself was not the right way.

O-Ride on the other end saved themselves the stress by not owning the riders but making them partners. Now that will save more cost and give room for the service charge to reduce.

Now because of the huge money O-Ride has, they were able to cut down service charge to a give away rate.

Since bikes has no class attached to it, people do not mind and do not care. They will always go for the cheaper one due to price sensitivity.

This is simply the way O-Ride was able to gain entry into the market and dominate. However, this is just the beginning of a failed business model for O-Pay as well.

Nigerian Government to Launch National Youth Policy to Support Entrepreneurship

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The Nigerian government is planning to launch the National Youth Policy that will strengthen entrepreneurship across the country. The plan is to develop a policy that will empower Nigerian youths to succeed in their entrepreneurial endeavors.

The Minister of Youth and sports, Sunday Dare, disclosed this during the Student Entrepreneurship Activity Hub (SEA-Hub), National Competition held in Abuja on the 7th of November. He said there have been misconceptions about Nigerian youths, and it is the mandate of the Ministry of Sports and Youth Development to correct them.

“Our youths no longer need empowerment but investment in entrepreneurship and skills development. We will be launching the National Youth Policy to ensure that more youths have access to employment and entrepreneurship development program,” he said.

The Minister was full of praises for the German Ministry for Economic Corporation and Development, Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), for the empowerment of over 14, 000 students through the SEA-Hub intervention programme.

“It’s exciting to know that over 14, 000 students have benefited from this programme. This is a good way to prepare the youths for the future. The future belongs to the youths who are innovative, bold and creative,” he said.

The head of SEDIN, Detlev Holloh, said that GIZ has continued to expand its empowerment activities through the sustainable development cluster. He noted that there has been an increase in employment and income generation through many programmes like the pro- poor growth and promotion of employment in Nigeria program-SEDIN.

According to him, the GIZ initiatives are designed to promote economic development, employment, rural development, governance and democracy among others.

“The SEDIN program promotes entrepreneurship through several approaches such as the SEA-Hub which have direct impact on some of the sustainable development goals.

“SEA-Hubs are extracurricular clubs created in schools to help young people build life-long skills and prepare them for the future. So far, SEA-Hub has reached close to 15, 000 students in Edo, Niger, Ogun and Plateau states.

“It is our hope that we continue to work together at the state and national levels to build and inclusive and sustainable future for our young entrepreneurs,” Holloh said.

The representative of the Minister of Education, Ayodele Adegun, didn’t save her delight at the development. She said that challenges facing youths in entrepreneurship in Nigeria cannot be ignored, and the fact that they need help to develop their skills and tackle unemployment is a naked truth.

“I want to commend GIZ for the empowerment programs that touched thousands of lives, the ministry will continue to support your efforts in improving the lives of the Nigerian youths,” she said.

The 2009 National Youth Policy was centered on five areas of priority that needed to be given attention for the improvement of the lives of Nigerian young age. These include the impact of globalization, access and use of communication technology, the impact of STDs and HIV/AIDS, intergenerational issues in an aging society, and youth perpetrators and victims of armed conflict.

Several years have passed since then and a lot has changed. There has been a host of new challenges facing the country, and of the most significant of them is unemployment.

Nigeria has a vibrant median age of 19.7, facing the challenge of unemployment. According to Spectator Index, 36 percent of Nigerian youths is unemployed, the second highest rate in the world. Only South Africa with 58 percent is ahead of Nigeria.

The alarming increase in unemployment figures in Nigeria is an indication that the youths do no longer need to depend on the government for jobs. In the age of internet and data technology, skill acquisition offers an alternative to scarce white collar jobs, but not when there is poor infrastructure to back it up.

Therefore, the promise of the youth and sports minister to launch a National Youth Policy that will meet the challenge of entrepreneurship in Nigeria beams hope. It will not only encourage organizational participation in capacity building, it will also empower youths to develop their individual skills gainfully.

Nigeria Border Closure: Winning Customs Revenue Battle But Losing War of Regional Exports Dominance

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As the days go by, the Nigerian closed borders are yielding in increment different results. The Nigerian Customs Service (NCS) claims it is generating more revenue as a result of the closed borders, and there have been drastic decrease in arms smuggling among other things. There has also been an increase in rice production and local producers are selling more than ever before. To the people on this side of the story, the border should remain closed indefinitely; after all, it’s tripled the revenue generation of the NCS and encouraged local production of food items.

The argument sounds genial until you listen to some other producers in Nigeria who need to cross the borders in order to sell their products. Some of them are sending SOS to the government to open the borders because they are close to going out of business.

In a chat with Vanguard, exporters whose markets are within the West African coastline counted their losses and the gloomy future ahead of them if the borders are not open as soon as possible.

The CEO of Multi-mix Academy, an export focused institution, Dr. Obiora Madu said the situation is crippling the export business within the Ecowas region. He also said that the speed of export activities has been so slow, owing to the fact that a lot of thorough inspections now take place before cargo could leave for their destinations.

“It is definitely impacting negatively on the economy as the exports done within the Ecowas region and our neighboring countries are now in decrease. These countries that benefit from the open border, since we have closed it, even though we used to export to them before, you don’t expect to get the level of cooperation that we are getting before because they are hit hard by these closed borders.

“The fact is that it definitely has impact on volume, it will also impact on speed and it will not be as swift as it used to be because of scrutiny,” he said.

Another export executive who voiced his concern is Ofon Udofia, the CEO, Institute of Export Operations and Management (IEOM). He said Nigeria is losing more than it’s gaining since most of the country’s products have West African nations as sales destinations.

“It is a big problem. We are losing money because when we talk about exporting goods, we are not only talking about exporting it to countries in Asia, Europe or America. We are also talking about exports taking place within the West African sub-region.

“We in the private sector are victims of this border closure. Take a look at companies like Unilever, they supply goods to other countries through Nigeria and for many years, they make use of the land borders. We have lost a lot of money because of this. Even Dangote who exports cement to Benin Republic has lost a lot,” he said.

The alternative to exportation using land borders have been airline cargoes or shipping, depending on their volume. The most practical considering the weight of the goods being exported is shipping. Udofia argued that shipping is not yet a viable means of transporting goods from Nigeria through West African waters because currently, Nigeria doesn’t have any vessel that ply the routes.

He also noted that in the absence of Nigerian owned ships, the international shipping lines will have the opportunity to increase their shipping fares, and that will result in high cost of goods and services.

“Even when they say we can make use of the sea, do we have vessels? We don’t have vessels plying the West Coast or even a vessel that can carry the volume of what we are exporting.

“Even Maerskline Shipping Company, MSC, or any other international shipping line that will pick products from Nigeria and take it to these West African countries must charge extra fees.

“This is because we don’t have any shipping line. Which flag are we flying, we are just deceiving ourselves. When they said that we should use inland waterways for export, we are still negotiating on how we can partner with shipping lines and the ship is already in Nigerian waters, but we have to pay five percent duty of the cost of that vessel before it comes.

“This is not what you do overnight because we are unprepared. Shipping is not like going to a market to buy a trailer, it goes beyond that. We are talking about shipping line that will be going across West and Central which we don’t have, and its possibility is still in question,” he concluded.

The plights of exporters go beyond transportation. The closed borders have generated trade apathy toward made in Nigerian goods and services. Two weeks ago, a Ghanaian news outlet, my joyonline reported that Ghanaians are shutting shops belonging to Nigerians in anger over the closed borders.

With the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) set to go into play in July 2020, the border closure is setting an antitrust precedent between Nigeria and other African countries. The Nigerian government seems adamant, and to other African countries, it appears like a foretaste of what is to come. The Nigerian government’s insistence to keep the borders closed is as a result of smuggling activities that have resulted in inflow of substandard goods into the country among other things.

The federal government of Nigeria has vowed to keep the borders shut until the neighboring nations find a solution to the problem. However, experts believe that smuggling activities owing to porous borders is evidence of weak customs, and cannot be solved by closing the borders.

The president of the African Export-Import Bank, Prof. Benedict Oramah, has urged Nigeria and other African countries to deploy technology in their fight against smuggling. He also expressed confidence that Nigeria will not renege on AfCFTA since it is the key to the development that the continent needs.

“Africa consists of 55 fragmented markets. AfCFTA will create one market one market in Africa. Unless we turn it to one market, the continent will remain underdeveloped,” he said.

Nigeria is encouraging local production of goods and services it has been known for importing, in view to export them in the near future. The steps the country has taken with the border closure seems more like shooting yourself in the leg when you have a thousand miles to walk.