DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 7494

Nigerian Interswitch is Facing Existential Threat from Other Fintechs and Banks

0

Interswitch is a pioneering fintech in sub-Saharan Africa. It  is an Africa-focused integrated digital payments and commerce company that facilitates the electronic circulation of money as well as the exchange of value between individuals and organisations on a timely and consistent basis.

At its peak, it was valued close to $1 billion few years after Helios invested for majority share. Helios had paid $92 million for a 52 percent stake in Interswitch in 2010, according to its website.

But things have gone really south for the fintech company and if care is not taken Interswitch may fail. The challenges are numerous. There are attacks from global fintech companies like Paypal and Stripe which have provided other ways for Nigerians and Nigerian companies to do ecommerce online. Interswitch used to be the only company to take companies online to collect payments (remember the unfortunate N100,000 merchant activation fee); not anymore. As these companies strengthen their positions in Africa, Interswitch will lose its dominant capabilities.

Apart from its core infrastructure, the company does not come out as being innovative. Its products are largely ordinary.

And besides the foreign fintechs, startups like Flutterwave and Paystack are emerging and they have real Africa-wide visions. The latter just raised $1.3 million today.  It took Interswitch ages to expand outside Nigeria despite having, at a time, all the opportunities to dominate sub-Saharan Africa digital payments.

In the past, merchant integration with GTBank used to offer the options of GTPay and Interswitch, now it is only GTPay as GTBank had removed Interswitch. Other banks are increasingly pushing their brands over Interswitch.

Sure the company understands these challenges and have made some acquisitions. It bought VANSA for $50 million in cash in October 2015. That was after it bought Paynet for an undisclosed amount few months earlier. It has sought diversification by investing in SlimTrader and Africa Courier Express. But generally, these are all hail marys because the company is not locking any barrier of entry into its core business. The growth drivers are in continental Africa and Interswitch, unlike in the past, does not seem to be the potent competitor that can win the race right now.

It needs to invest in innovation and stays a step ahead of its peers to ensure its business remains viable within the next five years. The old rumored IPO in London had died down because global players could not really see what they will be buying into. They had expected $1 billion. But if you look critically, Interswitch may not be worth that much since its main competitor, eTransact, is worth about N5.25 billion.

One Reason Uber will Dominate Ride-Hailing in Africa

0
File illustration picture showing the logo of car-sharing service app Uber on a smartphone next to the picture of an official German taxi sign in Frankfurt, September 15, 2014. A Frankfurt court earlier this month instituted a temporary injunction against Uber from offering car-sharing services across Germany. San Francisco-based Uber, which allows users to summon taxi-like services on their smartphones, offers two main services, Uber, its classic low-cost, limousine pick-up service, and Uberpop, a newer ride-sharing service, which connects private drivers to passengers - an established practice in Germany that nonetheless operates in a legal grey area of rules governing commercial transportation. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach/Files (GERMANY - Tags: BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT CRIME LAW TRANSPORT)

If you think you can compete with Uber, think again. The company has notched yet another quarter of staggering losses.

That’s according to a new story from The Information’s Amir Efrati, who reports that the ride-hailing company lost more than $800 million in the third quarter of this year. Those losses, which follow a reported $1.27 billion in the first half of the year, put Uber on track to lose $2.8 billion in 2016, according to The Information’s calculation.

While the millions in losses look bad on the surface for Uber — which was most recently valued at $68 billion — those losses are growing more slowly than they used to.

These losses and the ability to do them without worries explain why it will be hard for anyone to challenge Uber as it works to dominate African ride-hailing. Simply, Uber can decide to drop $50 million and waste it in Africa just to own the market share. It has shown that it does not care and anyone that wants to challenge it must first go and raise millions of dollars and be ready for battle.

Take note – there is no market share available for ride-hailing in Africa unless you have $100 million in the bank!

List of Virtual Cybersecurity Equipment and Tools for Learners at Facyber

0

First Atlantic Cybersecurity Institute (Facyber), the cybersecurity and digital forensics firm, has published some of the virtual tools which are available for learners in its portal. Each participant will need Internet access for the programs. Our firm will provide all the virtual tools and staff facilitators required for the training in our platform where they are required for Diploma and Nanodegree programs which require practical components. Some of the virtual tools are:

  • Virtual Lab Environment: A virtual lab environment employs the concept of virtualization and allows one to use a single physical computer for hosting multiple virtual systems, each running a potentially different operating system
  • Computer Forensics Tools: Computer forensic tools are used for digital image acquisition, analysis, reporting, recovery and investigation of material found in digital devices
  • Malware Analysis Tools: Malware analysis tools are used to disassemble, debug and analyze compiled malicious executables. This is a key tool in reverse engineering and facilitates malware analysis. While analysis relies primarily on the expertise of skilled and trained personnel, these tools enable the process to be accomplished much easier.
  • Live Memory Forensics Tools: Memory forensics tools are used to acquire and/or analyze a computer’s volatile memory (RAM)
  • Network Forensics Tools: Network forensic tools provide real-time network forensics and automated threat analysis solutions
  • Expert Witness Testimony: To provide expert witness testimony, one must be able to provide a visual presentation of associations and linkages that may exist for any person, location or thing under investigation
  • Up-to-Date Threat intelligence: Serve as the operational focal point for up-to-date threat information sharing through a Virtual Collaborative Information Sharing Environment for eligible subscribers.
  • eBooks and electronic publications on cybersecurity: We have access to ebooks and materials our learners need to continue advancements in the cybersecurity education.

Ranking of the Best 10 Private Universities in Nigeria

0

Private universities category, such as Covenant University and Babcock University, offer a full range of undergraduate majors, plus master’s and doctoral programs in some cases. These colleges also are committed to producing groundbreaking business research just as the public universities.

Methodology: Please refer to the explanation of Tekedia Intelligence methodology to understand the processes behind our ranking results.

Ranking of Private Universities in Nigeria

So based on the data we have and as we explained in our methodology, here is the ranking of the top ten Private Universities in Nigeria:

1. Covenant University

2. Pan-Atlantic University

3. Babcock University

4. American University in Nigeria, Yola

5. Bowen University

6. Ben Idahosa University

6. Redeemers University

8. Madonna University

9. Igbinedion University

10. Caleb University

Nigerian Fintech Paystack Raises $1.3M Seed Investment from Tencent, Singularity Inv., Others

0

Nigerian fintech startup Paystack announces it has closed a Seed Investment of $1.3M from international investors. Tencent, Comcast Ventures and Singularity Investments led the investments with participation from Spark, M&S Partners, Tokyo Founders Fund, Blue Rinc Capital, Pave Investments, KIBS-CFY Partners, Michael Siebel, Justin Kan, Olumide Soyombo, Leonard Stiegeler and a number of angel investors.

The Paystack team will use the USD 1.3M investment to build out its engineering team, grow its sales and marketing operations, to accelerate product development and customer onboarding.

Already, Paystack has partnered with some of Nigeria’s leading Internet companies iROKOtv, Jobberman, Payporte, and Hotels.ng, to facilitate fast, safe payments. The payment platform has also built a strong following amongst Nigeria’s technology community, as over 30 independent developers have built additional plug-ins and tools for Paystack, using the company’s REST APIs and client libraries.

Paystack had already received backing from YCombinator, the venerable Silicon Valley accelerator.