Save and Remit is helping Saving Groups and Cooperatives digitize. #40Days40FinTechs Zambia and Malawi edition, Day 31

 Save and Remit is helping Saving Groups and Cooperatives digitize. #40Days40FinTechs Zambia and Malawi edition, Day 31

Africa has thousands of women savings and lending groups. Many of these are still informal, cash and paper based thus making them prone to administration mismanagement and funds misuse. It is such ills that Save and Remit services was founded to solve in Zambia.

According to Putty Kabango Muuka, the Founder and CEO of Save and Remit Services, this platform was born from the development of a digital application which caters for saving groups, village banking groups and cooperatives.

“The main focus of this application is to create a digital identity for these informal sector savings and lending groups and make them viable to microfinance institutions (MFIs) as well as give them a digital structure which also intensifies security in terms of payments because the application is linked to digital payments like mobile money and bank cards,” Putty Kabango Muuka said.

She added: “The Save and Remit application is currently present on the Google Play store. Our users are able to download it on the Google Play store. Once they download, they register their group and its details such as number of members, circle period and whether they would want to use the application for payments, savings plus administration which is all digitized. When they contact us, the registration is completed in less than 5 minutes. We then produce for them an 11 digits code to which the administrators of the group use to invite all their members. Once the members log on, they link themselves to the group using the 11 digits code and their administrators can confirm them on to the group.”

She noted that once onboarding is done, then the group and its members are able to transact digitally as per the services they signed up for.

“All transactions like savings are updated in real time. Every member can access their details and information from anywhere across the world. They are also able to download their statements which are generated in real time as members are transacting.

Kabango noted that while this platform was launched at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, it picked up in 2022 when they were able to carry out pilot projects with organizations such as FSD Zambia.

“We currently have 50 saving groups that sit on our application with each group having a minimum of 20 members. We have at least 1000 members utilizing the APP.”

Kabango revealed that it is very difficult for FinTech start-ups to acquire certification and regulatory qualifications.

“For one to get a payment license, there a number of requirements needed. Also, the amount of money needed to acquire such a license is quite high for start-ups like ours. Also getting aggregation agreements with telecoms is hard as they also look at the volumes you have thus favoring already established FinTechs. Other challenges we are facing are high costs of new APP’ features development, and high cost for development of a USSD version to include those that don’t use smart phones.”

She applauded the 40 Days 40 FinTechs initiative for its gender intentional approach that supports women innovators and urged the initiative to further empower women through helping them address some of the challenges they face, working with regulators to improve certain regulations to enable more women to roll-out their ideas plus extending technical and financial aid if possible.

Save and Remit featured on Day 31 of the 40 Days 40 FinTechs initiative; Zambia and Malawi edition. The roll-out of the 40 Days 40 FinTechs initiative in Zambia and Malawi followed its success in East Africa. Over the past 5 years, the 40 Days 40 FinTechs initiative has featured over 200 FinTech stories from Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya, and Rwanda. This initiative has also engaged hundreds of end-users and shared their stories with millions worldwide.

The primary objective of this initiative is to support and showcase innovative FinTech giants and start-ups from across Africa, with a focus on promoting financial inclusion and economic growth, in addition to giving start-ups access to the resources they need to develop new and innovative financial solutions that can benefit underserved populations. Such resources include but are not limited to Level One Project guidelines, Mojaloop Open Source Software and Inclusive Finance systems, etc.