Frankline Sunday
Telkom Kenya has shut down almost 90 per cent of its mobile money agent network T-Kash.
The move follows a fresh push by the telco to revamp its fintech unit
in a ...
challenging market environment, even as it admitted several
missteps.
According to the latest industry data from the Communications Authority
of Kenya (CA), the third-largest mobile operator in the country shut
down 24,946 of its existing 28,106 T-Kash agents at the end of last
year.
This as the telco registered a 30 per cent drop in mobile money
subscribers from 27,837 to 19,607, bringing its share of the lucrative
market segment to 0.06 per cent.
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Telkom
Kenya said it had scaled down its mobile money agent network after
evaluating the business and in the face of several challenges.
“At the launch of T-Kash, Telkom embarked on an aggressive agent
recruitment drive to complement the desired push of our Mobile Financial
Services (MFS) platform,” said the company in a statement.
“With time, and through continuous review coupled with prevailing market
forces and ongoing regulatory challenges at the time, we noted that we
had a number of inactive and non- performing agents.”
Telkom said it is now "ramping up its agent numbers, armed with a more
robust vetting system in place and cognizant of past learnings.”
T-Kash was launched in March 2018 following a revamp of Telkom Money.
Users can withdraw money from an agent or make payments using a one-off
code instead of the customary agent and till numbers, which could have
made the product less attractive to customers.
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“We
spoke to our customers and the feedback we got was users want choice
and reliability,” said Director for Mobile Financial Services Anuj Tanna
at the time.
Before suspending its services to rebrand, Telkom Money was the
third-largest mobile money service, with 3.6 million subscribers and
transacted Sh4.3 billion during its peak in the second quarter of the
2015-16 financial year.
The move comes at a time when Telkom Kenya is in merger discussions with Airtel Kenya.
The merger has, however, faced several challenges, including a protest
by market leader Safaricom that is seeking more than Sh1 billion in
debts.
Telkom Kenya says the merger discussions are still ongoing
although it could not give an expected completion date.
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