Category: e-Business

  • ‘Why $26.45m spectrum licence dormant’

    About a year after it beat national operator, Globacom, to clinch the 2.3gigahertz (GHz) spectrum, its winners, Bitflux is yet to put the spectrum into use.

    According to the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), the spectrum would allow the firm to offer wholesale ‘wired’ broadband services to complement the capacity being  provided by optic fibre cables and allow the achievement of five-fold target, from current 6.2 per cent,  of broadband penetration set by the Federal Government.

    The Managing Director of VDT Communications, Mr. Biodun Omoniyi, who led Bitflux’s team to the 2.3GHz spectrum auction in Abuja, has said the firm went back to the drawing board to restrategise and rework its business model in order not to make mistakes.

    Speaking on the sideline during the rebranding of the corporate logo of VDT with The Nation in Lagos, Omoniyi said the firm is aware that stakeholders in the industry are eagerly looking forward to seeing Bitflux put the licence to use, adding that all loose ends have been tightened and services would go live from the spectrum.

    He said: “I appreciate the expectation and goodwill of all over this and the expectations that we need to put the licence to use. But the truth is that with respect to that particular project, everything is going very smoothly. Shortly after we won the licence, we went back to the drawing board to relook and restrategise our business plan to make those services available.

    “This is because we don’t want to do things haphazardly. It is important to plan and follow the plan diligently, but what I can assure you is that the Bitflux project is going on very well. We will come out in January. An award has already been made to a vendor and it is a 90-day delivery project. “Again, we have several vendors with so many competing technologies and solutions so we have to hire consultants so that we can actually deliver the best to Nigerians.”

    He said the roll-out of services will start with the three major cities of Lagos, Port Harcourt and Abuja, adding that VDT will also be actively involved as it would now become a retailer getting capacity from Bitflux which is a wholesaler.

    He said: “What we are expecting is that we are going to launch in three cities of Lagos, Port Harcourt and Abuja with broadband services. You know Bitflux itself is wholesaler, so we are not going to be advertising to the general public. So part of what we are doing today is preparatory to selling the Bitflux product to those markets. Am sure you have people say we shall be in your house, we are not there yet but we will get there. Bitflux is a wholesaler, it will sell to VDT.”

    Speaking after the auction that produced Bitflux as winners, NCC’s Chief Executive Officer, Dr Eugene Juwah said the electronically powered process went through two rounds. While the first round, which had set $23million in addition to another 15 per cent which made total to stand at $26.450million had produced no winner, the machine immediately switched to “tie breakers’ indicating that neither of the two bidders was ready to go above what was put on offer.

    The second round produced Bitflux offering $23,251,000 while Globacom upped the game by offering to pay $23, 50,001milliom

    Omoniyi had congratulated the NCC for its open, fair and transparent process. He had also congratulated big brother, Globacom, for being magnanimous even in defeat because, according to him, “nobody can put his head down to fight with the Bull.”

  • NIPOST’s facilities to drive mobile money

    About four years after the Central Bank o f Nigeria (CBN) licensed 18 mobile money operators in the country, only approximately one million of the over 130 million mobile subscribers in the country have taken advantage of the platform for transaction.

    The Ministry of Communications Technology said the ubiquitous network of the postal outlets of the Nigerian Postal Service (NIPOST) would be deployed to boost digital transaction across the country.

    Its minister, Dr Omobola Johnson said the development, after being in operation for one year, is expected to reduce the number of the unbanked in the country by 10 per cent (3.5 million).

    Omobola who spoke on Connect Nigerians: The role of Nigerian postal agency, NIPOST, in our Financial Inclusion Model said: “The network of postal outlets operated by the Nigerian Postal Service, NIPOST constitutes the most widespread retail network in the country

    “The postal service network is more widely spread than the combined bank branch networks; nationwide spread of physical network with a constitutional mandate to maintain location in every local government area (774 LGAs); recgnised and trusted brand, particularly in rural areas; most experienced public entity in the recruitment and support of agents; potential to be an effective, multi-ethnic, multi-lingual workforce; postal financial services to be delivered in partnership with banks, telcos, IT companies.”

    According to her, the transaction advisor for this programme would be selected this quarter while partners would be selected the second quarter of next year while the partnership is also expected to begin by the second quarter of 2016.

    “After being in operation for one year, this service should be able to reduce number of unbanked Nigerians by 10 per cent (3.5 Million),” she said of the anticipated effects of the initiative.

    According to her, about 67,000 mobile money agents have so far been registered, lamenting that analysis has shown that a significant proportion of payments in the country are still cash-based.

    The minister said total payments are estimated at $695billion per annum out of which cash accounts for over 90 per cent of transactions in terms of volume and about 60 per cent in total value

    Dr. Omobola said: “Bank transfers and cheque payments combined make up less than 0.5 per cent in terms of volume and approximately 38 per cent in terms of value

    “Other digital forms of payment are increasing in volume. They however currently make up only about two per cent in value. Most payments (in terms of value) are between businesses and persons (B2B, B2P, P2P) business to business (B2B), business to person (B2P) and person to person (P2P)”.

    She said government payments however have high potential to change the payment landscape of the country, adding that cash transactions are expensive, risky and promote insecurity in the financial system and country

    “Government is therefore implementing policies to increase the adoption of digital forms of payments. ICTs are at the heart of the success of such policies. Infrastructure for the delivery of services, applications for management, security and adoption of services (would be provided),” she said.

     

  • Solving Nigeria’s data wahala

    Nigeria has grown subscriber figures to about 131 million over the last one decade. In spite of hiccups here and there, the voice segment has done well to boost operators’ revenue. The data segment holds hope for carriers to shore up declining revenues. To help internet protocol (IP) data reduce costs and deliver cheaper services, the intervention of the government and the regulator is inevitable, LUCAS AJANAKU reports. 

    With the pace of the transition going on in the information communication technology industry across the world, sooner than later, everything will be data. The ubiquity of data will be such that it will subsume the voice segment, which will no longer exist as a segment requiring the application of a different technology. This is the era of convergence.

    According to an online platform, Balancing Act, the transition in developed countries has been relatively slow. However, at the international level, large amounts of calls now move through internet protocol (IP) and Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)-based networks.

    Every year, consumer software are used by  a large number of people. Increasingly in Nigeria and other parts of the continent, it is not uncommon to see people use social media platforms, such as Facebook and WhatsApp, to send messages they used to send through short message service (SMS).

    In Nigeria, the transition is slow because the telecoms industry that is supposed to be at the vanguard of the ‘revolution’ cannot still divorce itself from the ‘business as usual’ approach.

    They see the internet and data as capital-intensive business for which they don’t really have the networks. The returns on data are not anything near those for voice. This has been a sort of nightmare for those that have experienced the money spinner called voice. But things are increasingly changing.

    Data is essentially about content. Subscribers have demonstrated acceptance of this by voting massively for social media platforms, such as Facebook. This is not the same with the content produced by mobile network operators (MNOs) through value added service (VAS) providers. The content deal offered to VAS producers is still nothing to write home about. Content providers have never hidden their disgust over the ‘monkey dey work baboon dey chop arrangement. They have urged the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) to intervene.

    The Federal Government has set before it, ambitious targets in its National Broadband Plan launched amid pomp and celebration last year in Lagos. The Minister of Communications Technology, Mrs Omobola Johnson followed it up this year with the launch of a campaign to create awareness.

    The regulator of the telecoms sector, the NCC said it auctioned the 2.3gigahertz (GHz) spectrum to provide wholesale broadband services while it is planning another spectrum auction in the 2.6 GHz to provide wireless services.

    Its Chief Executive Officer, Eugene Juwah said its open access broadband model will be used to accelerate the penetration of broadband services across the country.

    The efforts of the government and the regulator are not for nothing. Ubiquitous, affordable, reliable and fast internet will open new opportunities in every facet of human endeavours ranging from education, health, government, agriculture to politics.

     Spectrum availability/cost

    Operators see the current regime of spectrum cost as being punitive. For effective coverage, spectrum is needed because it is the vessel through which signals are received and sent either via radio or wireless.

    The Federal Government, through the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) should also expedite action on meeting the deadline set by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) for all its member countries to complete the transition from analogue to digital broadcasting. It is believed that spectrum currently in the custody of the broadcast industry would be freed up for telecoms as digital dividends.

    Juwah said spectrum in the country costs much less than it is in any part of the world, adding that in a country such as India, it is a major revenue source. Analysts say the view that spectrum auction should be seen as a revenue generation exercise should be revisited.

    “The cost of the new LTE (long  term evolution or 4G) spectrum must not be sold in such a way that it limits use of these new services only to high-end business users in the central business district (CBD) and at the airport. Licence conditions can be used that place a premium on wider roll-out and lower prices: a simple conditional, if you do this on price and roll-out, we will cut your spectrum prices.

    “For rural areas, LTE is significantly more efficient for delivering spectrum over distance and the regulator could reserve certain geographic areas where they would offer those willing to invest, free LTE spectrum beyond a nominal administrative charge,” Balancing Act added.

    Both the regulator and government could fast-track data ubiquity through:

     Deepening coverage

    In Nigeria, access to the internet is still an urban exclusive preserve. It is scarcely available in the mass rural areas where a huge number of people reside.  The telcos have tried by providing mobile internet to their customers.

    Balancing Act believes the mobile operators have more or less reached the edge of what they consider are addressable markets and on this basis, they should not be allowed to stand in the way of progress. The regulator needs to tell them to either get in there and develop services or clear off the way and let others get on with task. They need to be made to offer fair and transparent interconnection rates for those who tackle geographic areas they won’t move into.

    “Technical innovation needs to be a cornerstone to work of this kind. The newer generation of low cost base stations and the TV White Spaces pilots offer interesting ways to reduce delivery costs,” it argued.

     Encouraging competition

    Even in the more competitive countries, mobile operators with large fibre wholesale networks are said to be hanging on to cut throat wholesale pricing. In Nigeria, discussion about this kind of market blockage came to the fore last year when the regulator adjudged two operators ‘dominant’.

    There’s need to open up competition to utilities fibre assets and allow them to make their capacity available competitively in the market. They need to encourage ‘carriers’ carriers’ to roll out and offer competitive wholesale fibre networks from the private sector.

    The regulator needs to ensure that there is fair and open access for those wanting to roll out local access networks so that they can use wholesale capacity to deliver competitive prices. Insurgent challengers offering household fibre to the home and LTE should be actively encouraged through the licensing process. This is the essence of the open access model of the NCC.

    Mobile vooice network operators (MVNOs) should be encouraged that operate voice services over data.

     Lowering prices

    Analysts believe another important step regulators should take is getting access costs for end-users reduced. The efforts of the Alliance for Affordable Internet in this respect are commendable. The explosion in the number of internet users over the last five years has been possible because of decreasing access cost.

    Analysts at Balancing Act say information is a powerful tool in this battle. They lament  that only a handful of regulators publish internet subscriber numbers and rates charged by operators. They suggest that regulators need not only to collect internet user numbers from operators but publish them quarterly so that subscribers could cross-compare and allow them to make appropriate choice.

     Insisting on quality

    Though the NCC has done well by providing a level-playing field for operators, much still needs to be done in the area of allowing customers get value for their money. The dearth of infrastructure, especially power remains a daunting challenge.

    While there is a key performance indicators (KPIs) in the voice segment of the industry, it is hardly present in data.

    The NCC should start to carry out Quality of Service (QoS) tests on data services and issue fines against operators failing to keep the promises they make to their customers. The regulator should also listen to the industry and tackle network blockages that are slowing everyone’s service delivery down.

    Vandalism remains a huge problem: it comes both from over-enthusiastic employees (the cuts are too strategic to be otherwise) and thieves looking for copper.

    Corporate Service Executive at MTN, Akinwale Goodluck lamented that people vandalise fibre optic cables because they think they could get copper to sell.

    Analysts have suggested education and awareness about the issue because it is apparent that those who willfully vandalise cables do it ignorantly.

    NCC should help the operators to push for the classification of telecoms infrastructure as critical national infrastructure. It is curious that over the last 12 years that the industry has been liberalised, vandalism has been its challenge, while the National Assembly has not taken any concrete step to criminalise act.

    All that is heard from the political gladiators in Abuja are empty promises to do something.

  • Open access model is way to go, says Broadbased Communications

    Contrary to insinuations that the open access broadband network model of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) would breed corruption and inefficiency in the system, the Managing Director, Broadbased Communications, Prince Henry Ise-Okojie, has said the model would promote the goal of deepening broadband access across the country.

    Speaking on the sideline during the official launch of its range of equipment in Lagos, the CEO said the NCC’s model aligns with Broadbased Communication’s strategy to take fibre optics infrastructure to the last mile.  He said all the 20 banks in the country presently are either directly or indirectly using the company’s fiber optics open access non-compete strategy, adding that the firm would play a key role in the initial rollout of the infrastructure companies (Infracos) strategy.

    He said: “In the next 12 to 18 months, we will continue to expand our reach and hopefully add 1500 to 2000 kilometers to our existing infrastructure. Again this is to make our platform available to all existing telecom operators and new players including InfraCos seeking to lease fibre optic links from an open access, non-compete metropolitan fibre optic network operator.”

    The ‘Open Access Next Generation Fibre Optics Broadband Network’ paper, which is based on input from industry stakeholders, also outlines wholesale wireless last mile access through the auctioned 2.3gigahertz (GHz) spectrum to complement existing solutions.

    The NCC said it is committed to establishing a new broadband deployment environment in line with the National Broadband Plan, adding that the open access model for fibre-optic network deployment is best suited to bridge the digital divide and deliver fast and reliable broadband services to households and businesses.

    Under the model, a national broadband network will be provided by licensed InfraCos on a non-discriminatory, open access and price regulated basis to all service providers. The regulator said the objective of this initiative is to ‘stimulate a new national broadband network that is not only more widespread but also faster and more secure than what is available today, thereby stimulating other sectors of the economy and leading to higher economic spinoffs for Nigeria. In addition, it will offer efficient connectivity as well as ultra high-speed broadband services that are available, affordable and sustainable.

    Its Chief Marketing Officer (CMO), Mr. Chidi Ibisi, said the company is a purely open access fibre optic network infrastructure company which does not compete against its clients by aspiring to provide last mile services to consumers of services.  He said the firm provides the infrastructure that makes it possible to reach the last mile, adding that as the need for broadband connectivity expands, the firm will be a major enabler to telecom operators and other industry players that are interested in providing services to the last mile.

  • ATM… the fraudster’s tool?

    ATM… the fraudster’s tool?

    The Automated Teller Machine (ATM) has moved from being a mysterious machine to a basic tool of business transaction. But it is at the heart of online frauds and internet scams, thereby making many to be weary of the ‘machine that spits cash at the punch of just four digits’. According to experts, more needs to be done to improve its end-user experience, LUCAS AJANAKU reports.

    To some people, President, Nigeria Internet Group (NIG), Bayo Banjo is an iconoclast of a sort. Speaking on the spate of cybercrimes in the country against the background of the Cashless regime of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), he said he does not use automated teller machine (ATM) card and would never advise anybody to do so. His reason: The lenders have cleverly injected clauses in the ATM card request forms that extricate them of liability should a fraud occur.

    But sharing his experience, Group Chief Executive Officer, (GCEO), Computer Warehouse Group (CWG), Austin Okere, said his wife and many others like her, who have vowed never to test the efficacy of banks’ assurances on the safety and security of their ATM systems against the increasing ingenuity of fraudsters have now become unwilling converts. This he said is due to the higher risk of being shut out of modern day transactions. Regulatory pressures such as the CBN’s cashless policy have also played their part in this conspiracy against financial conservativism. There are now penalties on cash transactions beyond a certain threshold. Thankfully, she has broken ranks and acquired an ATM card just only last year, he said.

    According to Okere who is also an Entrepreneur in Residence, CBS, the CBN has tried to allay fears by compelling the banks to put additional security measures such as the installation of anti-skimming devices and two cameras on all ATMs. The rationale is that a fraudster who covers both cameras with his hands to avoid detection will have no spare to conduct his nefarious activities.

    The average customer experience of ATM user  is still a tale of woes, mostly self-inflicted, and inadvertently by the same banks in whose major interest it should be to drive its adoption to cut the high cost of serving customers within the branch. For example, it was reported that on Christmas eve last year, customers looking for ATMs to withdraw cash in Gbagada, a Lagos suburb, could not. All they saw on the ATM screen was: ‘Temporary out of service’or‘Unable to dispense Cash.’ The only ATMs that seemed to working on the whole axis were that of UBA at the Charlie Boy Bus stop. Of course, the queue had built up to the extent that faint hearted customers rather opted to go without cash than risk the possible consequences of a stampede. Similarly, on December 14 last year, there were reports that virtually no ATM worked in the Badagry area of the state.

    Policy summersault

    Okere said these experiences are exacerbated essentially by the following factors; firstly, stagnation in the ATM population in spite of significant adoption rate. The ATM population in the country has been stuck at the 11,000 mark for the past six years, resulting in an average of 11.39 ATMs per 100,000 adult population (adult population in Nigeria being about 56 per cent or 95.2million according to a World Bank report on population).

    This is not unconnected to the CBN’s misadventure with the Independent ATM Deployers (IAD) experiment of 2008 that barred banks from deploying ATMs outside their branches. This resulted in the sudden halt in the momentum of ATM deployment by banks. “This was largely due to the hasty conduct of the CBN in trying to swallow an elephant at one go. Noble as the intention was, a pilot scheme would have uncovered the soft underbelly of the strategy, the major shortcoming being the fact that the cash in the offsite ATMs would have been too expensive for the IADs to carry, and therefore compel them to charge customers very exorbitant rates or render them totally unprofitable at the flat rate of N100 per withdrawal then allowed by the CBN,” he said.

    Six years later, there are less than the 11,800 achieved at the highpoint because many banks had to abandon the long term rents secured for their offsite ATMs and wheeled the ATMs into warehouses and parking lots because the IADs could not afford the book value to take on the sites and ATMs. The operational lives of those ATMs, about a third of the total volume, were cut short, as they were subsequently unusable two years later when the CBN rescinded her decision, Okere lamented.

    Comparatively, Indonesia with an adult population of about 90million, more than doubled their ATM installed base from 16.7,000 in 2011 to 36.5,000 in 2012, resulting in 37 ATMs per 100,000 adult population, about three times the ATM per adult capita in Nigeria. South Africa has 60 ATMs per 100,000 adult population, while the United Kingdom (UK) has 124 ATMs per 100,000 adult population. Nigeria clearly has a lot to do as the largest economy in Africa after the GDP rebasing.

     

    Challenges

    He said the quality of notes in the ATM are a far cry from standard. In the early days, the ATM was where to go if you wanted crisp notes. Today, the notes in the ATM are sometimes worse that the change you receive at the flea market. This is underscored by the fact that the security features and the general quality of the naira could do with some enhancements. Dirty notes generally cause paper dirt to be lodged in sensitive parts of the ATM when it is dispensing cash, therefore resulting in more frequent system faults or currency jams. When the work rate of the ATM in Nigeria is compared to that of the UK, it is clear that the Nigerian ATM dispense on the average five notes to one in the UK, if it is dispensing N1,000 notes and the UK one is dispensing £20 notes (£20 is approximately N5,000). This coupled with the low ATM density and challenged note quality contributes a lot to the frequent breakdowns and ‘unable to dispense cash’ notices.

    He argued that most ATMs are not under any guaranteed service level support programme. This is very shocking, and a serious anomaly by any stretch of the imagination. Banks inadvertently encourage this malaise. There is a notion that appraisal and compensation for ATM support heads in the E-banking departments seem to be heavily skewed on how much they can save in the ATM support costs. So they devise all means necessary to achieve this, even at the detriment of customer experience and the banks’ brand erosion. There is a blatant refusal to sign any Service Level Agreements (SLA) support for the ATMs in the first year of purchase under the illusion that warranty on the systems equates to SLA support. This results in fallacious claims of reduction in support costs.

    This alluded cost efficiency cannot be further from the truth. Warranty and SLA support are quite different from each other as any owner of a car under warranty well knows. While SLA defines the time within which an ATM should be fixed or replaced in the event of a fault (usually two hours within urban areas and six hours in remote areas), warranty relies on a best effort basis for the replacement of factory defective parts.

    Parts that are rendered unusable due to wear and tear, or as a result of exogenous effects such as power surges cannot be claimed under warranty (as sometimes the bank officials are wont to ferociously argue). For simplicity, warranty on ATMs is very similar to that on automobiles.  If you drive your new car which carries a three year or 100,000km warranty to the dealer for a part replacement. Firstly they check that it is not normal wear and tear, and that it is not due to abnormal circumstances such as the wrong type of fuel or an accident. Then they take in the car and order the part. They call you when the part arrives, which takes an average of three months, and then slap you with a labour bill. This is the type of service that the Bank is hoodwinked to render to their hapless customers. It is worthy to note that warranty does not cover periodic maintenance of the machines. Imagine driving your warranty car for three years straight or 100,000km without any service or Oil change! Not opting even for the bare bones labour-only quarterlypreventive maintenance service does drastically shorten the lifespan of the ATMs. It is therefore not surprising that some relatively new ATMs needlessly break down and cause customers to spend eternity looking for a working one, or in an endless queue.

    The average annual support-spend on an ATM in Nigeria is $2,500, about half of what obtains in Indonesia and South Africa, both spending about $4,500 per ATM per annum. By investing the right amount to keep their systems properly maintained, they prolong the lives of their ATMs and ensure better customer experiences, which we readily testify to when we visit those countries.

    Most ATMs work with windows operating system. Many are currently on the Windows XP operating system (OS) which has recently been announced by Microsoft as de-supported, and a new OS, Windows 7, announced to replace it. This means that any ATM that is not upgraded to the Windows 7 OS shall be vulnerable to viruses and fraud attacks, since the new security patches shall not work on them. Globally, 2.2million ATMs are vulnerable. In Nigeria a significant number of the installed base shall be affected. The solution is a simple upgrade of the operating system if the ATM is upgradable. This is free if the bank has been paying its software maintenance fee. They will otherwise have to incur huge capital costs to repurchase the new software licenses. “Available data suggests that many banks have not kept up with the software support fees. A further complication is that certain category of ATMs cannot be upgraded because of non USB Interfaces. These have to be replaced, and will further deplete the already stretched ATM density,” he said.

    Again, there are serious challenges in stable and consistent power supply, and network connectivity, both of which the ATM cannot operate without. There are also infrastructure challenges in access roads to ATMs in rural areas which cause support engineers to spend significantly more ‘travel time’ than ‘dwell time’ to fix machines. A possible solution will be for service providers to have enough support offices across the country than depend on engineers being dispatched only from the three commercial centers of Lagos, Port Harcourt and Abuja. Cross training support engineers on ATMs, inverters and network connectivity will ensure that the first engineer to arrive at the ATM can fix the fault and does not have to call another specialist. A monitoring system if installed by the provider would ensure that the ATM correctly diagnoses itself and advices on the correct spare part to be carried to site. A monitoring system will however, require client licenses on the ATMs for which maintenance fees are due to be paid, and which many banks shy away from.

  • We are near-profitability, says Etisalat chief

    We are near-profitability, says Etisalat chief

    More than six years after it started operations in the country, Etisalat Nigeria has said it still far from hitting the profitability margin, lamenting that willful vandalism of infrastructure, theft, dominance of the industry by one operator and acute power shortage.

    Its Chief Executive Officer, Mathew Wilshere who spoke in Lagos, said though the firm was not making profit yet, its business strategies and continued subscriber acquisition all signpost a profitable future that is no longer far.

    He said: “On the issue of profitability, we are not profitable yet but we are improving in terms of our route to profitability. So the public data on our group EBITDA (‘Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortisation) which is a measure of our profitability has moved from positive two per cent to positive 15 per cent.”

    He said in spite of this positive outlook, the telco still has a long way to go, adding however that he is optimistic that the storm will soon be over as management has mapped out strategies to lower cost and, increase customer satisfaction and consequently subscriber figures.

    He said: “But we still have some way to go until we finally arrive at positive but we are moving in the right way because we are growing size and we are keeping our cost quite under control through good product.”

    On the dominance of the industry by one operator, he commended the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) for the steps it has taken so far at ensuring that a level playing field is ensured for all players in the industry. He warned that dominance of the industry by a single operator without being checked is dangerous for the industry.

    He said:  “It is also important to continue with some of the policies the NCC have started which I think are sensible and smart for the industry especially the policy on dominance. It is not healthy for the industry to have one operator that is so dominant and it is important too that the operator does not start abusing (the dominant power over the others).”

    Etisalat was the last operator to roll out operation in the country. It started operation when others that came earlier than it began operation with a lot of mouth-watering incentives such as tax holidays and duty-free imports on telecoms equipment by the Federal Government.

    It was even alleged that five years after the tax holidays elapsed, some of the operators still took advantage of the porous, permissive, corrupt and acquisitive nature of the society to continue to enjoy some of these incentives.

  • Zinox votes N18b for expansion

    Indigenous tech firm, Zinox Technology Limited has said having conquered the sub-Saharan African market, it is now posed to explore the entire African continent.

    To achieve this, it said it has split one of its subsidiaries, Technology Distribution (TD) Mobile Limited, a fast growing digital smart devices distribution outfit, into three arms.

    Its Chairman/Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Leo Stan Ekeh, who spoke in Lagos during the launch of the firm,  said N18 billion has been voted to grow the firm.

    He said: “What we are witnessing today is the birth of an idea which took shape years ago. I thank my partners: HP, Lenovo, Nokia, IBM, the various bank chiefs who are here today to witness this and the media which helped build up this company.

    “We are keen to expand the market and move from being the biggest ICT distributor in sub-Saharan Africa to be number one in Africa. From the first week of this month, Technology Distributors Ltd, will witness a split into three arms: TD-Mobile, TD Solutions Distribution and the present company. I have secured approval for this and for the funds needed to make this a reality.

    “The sum of N18 billion will be injected into Technology Distributions while we are also importing musical equipment worth a million dollars. For the resellers, the idea is to take the market by storm.”

    “We have a flagship in mind that will be the biggest support center with a space of 750 square meters where issues on your mobile devices will be resolved at any time of the day. This will go live first week of next month.

    “We are also building the biggest showroom in Africa which is estimated at 1000 square meters which is an indication of the direction in which we are moving. One of the problems we have in the industry is that of fake devices and as a stop-gap measure, we are putting together a database from which you can confirm the serial number of any of our mobile devices for authenticity.”

    According to him, the firm is also introducing the TD Champion 2014 as a means of rewarding the partners with the best turnover figures and credit history which will be in the form of enhanced credit facility and investment from the Zinox Group through mentorship and actual involvement in the development of these mentees.

    He encouraged resellers to see the present challenges in the industry as temporary setbacks which would be overcome with time.

    Business Manager of TD-Mobile, Mrs. Gozie Ijogun lamented that about 60 per cent of the population still lacked access to the internet in spite of the growth in the scale of penetration of mobile phones.

    “We are well aware that despite the increasing growth rate in the ICT industry, over sixty percent of Nigerians still have limited access to the internet.TD-Mobile is the window to the world of access. Our aim is to bridge the divides between the rich and the poor, between the young and the old, between East and West and between North and South through the distribution of a range of smart devices such as tablets, phablets, phones and computers:  devices that will radically change the way we live and do business. She rounded off by paying tributes to partner organizations such as HP, Nokia, Toshiba, Dell, Lenovo, IBM, among others and to the TD-Mobile team for the support and hard work which went into making the unveiling a reality.

    Director, HP Computers, Mr. Ime Umoh, said the inauguration of TD-Mobile is a timely response to the dynamic and changing face of the industry and end-user requirements. According to him, the world is now living in a technology-mediated world; one in which the customers demand more and more innovative solutions not only in the area of pervasive devices but in other modes as well.

    He said the successful launch of TD-Mobile is testimony to the vision of the Management of Zinox Group, the holding company of Technology Distributions Limited, cannot be divorced from the visionary leadership of Ekeh who has continued to drive changes in the ICT industry.

    Chief Executive Officer, Etisalat Nigeria, Mr. Mathew Wilshere said a congruence between the indefatigable Nigerian spirit and the launch of TD-Mobile.

  • NIMC urges national ID card as travel document

    The National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) is pushing for the use of the new National e-ID Card as a valid travel document.

    This as an alternative to the international passport for certain types of travels.

    The new National eID Card issued to Nigerians on behalf of the Federal Republic of Nigeria is a bona fide Machine Readable Travel Document (MRTD), recognised by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO).

    Its Head, Card Management Services, Mr. Tunji Durodola, explained that the back of the NIMC e-ID Card contains three lines called Machine Readable Zone (MRZ) lines just like the Passport and the same as other national identity cards that have ICAO support. Its development was as a result of NIMC’s conformance to the ICAO Document 9303 parts 1 and 2. rigorous testing by international testing agencies ensured that the contents of the chip meet or exceed the standards set by the internationally recognised body.

    The first generation of cards have the smartcard chip, but future generations will be dual-interface (chip and contactless) for a truly robust solution.

    But for other countries to recognise the use of the National e-ID card for cross-border travel, its usage must be included a bilateral agreement among countries that partner with Nigeria and this agreement must be recognised by the countries’ immigration and border control agencies, and such countries must have inspection devices that can read the cards, which most currently do.

    For this to work NIMC, the Federal Ministries of Aviation, Foreign Affairs and the Nigeria Immigration Service must have to sit down and agree on the process. Also, it is not certain if countries would be willing to work with Nigeria, which seems to be ahead of many other nations on the e-ID card programme. NIMC is confident that with time, the International Community will build confidence in the authenticity of the card and the robust security features built into it.

    Durodola also explained that Nigeria had to apply for an Object Identifier (OID), a pre-requisite for what is known as a document signer (DS), which in turn establishes the authenticity of the data contained on the chip as being authentic and not counterfeit. “The national identity card is also a travel document and conforms to the same standards (ICAO 9303 Rev 2) as international passports and national identity cards of other nations which have TD1 functionality built in. It is hoped that the document will be used for ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) travel (without the need for a passport), as the data on the chip cannot be forged. NIMC has its own  DS, a significant component of the Public Key Infrastructure (PKI), on behalf of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

  • ATM… the fraudster’s tool?

    ATM… the fraudster’s tool?

    The Automated Teller Machine (ATM) has moved from being a mysterious machine to a basic tool of business transaction. But it is at the heart of online frauds and internet scams, thereby making many to be weary of the ‘machine that spits cash at the punch of just four digits’. According to experts, more needs to be done to improve its end-user experience, LUCAS AJANAKU reports.

    To some people, President, Nigeria Internet Group (NIG), Bayo Banjo is an iconoclast of a sort. Speaking on the spate of cybercrimes in the country against the background of the Cashless regime of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), he said he does not use automated teller machine (ATM) card and would never advise anybody to do so. His reason: The lenders have cleverly injected clauses in the ATM card request forms that extricate them of liability should a fraud occur.

    But sharing his experience, Group Chief Executive Officer, (GCEO), Computer Warehouse Group (CWG), Austin Okere, said his wife and many others like her, who have vowed never to test the efficacy of banks’ assurances on the safety and security of their ATM systems against the increasing ingenuity of fraudsters have now become unwilling converts. This he said is due to the higher risk of being shut out of modern day transactions. Regulatory pressures such as the CBN’s cashless policy have also played their part in this conspiracy against financial conservativism. There are now penalties on cash transactions beyond a certain threshold. Thankfully, she has broken ranks and acquired an ATM card just only last year, he said.

    According to Okere who is also an Entrepreneur in Residence, CBS, the CBN has tried to allay fears by compelling the banks to put additional security measures such as the installation of anti-skimming devices and two cameras on all ATMs. The rationale is that a fraudster who covers both cameras with his hands to avoid detection will have no spare to conduct his nefarious activities.

    The average customer experience of ATM user  is still a tale of woes, mostly self-inflicted, and inadvertently by the same banks in whose major interest it should be to drive its adoption to cut the high cost of serving customers within the branch. For example, it was reported that on Christmas eve last year, customers looking for ATMs to withdraw cash in Gbagada, a Lagos suburb, could not. All they saw on the ATM screen was: ‘Temporary out of service’or‘Unable to dispense Cash.’ The only ATMs that seemed to working on the whole axis were that of UBA at the Charlie Boy Bus stop. Of course, the queue had built up to the extent that faint hearted customers rather opted to go without cash than risk the possible consequences of a stampede. Similarly, on December 14 last year, there were reports that virtually no ATM worked in the Badagry area of the state.

     

    Policy summersault

    Okere said these experiences are exacerbated essentially by the following factors; firstly, stagnation in the ATM population in spite of significant adoption rate. The ATM population in the country has been stuck at the 11,000 mark for the past six years, resulting in an average of 11.39 ATMs per 100,000 adult population (adult population in Nigeria being about 56 per cent or 95.2million according to a World Bank report on population).

    This is not unconnected to the CBN’s misadventure with the Independent ATM Deployers (IAD) experiment of 2008 that barred banks from deploying ATMs outside their branches. This resulted in the sudden halt in the momentum of ATM deployment by banks. “This was largely due to the hasty conduct of the CBN in trying to swallow an elephant at one go. Noble as the intention was, a pilot scheme would have uncovered the soft underbelly of the strategy, the major shortcoming being the fact that the cash in the offsite ATMs would have been too expensive for the IADs to carry, and therefore compel them to charge customers very exorbitant rates or render them totally unprofitable at the flat rate of N100 per withdrawal then allowed by the CBN,” he said.

    Six years later, there are less than the 11,800 achieved at the highpoint because many banks had to abandon the long term rents secured for their offsite ATMs and wheeled the ATMs into warehouses and parking lots because the IADs could not afford the book value to take on the sites and ATMs. The operational lives of those ATMs, about a third of the total volume, were cut short, as they were subsequently unusable two years later when the CBN rescinded her decision, Okere lamented.

    Comparatively, Indonesia with an adult population of about 90million, more than doubled their ATM installed base from 16.7,000 in 2011 to 36.5,000 in 2012, resulting in 37 ATMs per 100,000 adult population, about three times the ATM per adult capita in Nigeria. South Africa has 60 ATMs per 100,000 adult population, while the United Kingdom (UK) has 124 ATMs per 100,000 adult population. Nigeria clearly has a lot to do as the largest economy in Africa after the GDP rebasing.

     

    Challenges

    He said the quality of notes in the ATM are a far cry from standard. In the early days, the ATM was where to go if you wanted crisp notes. Today, the notes in the ATM are sometimes worse that the change you receive at the flea market. This is underscored by the fact that the security features and the general quality of the naira could do with some enhancements. Dirty notes generally cause paper dirt to be lodged in sensitive parts of the ATM when it is dispensing cash, therefore resulting in more frequent system faults or currency jams. When the work rate of the ATM in Nigeria is compared to that of the UK, it is clear that the Nigerian ATM dispense on the average five notes to one in the UK, if it is dispensing N1,000 notes and the UK one is dispensing £20 notes (£20 is approximately N5,000). This coupled with the low ATM density and challenged note quality contributes a lot to the frequent breakdowns and ‘unable to dispense cash’ notices.

    He argued that most ATMs are not under any guaranteed service level support programme. This is very shocking, and a serious anomaly by any stretch of the imagination. Banks inadvertently encourage this malaise. There is a notion that appraisal and compensation for ATM support heads in the E-banking departments seem to be heavily skewed on how much they can save in the ATM support costs. So they devise all means necessary to achieve this, even at the detriment of customer experience and the banks’ brand erosion. There is a blatant refusal to sign any Service Level Agreements (SLA) support for the ATMs in the first year of purchase under the illusion that warranty on the systems equates to SLA support. This results in fallacious claims of reduction in support costs.

    This alluded cost efficiency cannot be further from the truth. Warranty and SLA support are quite different from each other as any owner of a car under warranty well knows. While SLA defines the time within which an ATM should be fixed or replaced in the event of a fault (usually two hours within urban areas and six hours in remote areas), warranty relies on a best effort basis for the replacement of factory defective parts.

    Parts that are rendered unusable due to wear and tear, or as a result of exogenous effects such as power surges cannot be claimed under warranty (as sometimes the bank officials are wont to ferociously argue). For simplicity, warranty on ATMs is very similar to that on automobiles.  If you drive your new car which carries a three year or 100,000km warranty to the dealer for a part replacement. Firstly they check that it is not normal wear and tear, and that it is not due to abnormal circumstances such as the wrong type of fuel or an accident. Then they take in the car and order the part. They call you when the part arrives, which takes an average of three months, and then slap you with a labour bill. This is the type of service that the Bank is hoodwinked to render to their hapless customers. It is worthy to note that warranty does not cover periodic maintenance of the machines. Imagine driving your warranty car for three years straight or 100,000km without any service or Oil change! Not opting even for the bare bones labour-only quarterlypreventive maintenance service does drastically shorten the lifespan of the ATMs. It is therefore not surprising that some relatively new ATMs needlessly break down and cause customers to spend eternity looking for a working one, or in an endless queue.

    The average annual support-spend on an ATM in Nigeria is $2,500, about half of what obtains in Indonesia and South Africa, both spending about $4,500 per ATM per annum. By investing the right amount to keep their systems properly maintained, they prolong the lives of their ATMs and ensure better customer experiences, which we readily testify to when we visit those countries.

    Most ATMs work with windows operating system. Many are currently on the Windows XP operating system (OS) which has recently been announced by Microsoft as de-supported, and a new OS, Windows 7, announced to replace it. This means that any ATM that is not upgraded to the Windows 7 OS shall be vulnerable to viruses and fraud attacks, since the new security patches shall not work on them. Globally, 2.2million ATMs are vulnerable. In Nigeria a significant number of the installed base shall be affected. The solution is a simple upgrade of the operating system if the ATM is upgradable. This is free if the bank has been paying its software maintenance fee. They will otherwise have to incur huge capital costs to repurchase the new software licenses. “Available data suggests that many banks have not kept up with the software support fees. A further complication is that certain category of ATMs cannot be upgraded because of non USB Interfaces. These have to be replaced, and will further deplete the already stretched ATM density,” he said.

    Again, there are serious challenges in stable and consistent power supply, and network connectivity, both of which the ATM cannot operate without. There are also infrastructure challenges in access roads to ATMs in rural areas which cause support engineers to spend significantly more ‘travel time’ than ‘dwell time’ to fix machines. A possible solution will be for service providers to have enough support offices across the country than depend on engineers being dispatched only from the three commercial centers of Lagos, Port Harcourt and Abuja. Cross training support engineers on ATMs, inverters and network connectivity will ensure that the first engineer to arrive at the ATM can fix the fault and does not have to call another specialist. A monitoring system if installed by the provider would ensure that the ATM correctly diagnoses itself and advices on the correct spare part to be carried to site. A monitoring system will however, require client licenses on the ATMs for which maintenance fees are due to be paid, and which many banks shy away from.

    Banks are by no means the only clog in the wheel of good ATM customer experience. Some of the blames lie squarely on the shoulders of the service providers. In a bid to win business at all costs they are ready to accept terms that tempt them to cut corners in quality of products and service delivery. For example, there is a need to install monitoring systems and a call centre to aid support efficacy. There is also a need to ensure that the custodians are sufficiently trained to provide the crucial first level support. The negligence of these will make the support process expensive, unwieldy and ineffective. This drives the proverbial ‘race to the bottom’ for all stakeholders. A decimation in the number of service providers  or their replacement by uncertified operators willing to collect the cutthroat rates offered by the banks will not bode any good tidings for the banks nor their customers.

    Another emerging class in the clog of ATM availability is the gang of Marauders who attempt to blow-up the ATMs to gain access to the cash in the safes. For this group, Banknote staining could be an effective prevention technique, in which the anticipated reward of the crime is removed by denying the benefits, by marking the cash stolen with special security ink. Of course the ink should be machine detectable to ensure that deposit machines reject stained notes.

    Some customers are also culpable. Furiously banging the ATM when ‘it swallows your card’ or does not dispense the money on your transaction will not solve any problem. If will only compound the problem by taking the ATM out of service. In the rare instance of this anomaly, the right thing to do is to call the number on the ATM body or visit the bank. There are usually journal entries and time stamps that will prove that you were not paid what you have been inadvertently debited, and a routine for redress and refund instituted, Okere said.

    While acknowledging the significant progress that has been recorded in payment systems, underpinned by the opportunity for the average Nigerian to be availed of having access to the global installed base of ATMs, courtesy of his local bank ATM card, and without recourse to a foreign bank account and ATM card, there is still the need to ensure that charity truly begins at home.

  • MainOne supports DemoAfrica

    MainOne supports DemoAfrica

    West Africa’s leading provider of business communications, MainOne, said it has demonstrated its commitment to entrepreneurship and technology development in Africa by supporting the Demo Africa conference, held in Lagos.

    In a statement, it said it also shared ideas for tech start-ups to create successful businesses. The event attracted 40 African Start Ups and Venture Capitalists that include Angel Investors, Tech Acquisition Specialists, IT buyers, in addition to business leaders and ICT experts from within and outside Africa who discussed technological start-ups and key strategies to keep businesses afloat. Conference discussions revolved around strategies for supporting new and emerging tech-startups and entrepreneurs to strengthen Africa’s start-up and innovation ecosystem, promote and facilitate new investments, and foster innovative business models for the continent’s development.

    Its Chief Sales & Marketing Officer, ‘Folu Aderibigbe said DemoAfrica was an easy sponsorship decision, as it provided an impetus for community entrepreneurship development, and enabled young talented Nigerians showcase their products (ideas), learn how to harness and create wealth from their skills, as well as prepare for the journey that ensures personal development, and global relevance.

    He said: “MainOne is pleased to be a vital part of this public-private alliance aimed at enhancing and deepening the startup and innovation ecosystems of fast- growing West-African economies.

    This partnership reiterates our commitment to technology development and the growth of the Nigerian start-up environment, manifested through our support for the Co-Creation Hub, Institute of Software Practitioners of Nigeria Software Cup, and Paradigm Initiative Nigeria’s TENT programmes, among others.”

    The Demo Africa conference is one of the flagship initiatives of LIONS@frica and aims to connect African startups to the global ecosystem. Demo Africa is the place where the most innovative companies from African countries get a platform to launch their products and announce to Africa and the world what they have developed. The selected start-ups also benefit from coaching and mentorship programmes from both local and international mentors and coaches organised by Demo Africa and the US State Department.