Silicon Pay is helping more women-led businesses have online presence
While the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has forced businesses to market and sell their products and services online, in what is called the new normal, women-led businesses are still struggling to have online presence.
This is partly because of limited digital skills.
This is, however, set to change as Silicon Savannah Limited, a Financial Technology Company (FinTech) in the digital payments space is offering women-led enterprises low-cost website development and e-commerce services to enable -them move their businesses online and reach a wider customer base.
According to the Silicon Savannah Chief Executive Officer Patrick Setuba, the websites when developed are integrated with the company’s Silicon Pay payment solution, to enable women entrepreneurs have a fully modern e-commerce store where they collect and control their funds in real time.
Setuba also notes that the company integrated the Silicon Pay solution in several women Saccos to help them ease collection of money through the platform and enhance accountability.
The Silicon Pay solution is increasingly being used by businesses to ease payments.
Setuba says that the platform offers a fully integrated suite of payments products including collection, bulk payments, utilities, bank transfers and crowd funding through its Application Programming Interface (API).
Additionally, he says that the platform provides an API for mobile money and credit card services, which merchants, individuals and companies can leverage by integrating it into their websites and mobile application and start receiving payments in real time.
“COVID-19 has affected businesses but it has paved way for the growth of digital payments as businesses resorted to online toolsbecause they could not do physical meet-up and collections. So we provide solutions to these businesses and merchants to receive e-value,” he says.
Wallets
To stay on top of their game, Setuba says Silicon Pay integrated new products and services to meet its clients’ evolving financial needs. It for instance integrated mobile wallets to cater for customers who receive money in different currencies across Africa.
It also forged partnerships with key service providers such as e-commerce platform players, to provide more services to its clients.
To make it easy for businesses to onboard, Setuba says that the company uses the tiered Know-Your-Customer (KYC) principle, which he says also, helps them guard against fraud.
“To understand who we are dealing with, we incorporated KYC standards to better understand the customer we are dealing with. We thus take extra steps by asking them to prove their identity, and nature of business to make sure the source of a customer’s funds are legitimate,” Setuba notes.
He adds that their systems enables users to monitor their funds on their dashboard in real time and can withdraw through mobile money instantly whenever they need it.
Additionally, the platform enables users to transfer funds instantly to their preferred bank accounts on request and receive the funds in a few hours depending on the time the request is made.
40-Days 40-FinTechs
Silicon Savannah is among the firms taking part in the ongoing second edition of the 40-Days 40-Fintechs initiative, which Setuba says has provided a platform for industry players to showcase their innovations that were less known to the public.
He alludes that Uganda’s FinTech industry is still virgin and thus offers a multitude of opportunities for growth, especially now that businesses are steadily picking interest in digital payments and e-commerce as they seek to reach a wider customer base.
Setuba, however, appeals to industry players to ensure real time funds transfer and same day settlement, noting that this will attract more Ugandans to use Fintech solutions.
The 40-Days 40-FinTechs initiative is organized by HiPipo in partnership with Crosslake Technologies, ModusBox and Mojaloop Foundation, and sponsored by the Gates Foundation.
The HiPipo Chief Executive Officer Innocent Kawooya also notes that FinTechs need to be prepared with appropriate products and have appropriate real time payment systems in place to support an inclusive, interoperable digital marketplace that is both thriving and safe.