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Easi
simplifies prepaid electronic vending
L.S.M Kambweza, Technology Zimbabwe
November 07, 2012
View this article on the Technology Zimbabwe website
You've probably seen the Easi logo on the right in a number
of retail outlets in the country. The company has entered the market
to provide a South African designed solution to simplify the electronic
vending of prepaid products. So far Easi has signed up all mobile
network operators in Zimbabwe, internet providers like Broadcom
and Africom, mobile health insurance startup MedAccess, new airtime
& microcredit startup LendMe, and MTC Lotto. Rusch says they're
currently finalizing arrangements to have biNu (for the biNu credits).
Their plan is
to make it as easy as possible for anyone to buy prepaid services,
you telephone airtime, your internet bundles, and even plans to
integrate and provide ZESA prepaid airtime on the platform. If you
use any of the new prepaid internet services by companies like Brodacom
and Africom, then you're probably familiar with the frustration
of loading up your credit when you run out. The companies just don't
have a large enough network of agents. The national power company's
new prepaid electricity product has the same issue, one we have
written about here before.
Easi is here
to solve that problem.
We had the opportunity
to speak to the founder of the company Phil Rusch recently and he
says he's pleased with the progress they have made since they
connected their first device in April this year. Easi now have over
200 connections in the market and in September processed about 25,000
transactions. He says the number of transactions has increased exponentially,
sometimes by as much as 300% month on month.
On how he identified
and decided to address the gap in the market, Rush says he saw the
devices in Zambia, spoke to the guy who was doing the agency there
and learned that the solution was part of Saicom's proprietary
management platform and hardware. Saicom are the same guys that
used to do the Adondo pay phones and, when that market started declining
due to an increasing mobile penetration, they decided to add electronic
vending to their products. From Zambia, Rusch decided to implement
the solution in Zimbabwe and spent the next 9 months setting up
the business.
"I just
figured there's a gap in the market and the market is going
to change towards that [electronic vending] in time. Even in places
like South Africa now you don't really see scratch cards anymore,"
Rush explains.
How the platform
works is that Easi loads bulk pin codes from the providers onto
their platform, and their vendor devices connect to the platform
via GSM and GPRS. The devices look like the two on the left. Rusch
says they are also testing a pin-less credit vending with some providers
locally and they expect to launch the service soon.
Their market
target for the devices ranges from corporates right down to tuck-shops
and street vendors.
Asked whether
they feel threatened by new mobile money method to purchase credit
like EcoCash Rush says he doesn't think so, and explains "Down
the road as we connect more and more different things, we bring
more central value, for example prepaid electricity, insurance policies,
bus tickets, DSTV, gift vouchers, event ticketing and other things".
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