Comviva’s mobiquity Money crosses 100 Mn

Comviva’s flagship mobile money product, “mobility Money”, has crossed the 100 million registered customers mark across 60 deployments in 45 countries.

Moreover, mobiquity Money processes 3.6 billion mobile money transactions, valuing over $60 billion annually.

On the occasion of completing a decade of mobiquity Money, the company also unveiled a coffee table book, chronicling the role the product has played in empowering customers and societies globally.

The coffee table book provides a selection of human interest stories from mobile money deployments in Asia, Africa, Middle East and Latin America.

Speaking at the launch, Manoranjan Mohapatra, Chief Executive Officer, Comviva said, “In the years to come, as people access all kinds of financial services, it is likely that this group would have played an important part. On the occasion of ten years of transforming lives through mobiquity® Money, I would like to take the opportunity to congratulate our partners who have been with us through this journey.”

Unveiling the coffee table book Marc Rennard, ‎Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Customer Experience and Mobile Banking, ‎Orange Group said, “Orange Money and other mobile money services are constantly breaking new grounds in fields as diverse as financial inclusion, women’s health, migrant’s welfare, access to energy, development of small businesses and the progressive building of a cash-light economy. I am delighted to launch this coffee table book that contains a selection of life transforming stories from mobile money deployments across the world.”

mobiquity Money enables a host of mobile money services that has transformed millions of lives across the globe by changing the way money is used, saved and distributed. For example, the facility to transfer and store money digitally on the mobile phone is very handy during emergencies. In Mali, it has helped in the socio-economic empowerment of women by bundling pre-natal care with savings and insurance. In Tanzania, it is allowing non-smartphone users to tap and pay at merchants using an NFC card linked to their mobile money account.

In famine and drought hit areas of Africa, it is streamlining financial aid to the needy by streamlining donations. Similarly, mobiquity Money, in Zimbabwe, is powering remittance services, making it easier for the diaspora to send money to their families.

 

 

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