Paystack puts $200 million on table for digital payment across Africa

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By Jeph Ajobaju, Chief Copy Editor

Paystack, a Nigerian fintech recently acquired by American digital payment giant Stripe for $200 million, wants to inject the windfall into expanding digital payments across Africa, having now risen from the continent to Silicon Valley.

The acquisition is another marker of the great strides of Nigerian fintech which in total attracted over $600 million funding between 2014 and 2019.

Last month, Flutterwave – famed for its “seamless and secure” payments system – said it has processed more than $1 billion in transaction value, according to Chief Executive Olugbenga Agboola, who founded the tech firm in 2016.

He announced the milestone in a statement after Flutterwave secured $170 million capital from investors, saying the new capital flows – facilitated by “a leading group of international investors” – will bolster the firm’s client base in the global market.

“The fundraise brings the total investment in Flutterwave to USD $225 million and is one of only a very small number of African fintech companies to have raised significant funds in a period of widespread disruption and economic uncertainty,” the statement added, per CNN reporting.

Flutterwave provides digital payment services for small businesses in Africa.

Agboola said on Twitter that the firm aims to “build a payments technology infrastructure that connects Africa to the global economy by making local and international payments seamless.”

More than 1,000 SMEs across the continent have signed up to display and sell their products online using the Flutterwave store.

CNN reports below the success of Paystack which has further burnished the image Nigerian fintech, which is growing in importance and being notice globally.

Paystack plans to get Africa paid

Over the last year, the Covid-19 pandemic has fueled a shift towards digital banking and mobile money. In Africa, this change in habits has international investors eyeing the lucrative opportunity to bring the unbanked online.

These digital platforms could help expand financial inclusion on the continent, where more than half of people over the age of 15 in sub-Saharan Africa lacked access to a bank or mobile money account as of 2017 according to the World Bank.

Nigeria alone has more than 200 financial technology (fintech) companies, with the sector attracting global interest from companies such as Mastercard and Visa.

According to a recent report from consulting firm McKinsey & Company, funding for Nigerian fintech companies between 2014 and 2019 topped $600 million.

In 2019, outside investment in Nigerian fintech startups accounted for a quarter of all funding for tech startups across Africa.

One of the largest deals took place last October, when United States-based digital payment powerhouse Stripe acquired Nigeria’s Paystack, reportedly for over $200 million.

Founded in Lagos in 2015, Paystack says it now has more than 60,000 clients, including corporations like Domino’s Pizza and telecom giant MTN.

CNN’s Eleni Giokos caught up with Shola Akinlade, Paystack’s co-founder and CEO, to talk about the company’s transformation from a Nigerian startup vying for attention in Silicon Valley to a payment giant with goals of expanding across Africa.

The following interview was edited and condensed for clarity.

Eleni Giokos: You process over 50% of all online payments in Nigeria. Did you think it was going to get this big when you started?

Shola Akinlade: We started Paystack from a personal pain. I’ve been seeing how things work elsewhere … and I thought, ‘Why can’t we have good things here?’ I think that was where it came from and, personally, just wanting things to be easier.

I wasn’t thinking, ‘Oh, this is going to be big at all.’ But I got into Y Combinator [which provides seed funding for startups] in Silicon Valley.

And when I went to San Francisco, we saw people building amazing things. People were building shirts that never get dirty or a bra that detects breast cancer. I was initially intimidated when they said, ‘What are you guys working on? … How many people are in Africa?’ I was like, ‘One billion.’

That was the moment I realized that this is going to be very big. If you figure out how to move money and commerce around, it’s going to change lives, it’s going to change the continent.

EG: You can formalize the informal sector because it plays such a huge part of the economy. Is that the dream?

SA: I think that’s the interesting thing about Paystack. Our first set of customers are people that are building the future of the continent. I think Paystack builds a platform and we want people to build more on top of it.

One of my customers is a company called BuyPower, making it easy for people to buy electricity digitally. We started with them four years ago and what we’ve seen is that the way people get included in the financial digital landscape is by real-world cases.

So, think about when your electricity goes off on a Friday night. You have two options: you can buy it digitally or you can wait until Monday and go walk somewhere. So there’s a wide range of customers that Paystack is powering.

If you look at the Google Play store probably the top 10 finance apps are all powered by Paystack.

EG: Do you have to be a business to use this?

SA: Yes, we work with businesses. If you paid a business, you probably might have interacted with Paystack without even knowing. We empower the merchants, and the merchants will bring their customers.

We invited our customers and said, ‘What features should we build?’ And everyone said … ‘We want you to let customers know that paying online is safe; paying online works.’

One of the things we know at Paystack is if someone has a problem paying online with a merchant, that is someone that will never pay online again – so we take that very seriously.

We make sure that refunds get delivered instantly (and) disputes are resolved.

EG: We’ve seen the pandemic accelerating digitization. How has that influenced the way your customers are engaging with you in terms of your business’ growth?

SA: Now we’re doing probably more than five times more sign-ups than we were doing in March (of 2020). A lot of people are coming online, and I think this pandemic was a real reminder that African businesses are undertooled and underserved.

It was easier for businesses elsewhere to react with access to the right tools and just move online.

EG: Do you want to scale this globally? I know that you’re first looking at the continent. How big do you want to get?

SA: Paystack is one of those companies where the size of the opportunity is just so big. Today we’re in just three countries. Africa has over 50 countries. So we need to scale rapidly across the continent.

I think there’s a lot that’s going to happen in the continent and Paystack will build that infrastructure that allows us to scale across the continent.

EG: We keep saying that we can leapfrog legacy requirements and industrialization in a way, and just fast forward to AI and the digital world. Is that really possible?  How do you see this playing out as someone who is a pioneer within the space of the digital world for the continent?

SA: I think the way ecosystems are built is everybody doing their part. I’ll do my part, the person building the roads, she’ll do her part. So I think it’s not a zero-sum game.

We will play our part on the technology side, but we need the roads, we need things with good governance. We need more things in different directions. We need people to help us tell our stories. It’s hard to build and do all this yourself.

So I think the ecosystem needs a lot of different parts working together and everyone doing their part.


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