Thursday, January 21, 2016

STARTUP SPECIAL ..................Kwikening the Pace

Kwikening the Pace


After six years of sizing up the digital payments and mobile wallet market, MobiKwik is set to shift into higher gear

In the age of 12 and 18-month-old startups raising millions of dollars from venture capital investors and boasting about ambitious growth plans, Mo biKwik comes across as the ponderous senior citizen. For one, the company was founded back in 2009 (many founders were yet in college then); for another, it hasn't been in a hurry to build an explosively growing startup. Instead, the founders of MobiKwik have brought the business to a slow boil, spending this time figuring out the digital payments and mobile wallets market and only raising their second round of funding in 2015, a good six years after getting off the ground.
Although the founders have only been sipping at their funding to drive growth, MobiKwik has some impressive numbers to offer sceptics. Today it has 25 million users and processes half a million transactions a day, across 50,000 merchants, with its mobile wallet. “People are using their mobile phones more than they use their cards and other electronic forms of payment,“ says founder Bipin Preet Singh.
India today has some six million credit card and some 40 million debit card holders -for a population of over a billion that's a tiny figure, according to Singh. He points out that there are some 200 million smartphone us ers in India, all of whom are poten tial MobiKwik users. While mobile wallet-based payments started with recharge for mobile services and DTH television and then graduated more recently to ecommerce, the next step will involve pushing offline companies to accept mobile wallets. Already, MobiKwik is pushing ahead with this plan, with companies such as Big Bazaar (which gets about 2% of its overall business from MobiKwik payments), Café Coffee Day, Sagar Ratna and WH Smith among a fastgrowing list of merchants accepting this form of payment.“We want to reach a stage where you step out of home and should be able to pay anywhere for anything...you shouldn't need to carry cash or cards to pay the local grocer, taxi and any other product or service,“ says Singh.
While MobiKwik may have been off to a slow start (Singh prefers to call it measured), it has gathered strong momentum in the past 12 to 18 months. For example, it had barely eight million users 12 months ago processed some 2,00,000 transactions and most tellingly had fewer than 4,000 merchants signed up. As companies have become more confident with MobiKwik's mobile wallet, they have eagerly signed on, with the promise of both quicker payments and to distance themselves from handling cash transactions.“Once we have people's trust, we can think of what we can do beyond our core business of mobile wallets,“ says Singh. “We want to make everything seamless for consumers...we want them to be able to manage their money without logging into bank accounts or signing a piece of paper,“ Singh claims. For the moment, MobiKwik wants to cross $1 billion in gross mer chandise volume (GMV) in the next six to nine months and simultaneously unveil its plans to become a broader pro vider of financial services products -on the mobile phone.
With another $100 million round of funding in t

ETM3JAN16

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