Archive for: India

60 million mobile phones is a lot of…

by Jim Rosenberg : Thursday, August 23, 2007

…potential access points for payment services.

It also happens to be the number of handsets that Nokia has manufactured in India in the 18 months since its operation openned in Chennai, according to numbers released Thursday in New Delhi.  Those phones are not just for India or its neighbors, as LiveMint reports:

Kallasvuo said the firm exports nearly half of its Indian unit’s production, comprising low and mid-end GSM phones, to 58 countries in South-East Asia, Africa and West Asia. The firm started the plant to assemble entry-level handsets, mainly for the local market, and started exporting phones produced there only in mid-2006. Higher-end models, such as the Nseries are still not manufactured in India.

Meanwhile, more than one-third of Indians responding to a survey of Asian consumers said they would consider switching to a bank that offered mobile banking services.  As the Economic Times reports:

Among Indians, 49% of respondents to the survey claim to actively use their mobiles to check their bank balance, well above corresponding figures of 13% for Australia and 9% for China.

Seems like the days of subscriber trunk dialing are a bit numbered.

Britney on-demand in rural India?

by Kabir Kumar : Sunday, April 22, 2007

BBC reports on how villagers in India can request web content — from cricket scores to photos of Britney Spears — as part of a subscription service offered by the company United Villages which also operates in Cambodia, Rwanda, and Paraguay.

The business was dreamed up by MITians a few years ago. The underlying technology is called DakNet — a wifi “village area network” created when vans and motorbikes fitted with short-range wifi devices are driven through villages giving people access to the internet for a short period of time. Kiosks, schools, and other common locations are equipped with PCs and wifi devices.

DakNet may have borrowed its name from Dakiya which is what bicylce riding postmen were called in India and for many still symbolize a remote village’s only connection to the world.

Not sure if the business is sustainable but villagers subscribe (Rs. 50 for a lifetime membership) for a range of services from email to SMS. You can also shop online. Delivering web content on-demand might be a new service.Villagers submit a request for specific content which is available hours later as the van or bike drives through the village broadcasting it over a wifi network.

Britney on-demand in rural India. Banking next?

by Kabir Kumar : Friday, April 13, 2007

Described in an earlier post yet another way to overcome connectivity short-comings in rural communities. Can’t have mobile banking (what’s that?) without the “pipes” to carry the data.

Mobile banking can be another service down-the-road for the DakNet guys, using even just plain vanilla SMS, one of many “bearer” technologies that providers need to consider. These technologies can’t be ignored when you have shared phones, as in the case of DakNet, and don’t want sensitive banking info. left on the phone or stolen via an unsecured wifi network. Read the rest of this page »

Use of Agents in Branchless Banking for the Poor: Rewards, Risks, and Regulation

by Jim Rosenberg : Sunday, October 29, 2006

Focus Note No. 38, October 2006
Use of Agents in Branchless Banking for the Poor: Rewards, Risks, and Regulation
(pdf)
This Focus Note examines the experience of five pioneering countries–Brazil, India, South Africa, the Philippines, and Kenya–where agent-assisted branchless banking that targets poor customers is already a reality. It introduces the main issues involved in regulating branchless banking, particularly regarding the use of retail agents.