Wednesday 30 November 2011

Fwd: sludba | Launches BULK SMS website | send bulk SMS to over 200 countries

sludba | mobile money | U-Mo l Bulk SMS

twitter: @sludba
facebook: sludba

sludba recently launched it's bulk sms website where you can buy bulk sms

sludbasms is a mobile messaging specialist offering solutions to maximize our clients' revenue streams.

We assist our clients in leveraging their existing assets and offer access to our proprietary messaging platform.

Our Gateway can send message as dynamic sender id, most of our customers are using our services for their Brand Building and to promote their products. For Corporate sector our wireless solutions cover the supply chain management, Customer Service Management, Product Promotion, Brand Promotion, Mobile portal etc.


PRICING

The table below contains our pricing for SMS credits. All prices are quoted "per sms credit" and in Nigerian naira. Please pay with your USERNAME as the name of the DEPOSITOR.

Volume (Units)
Price Minimum Deposit
Above 500, 000 (Mail/ Call) Negotiable Negotiable
100, 000 - 500, 000 N1.50 N150, 000
10, 000 - 99, 999 N1.60 N16, 000
5, 000 - 9, 999 N1.80 N9, 000
1, 000 - 4, 999 N2.00 N2, 000

HOW TO SEND SMS

After you sign-up for an account, you will receive a confirmation message via your phone number and email address used during registration. Use the details
to LOGIN following the following steps;

  1. Click Login
  2. Login with the username and password sent to your phone number or email address.
  3. Click SMS Functions
  4. Type your Recipients Number(s) e.g 2348030000002 or 08030000002)
  5. Type your SENDER'S I.D (The Customize Name that will be displayed)
  6. Type you Message in the box
  7. Click SEND Bulk SMS and comfirm sending the message.

Our innovative service may be employed for the following:

· Welfare administration
· Event invitation
· Notification of meetings
· Political meetings
· Customer care
· Launching of new products
· Sales promotion
· Creating brand awareness
· Special season greetings
· Target marketing
· Trade alerts


Inquiry

To inquire about our pricing and to test our services. we will create a free web account for you plus 5 free SMS to test our service, please send us an email on support@sludbasms. com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or call our support on +234-806-361-2572, +234-805-783-8282+234-808-177-6864+234-809-514-5111, specifying the number of units you need, make payments and your account will be credited within 30 minutes of confirming your payment.



  
 4 Ikosi Road
 Ikosi-Ketu
 Lagos-Nigeria
  
234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 807 070 8795
234 805 844 9177

  




--

Kindest Regards

sludba Team

  
 4 Ikosi Road
 Ikosi-Ketu
 Lagos-Nigeria
  
234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 807 070 8795
234 805 844 9177

  

sludba | Launches BULK SMS website | send bulk SMS to over 200 countries

sludba | mobile money | U-Mo l Bulk SMS

twitter: @sludba
facebook: sludba

sludba recently launched it's bulk sms website where you can buy bulk sms

sludbasms is a mobile messaging specialist offering solutions to maximize our clients' revenue streams.

We assist our clients in leveraging their existing assets and offer access to our proprietary messaging platform.

Our Gateway can send message as dynamic sender id, most of our customers are using our services for their Brand Building and to promote their products. For Corporate sector our wireless solutions cover the supply chain management, Customer Service Management, Product Promotion, Brand Promotion, Mobile portal etc.


PRICING

The table below contains our pricing for SMS credits. All prices are quoted "per sms credit" and in Nigerian naira. Please pay with your USERNAME as the name of the DEPOSITOR.

Volume (Units)
Price Minimum Deposit
Above 500, 000 (Mail/ Call) Negotiable Negotiable
100, 000 - 500, 000 N1.50 N150, 000
10, 000 - 99, 999 N1.60 N16, 000
5, 000 - 9, 999 N1.80 N9, 000
1, 000 - 4, 999 N2.00 N2, 000

HOW TO SEND SMS

After you sign-up for an account, you will receive a confirmation message via your phone number and email address used during registration. Use the details
to LOGIN following the following steps;

  1. Click Login
  2. Login with the username and password sent to your phone number or email address.
  3. Click SMS Functions
  4. Type your Recipients Number(s) e.g 2348030000002 or 08030000002)
  5. Type your SENDER'S I.D (The Customize Name that will be displayed)
  6. Type you Message in the box
  7. Click SEND Bulk SMS and comfirm sending the message.

Our innovative service may be employed for the following:

· Welfare administration
· Event invitation
· Notification of meetings
· Political meetings
· Customer care
· Launching of new products
· Sales promotion
· Creating brand awareness
· Special season greetings
· Target marketing
· Trade alerts


Inquiry

To inquire about our pricing and to test our services. we will create a free web account for you plus 5 free SMS to test our service, please send us an email on support@sludbasms. com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or call our support on +234-806-361-2572, +234-805-783-8282+234-808-177-6864+234-809-514-5111, specifying the number of units you need, make payments and your account will be credited within 30 minutes of confirming your payment.



  
 4 Ikosi Road
 Ikosi-Ketu
 Lagos-Nigeria
  
234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 807 070 8795
234 805 844 9177

  

MTN Nigeria says rules should let telcos lead m-money system

MTN Nigeria has called for changes to the regulatory framework to allow telecoms firms to lead mobile money systems, The Guardian newspaper reported. MTN official Quasim Odunmbaku said the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) regulatory framework expressly excludes telecommunications firms from leadership in m-payment implementation, but MTN has provided the necessary technological platform and made substantial investments towards the achievement of a robust, dynamic and secure m-payment system in Nigeria. Odumbaku said that in other countries with successful m-payment systems, telecommunications firms have taken the lead role. The CBN regulatory framework has identified three major models for the implementation of mobile payments services.There is the bank-focused model, which can only be deployed by a licensed deposit-taking financial institution; the bank-led model, where a bank or a consortium of banks ties up with others companies to deliver banking services; and a non-bank-led model, which allows a corporate organisation that is not a licensed bank and telecommunication companies to deliver mobile payments services.




  
 4 Ikosi Road
 Ikosi-Ketu
 Lagos-Nigeria
  
234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 807 070 8795
234 805 844 9177

  

Cash-Lite: Mobile Money Expands In Nigeria

Who needs a bank when you have a mobile phone?

Last week, following regulatory approval from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the United Bank of Africa (UBA) launched U-Mo, a mobile banking product that will be accessible to more than 80 million people across Nigeria. Now, almost half the country's population will be able to transfer and receive funds using their cellphone -- without having to have a traditional bank account with UBA.

For the rich world, mobile banking is a low priority: Only 16 percent of consumers in the United Kingdom think it's important, according to a Datamonitor survey. But in emerging markets, being able to perform simple banking transactions with a mobile phone is a big deal. The same survey found that 60 percent of consumers in Brazil feel that "technology is important [in] making the development of mobile banking a priority for banks."[1]

HANDIES ARE MORE THAN HANDY, THEY DRIVE ECONOMIC GROWTH

The adoption of mobile phones in developing nations across Africa, Asia-Pacific and Latin America has been a clear driver of economic development. Deloitte estimates that every 10 percent increase in mobile phone penetration results in a 1.2 percent increase in GDP.[2] Additionally, cellular access has also empowered people, primarily the poor, by allowing those who have normally been excluded from participating in the financial system access to banking transactions that the rich world takes for granted.

U-Mo is being positioned as an enhancement of CBN's "cash-lite" banking initiative, meant to reduce the need for hard cash and teller banking while expanding financial inclusion."With this service, a subscriber does not have to have a bank account before performing banking and other financial services; people can store money in their phones and use it to do business," saidUBA Group Managing DirectorPhillips Oduoza.[3]

MOBILE PHONE = VIRTUAL BANK

With a U-Mo account, which can be opened in just a few minutes with very little information, people can virtually hold money in their cellphone at a cheaper rate than keeping it in a bank and use their phones to send and receive money to and from any part of the country. There are three U-Mo levels, the highest of which allows customers to spend up to NGN 1 million (USD 6,267) per day.[4]

"We have over 80 million connected telephone lines while only 25 million Nigerians have [a] bank account, leaving a major gap of about 55 million," said Oduoza. "U-Mo is going to address that by providing banking services to unbanked Nigerians. They can also transfer money to any mobile number...[or] spend the money directly from their mobile phones to pay for goods and services."[5]

BREAKING BARRIERS WITH CELLULAR CONNECTIONS

But it's not just banking services that are improved and expanded by the technological advancements of the cellular world. "Mobile communication opens up information sharing long dominated by traditional barriers and gives a voice to the traditionally unheard," says Jon Fredrik Baksaas, president and CEO of Telenor Group, an international mobile communications firm based in Norway. "It is a tool to enhance economic, health and educational activities...Access to a mobile phone is no longer a luxury. Today it is a necessity and a driver of development both for the individual and the nations."[6]

For James Kwabena Addo, director of FIT Group Holdings and a venture capitalist from Ghana who has experience developing finance programs in sub-Saharan Africa, it's a simple equation: "The more cellphones you put in the hands of Africans, the higher their economic growth is."[7]


  
 4 Ikosi Road
 Ikosi-Ketu
 Lagos-Nigeria
  
234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 807 070 8795
234 805 844 9177

  

Tuesday 29 November 2011

Nigeria's eTranzact gets central bank nod for mobile money

culled from: Telecompaper.com
ETranzact has received final approval from the Central Bank of Nigeria to roll out its mobile money service commercially, The Punch reported online. General Manager Patrick Eregie said it allows users to conduct financial transactions anywhere and anytime and aims to bridge the gap between banked and un-banked Nigerians. According to him, the eTranzact mobile money service is secure, convenient, cost-effective and available for everyone. It has been specifically designed to give access to financial services for Nigerians in areas with few banks and to create job opportunities, he said. The mobile money service works on all GSM networks, turning the mobile phone into a highly interactive, feature-rich payment device. The service offers various options such as cash withdrawal, cash deposit, recharge purchases, funds transfers (to bank accounts, cards and mobile phones) and bill payments (for cable TV, electricity, school fees and health insurance, among others). Business Development Director Sullivan Akla, said eTranzact had put in place products and services geared towards facilitating the Central Bank of Nigeria's cashless policy.

sludba Team

  
     4 Ikosi Road
    Ikosi-Ketu
     Lagos-Nigeria
  
 234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 809 514 5112
   

Mobile payment, mobile jobs

culled from: This Day Newspaper

There are job opportunities in the horizon, thanks to the granting of licences to 16 mobile payment operators by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN). Operators are scrambling for workers that can deliver the goods, writes AKINOLA AJIBADE.

MOBILE payment came with a bang. It is an innovative way of carrying out transactions without going to the bank. It is in practice in some parts of the world, but it will soon take off in Nigeria.

With its coming will be job opening for many. What is mobile payment, by the way? The system de-emphasises the use of banking halls for transactions, reduces the interface between depositors and their bankers, and the unbanked population. Also, it ensures payment through phones, guaranteeing safer transactions.

Other benefits include prompt service delivery and creation of jobs. Of paramount importance is the job opportunities it provides. With the licencing of 16 mobile payment operators by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), many unemployed graduates stand the chance of being employed. Many of them have been besieging the offices of those operators since September when CBN granted them licences.

Those who can work with them include channel managers, network administrators, security experts, marketing consultants, information and technology experts and agents.

At present, the companies are operating with ad-hoc staff recruited early in the year. But with the companies' readiness to fight for their own market shares, it has become imperative for them to hire more workers.

Chief Executive Officer, Mobile Money Africa, Emmanuel Okogwale, said the firms will employ many workers to achieve success. Okogwale said people would be employed across boards because the system is complex, adding that the jobs are relative, depending on what each company wants.

He said the companies will employ money payment agents who will be entitled to commission. He said the roles of the agents are sensitive, because they would be dispensing cash at designated points. Okogwale said the agents must acquire relevant skills and understand the rudiments the system before they can succeed.

He said: "Also to be employed are channel managers. They are responsible for the management of the mobile payment agents. Channel managers perform technical roles and are badly needed by the mobile payment firms. Thousands of agents are going to be employed by the firms due to their peculiar nature. The mobile payment system is a big project, and it requires the employment of various cadres of workers."

Okogwale said the companies would employ marketing consultants, risk management and security experts to encourage growth.

According to him, the system has opened up opportunities for information and technology (IT) experts to showcase their skills and further earn good salaries.

"Mobile payment system is a combination of telecom and banking activities. That is why the services of IT personnel are needed. Just as commercial banks cannot do without the services of risk management experts, so also the mobile payment companies. Marketers are going to be employed to market the products initiated by the companies," he added.

A 400-level marketing student of Lagos State University (LASU), Kehinde Oyetunji, said the mobile payment system would reduce the number of unemployed in the labour market. Oyetunji, who worked as a marketer with a mobile payment firm owned by the United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc at the just-concluded Lagos International Trade Fair, said he enjoyed the work. He described the system as innovative, challenging and rewarding.

The Editor, Financial Technology Magazine, Shola Fanawopo, said different categories of workers will be employed by the operators. He said the first category has to do with those in direct employment, adding that such workers are required to have specialised skills and good academic qualifications, among other attributes.

He said agents are the second category of workers that would be employed by the operators. He said the agents are going to be in strategic areas, to ensure prompt distribution of money to people. Fanawopo said operators will use various outlets for the success of the business.

"More than 250,000 agents would be employed by the mobile payment operators. Those that sell recharge cards would be used as agents. Those who work as fuel attendants, in drug stores among others, would work as agents. The operation of mobile payment companies can be likened to that of Global System of Mobile Communication (GSM) operators that provide indirect employment opportunities to Nigerians. You know that millions of people are now selling recharge cards in the country today. The same goes for mobile payment operators or carriers. Many people would work as agents for the mobile payment service providers," he said.

He said the agents serve as intermediaries between the mobile payment operators and the depositors.

"If you want to send or give money to somebody irrespective of his destination, agents are required to deliver the money to the person. The agents are banks on their own. Once you give an agent the code that signifies that somebody authorised you to collect money, the agents would hand over cash to you immediately. The system is organised in such a way that nobody can play pranks and go away with it. Even if somebody stole your mobile phone, he would find it difficult to access your account or know your password. Basically, what the agents do is to give you the cash equivalent of the codes you presented to them," he added.

He said the third category of workers are those in the software companies, adding that such workers prepare applications that would drive mobile payment system.

Fanawopo said the operators are going to benefit from the system, as the banks and insurance companies would make money by selling their products through mobile payment operators. He said people would be buying insurance policies through the agents, instead of going to insurance firms, offices for such needs.

He said the system will benefit every sector of the economy, adding that there would be mass recruitment of workers soon. Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, said the system was introduced to reduce the unbanked population put at over 80million, aid the cashless economy programme and bring abundant benefits to stakeholders.

It seems safer to say that the system holds the ace in the economy. It may be one of the largest employers of labour soon. But the onus lies on Nigerians to utilise the opportunity.



--

Kindest Regards

sludba Team

  
     4 Ikosi Road
    Ikosi-Ketu
     Lagos-Nigeria
  
 234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 809 514 5112
   

eTranzact receives final approval to operate Mobile Money in Nigeria

eTranzact International Plc, a mobile and switching company has been given the final approval to commercially launch the Mobile Money operation by the Central Bank of Nigeria. The approval to commence Mobile Money in Nigeria essentially marks the beginning of mobile payment revolution in the country.

The eTranzact Mobile Money is designed to allow users conduct financial transactions anywhere, anytime. The service is aimed at bridging the gap between the banked and the unbanked. eTranzact Mobile Money service is secure, convenient, cost effective and available for everyone.

According to Mr. Patrick Eregie, General Manager, Mobile Payment of eTranzact, "Mobile Money service has been specifically designed to give access to financial services for Nigerians in low banking coverage areas through the use of mobile phones and to create job opportunities for many Nigerians".

The mobile money service works on all the GSM networks, extending the capability of the user's mobile phone into a highly interactive feature-rich payment device. Mr. Eregie said: "This service offers various options such as cash withdrawal, cash deposit, purchase airtime recharge cards, funds transfer (to bank accounts, cards and mobile phones) and bills payment (for Cable TVs, PHCN, school fees, health insurance scheme, etc).

Since inception, eTranzact has been the forerunner of mobile transactions services and has partnered with commercial banks to ensure the smooth running of the Mobile Money operation. The eTranzact Mobile Money is truly the first mobile payment platform and it is positioned to enhance the cashless policy in the country.



--

Kindest Regards

sludba Team

  
     4 Ikosi Road
    Ikosi-Ketu
     Lagos-Nigeria
  
 234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 809 514 5112
   

Nigeria's Mobile Money Startup Pagatech Fills A Need, Attracts U.S. Investment

Mobile money is the next big thing and Tayo Oviosu is already bringing this revolutionary financial service to Nigerians.

Oviosu is the founder of Pagatech, Nigeria's first mobile money company. The company's flagship service, Paga, is Nigeria's foremost mobile money transfer service. Within less than a year of launching its service to the general public, the Lagos-based Paga has accumulated over 32,000 active users on its platform and has processed over US $1.6 million in volume.

Interestingly, Paga has piqued the interest of some internationally renowned investors, one of whom is Tim Draper. Draper, one of Silicon Valley's more well known venture capitalists, doesn't usually make investments around Africa. But when Oviosu, a Nigerian-born Stanford grad, approached the famed investor and shared his idea for a mobile money transfer service in Nigeria, Africa's second largest economy, Draper believed it was too good an opportunity to ignore. (Oviosu did not disclose how much Draper invested, or how much his company has raised so far.)

Tayo recently granted me an interview during which he talked about the idea behind his company, the benefits of a cashless society, the Nigerian opportunity, and reiterated his mission to transform lives by delivering innovative and universal access to financial services to Nigerians.

Simplify it for me. What is Paga, and what prompted you to startup this service?

Paga is a money transfer service that leverages the ubiquity of the mobile phone to bring great value to customers. Customers can use Paga to send money to anyone in Nigeria either from their mobile phone or Internet-enabled device, or via any Paga agent across the country. Recipients get the money instantly, and they don't even need to have registered on Paga. Customers can also use Paga to pay for a variety of goods and services at various online or offline merchants.  For example, you can sit at home and pay to top-up your electricity meter or pay your cable TV subscription using Paga.

Paga began out of my frustration with having to carry cash around with me all the time in Nigeria. Nigeria is a very cash driven society; only about 20% of the population have access to what you might call formal financial services. Even for the banked set, there are infrastructure issues to contend with – roughly 60% of ATMs in the entire country are located in Lagos State; debit cards are not accepted by most merchants. As such you have to carry cash with you. Additionally there is no safe and secure way to send money within Nigeria outside of the banking sector. Carrying cash around with you everywhere, even sending cash to your family by paying a fee to the local bus driver clearly has its limitations not forgetting security issues. As I explored these sets of issues I honed in on the fact that 60% of Nigerians are within mobile phone coverage and about 40% of Nigerians currently have a mobile phone with an even greater number having access to one when you count shared phones. This raised a question for me – "Can the phone become the primary means, not the only, of electronic transactions?" Fundamentally I believe the ubiquity of the mobile phone can be leveraged to deliver financial services to all.

We've been around now for two years and only just got our full operating license from the Central Bank of Nigeria this month. We launched to a closed user group of approximately 70 participants in September 2010 and then, after our Approval-in-Principle from the Central Bank of Nigeria, to the general public in February 2011. This allowed us to pilot our service and test the reception with the general public. The reception has been great! Customers and agents alike see the value of the service to their daily lives and the numbers tell the story. With pretty much just word-of-mouth marketing alone, we have almost 32,000 users on our platform and have processed over US $1.6 million in volumes. This represents over 40,000 transactions since February.

Give me a very basic run-down of how Paga works. If for example, I am based in Lagos, and a loved one makes a trip to Abuja and gets stranded over there for some reason, how can I send him/her money using Paga?

There are two ways to send money to your loved one in Abuja.

The first is to visit a Paga Agent in your neighborhood and have the agent perform the transaction on your behalf – you do not need to be a Paga customer to use one of our Agents. If you use a Paga Agent you give the Agent the recipient's phone number, the amount you would like to send, and the transaction fee. [NOTE: The fee ranges from $1 to $4.] The Agent runs the transaction on his phone or internet enabled device.

The second option is to initiate the transaction from your mobile phone or from any internet enabled device – to do this you need to be a Paga customer and have money in your account (which can be funded by depositing at an agent, bank, or using your debit card online).

With either of the two methods once the transaction is run successfully Paga sends a confirmation SMS to the sender and the recipient. The sender's SMS includes the withdrawal code needed to collect the funds. Recipients do not need to be Paga customers. Recipients of money on Paga collect their money from any Paga agent, partner bank, or in the future ATM machines. You need three pieces of information to collect money – phone number sent to, withdrawal code, and amount sent. Only the sender pays a transaction fee.

We provide Agents and Customers multiple channels to use to process their transactions – SMS, Online (PC or mobile web), an application on the phone, an Interactive Voice Response system (an automated line which can be in different languages), and eventually USSD (mobile network system that allows for interactive menus on the mobile networks).

Mobile money has thrived elsewhere in Africa. Safaricom's M-Pesa has made a kill by providing this financial service to Kenyans. But Nigeria is an entirely different market. Are the dynamics the same? Is there really an opportunity for this kind of service in Nigeria, and why do you think it is going to succeed?

I totally agree with you – it is a very local business. The dynamics in Nigeria are somewhat different than Kenya, and it's clear that the market opportunity is multiples of Kenya's.

Today in Nigeria, as in Kenya pre M-Pesa, there are no efficient, secure, and universally accessible ways of transferring money across the country. Paga changes this. However, in Nigeria we do not have a dominant Telco with the kind of market share Safaricom had in Kenya. We also have a very fragmented banking sector. These are reasons we have chosen to offer a service that works on all mobile networks and in partnership with banks. The convenience that Paga offers combined with the push by the Central Bank of Nigeria for a "cashless Nigeria," will help drive the opportunity for our service.

It's interesting. My view is that Nigeria may be the toughest African market to get right for a number of reasons. It also presents the biggest opportunity. With 160 million people, GDP of approximately $207 billion, 68% literacy rate, less than 20% of the population owning a bank account, BUT with 40% owning a mobile phone. Assuming that we execute on plan and capture our target share of the Nigerian market, we are certain that entry to other markets with our partners will be made easier. The reverse is probably not true.

You and I both know that Nigeria's financial landscape has been riddled with fraud, money laundering and other clandestine activities, and this could dissuade people from using mobile money services. Do you have any measures in place to checkmate any potential incidences of financial irregularities?

At Paga, security is our top priority. We have created rings of security to prevent the chance of any fraudulent activity, each channel we offer having its own security framework – some visible to the customer, many others not visible. For example, you must confirm every transaction you do on Paga by entering your PIN number. We train our customers to not share their PIN with anyone, even with Paga representatives.

If you use Paga's mobile phone application or online application there are additional security measures we have developed to protect your account such as device monitoring – we monitor the hardware you are using to log into Paga. If we see you attempting to login from an unknown device we ask you your security questions.

Furthermore, there is a limit on how much a customer can transact based on how much Paga knows about the customer.  A Level I customer, which is a customer that has only provided Paga with their name and phone number, can only transact a maximum of N30,000 (~US$ 200) per day, whereas a Level III customer, which is a customer that has provided Paga with the requirements to open a bank account in Nigeria, can transact up to N 1 million (~US$6,000).

We have gone to great lengths to ensure that the customer's account is safe and we will continue to stay ahead in terms of building in the latest technological advances to protect the customer's account

--

Kindest Regards

sludba Team

  
     4 Ikosi Road
    Ikosi-Ketu
     Lagos-Nigeria
  
 234 805 783 8282
234 806 361 2572
234 809 514 5111
234 809 514 5112
   

Add comments