In the last year, Equity Bank has grown from a small, hardly heard of
establishment to a large bank that is in many ways leading the market and
causing something of a revolution in the banking sector.
Tribute must be paid to the vision and resilience of the Muranga farmers who
came together to moot the community building society idea and to the leadership
of Peter Munga and his successors. This vision that targets the small
depositors is now leading rival banks like Barclays
and Standard
Chartered to rethink their
evaluation of the lower end of the market.
Equity's persistent efforts have proved that there is black ink at the bottom
of the rung. In the event, the customer has benefited as even proud Barclays has
been compelled to slash its banking costs and accede to the forces of banking
democratization, a path previously shunned and left as scraps for the likes of
Equity.
 It is doubtable however that Barclays and Stanchart's cultures will be
agreeable to the implementation of the business models that have seen the
smaller banks succeed at this level.
The big banks undoubtedly have the financial resources to execute every
strategy they may conjure to out-muscle their smaller competitors but they lack
the human capital necessary for micro-finance banking.
Previously these banks held sway in convenience service delivery
technologies such as ATMs but with the emergence of Pesa-Point this advantage
was lost. Now even members of SACCOs have access to ATM facilities and this at prices
lower than they would be burdened with at the mainstream banks. This advantage
was also set back by the alliance of the small banks in a consortium that led
to the creation of their own payment exchange infrastructure
In terms of values, not as a 'moral ideal ' but in terms of organizational mores;
Barclays and Standard value their big 'prestige'
corporate customers so much that the optimization of their services is
specifically targeted at this clientele. Their organizational cultures are
prejudiced towards those who seek exclusive banking services unavailable to the
ordinary mwananchi.
 As for processes; the cost-structures in the service models of the largest
banks are oriented to the premium banking consumers with a floor of 10,000/- in
their accounts plus deposits. Compared to the service delivery cost-model delivering
the same service to a consumer who barely affords to maintain the 200/- deposit,
it becomes clear that the Barclays model cannot be quickly tweaked. Customer
service at the largest banks is innately poor with regard to the non-banked.
The revolution however is not restricted to this struggle between the traditional
banks and those with micro-credit histories. Other players coming up in the
country threaten the existence of even the versatile and innovative
micro-finance firms like Equity. These organizations offer services beyond debt
instruments. Examples include South Africa's
Business Partners International
and GroFin East Africa.
These South-African enterprises
that are targeting SME's that need capital as well as management expertise for
grow. At the centre of their value-proposition is that in most Kenyans SMEs,
capital access has been the not been the only impediment to success. Management
expertise is a chronic problem where SMEs resulting in SMEs not reaching their growth
potential. These firms offer to take equity positions in small firms while
providing management expertise. This two in one package will compel the
industry's main players to come up with similar products especially as these small
businesses are much valued across the sector.
The battle lines are not just with the traditional banks or the South
Africans but extend to within the world of the micro-credits itself. Family
Finance has just last week had Central Bank approval to operate
as a bank. These former micro-lenders come into the market with solid years
of experience dealing with micro-borrowers and depositors. They also have solid
earnings and corporate governance practices that were honed during the
difficult period of their growth.
The battle for banking Kenyans, both individual consumers and businesses
will be fought on the basis of some key value-propositions that banks will have
to satisfy. The customer demands,
a. Help me save my money with minimal cost even when I need it
b. Help me grow and manage my money at the best price
c. Help me acquire an asset at the best price
d. Help me grow my business - as an entrepreneur
e. Help me fund my expansion- for the established business seeking growth,
perhaps even a listing.
It is in this field that market-share in the banking sector will be decided.
Even if they do not come out as market leaders, these institutions have done a
sterling job for the Kenyan consumer and deserve credit for their continued efforts
to democratize banking.
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Alexander