Capitec Archives - 麻豆原创 Africa News Center News & Information About 麻豆原创 Tue, 29 Jul 2025 07:52:19 +0000 en-ZA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Capitec Group HR Executive Rizwana Butler Champions People Through Technology /africa/2025/07/capitec-group-hr-executive-rizwana-butler-champions-people-through-technology/ Tue, 29 Jul 2025 07:52:17 +0000 /africa/?p=148313 Capitec group HR executive Rizwana Butler shares how putting technology at the forefront of everything the company does is key to keeping the organisation relevant,...

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Capitec group HR executive Rizwana Butler shares how putting technology at the forefront of everything the company does is key to keeping the organisation relevant, while empowering employees and helping them realise their dreams.

Rizwana is fascinated by people 鈥 and solving conundrums. For Capitec鈥檚 people champion, it is the perfect combination of art and science.

鈥淵ou can have a business strategy and then a technology strategy and all of those can typically be copied, but the one thing you cannot do is copy and paste people and culture and in my view that is exactly why people and culture remain a company鈥檚 most competitive advantage,鈥 she says.

The 2024 CHRO Awards winner, of both the Learning & Development and HR and Technology awards, adds, 鈥淧ersonally, I love solving conundrums, I love solving challenges, and it鈥檚 probably the reason why I love doing what I do every single day.鈥

Capitec鈥檚 digital-first approach is deeply embedded in its culture. 鈥淭he name itself 鈥 Capitec 鈥 derives from 鈥榗apital鈥 and 鈥榯echnology鈥.

While these are core to our business, they鈥檙e supported by our values and CEO behaviours,鈥 Rizwana explains.

鈥淪o our story is all about creating access to capital, and using technology as an enabler to do that. But it鈥檚 not the only thing that we do. We also have our values and our behaviours called the CEO behaviours, what we basically say is that every single person needs to show up at work as a CEO,鈥 she highlights.

But it鈥檚 not quite the traditional understanding.

The 鈥渃鈥 stands for clients first; the 鈥渆鈥 stands for energy and inspiration, and the 鈥渙鈥 for ownership, Rizwana explains.

Data the new currency

鈥淪o we fundamentally believe we have to put our clients first in every single thing that we do, whether it鈥檚 the internal client or the external client. But it always starts off with the external client and then we know from a people perspective if we put our own internal clients first, which are 17,000 employees that we serve, they in turn will put our external clients first,鈥 she says.

鈥淭he energy and the inspiration really comes from finding your own energy from within to solve challenges, and the ownership is about that relentless focus on solving a challenge. So it鈥檚 a combination of the capital and technology being the foundation, combined with these behaviours, that really allow us to foster this culture,鈥 she adds.

And while technology is literally seen as a platform for growth at the organisation, Rizwana noted that Capitec is ready to take the next step.

鈥淲e want to move from being a technology-based company to a data-driven AI enabled organisation. As Capitec continues to evolve, the focus is shifting from technology-based to a data-driven AI-enabled organisation,鈥 she says.

鈥淒ata is the new currency. The companies that harness its full potential will lead the future,鈥 Rizwana adds. Capitec has over 2.5 trillion client data points, enabling more than 50 predictive models to enhance decision-making. 鈥淏y leveraging AI and data, we aim to increase decision-making efficiency by 80 percent.鈥

From an HR perspective, this shift isn鈥檛 just about hiring data experts 鈥 it鈥檚 about ensuring every employee understands how to use data effectively in their role.

The focus from a people perspective is really about getting the data agenda moving, she adds.

Simplifying processes

When she joined the company in 2021, Rizwana was asked: What do you want to do with the technology agenda?

She immediately saw the need to enhance 麻豆原创 SuccessFactors, the bank鈥檚 cloud- based HR management system. Originally introduced in 2019, Capitec has since expanded its capabilities to include onboarding, learning, payroll, and performance management.

鈥淭his single-platform approach has simplified our processes, ensuring efficiency,聽safety and consistency,鈥 she says.

But, for Rizwana, the work is far from done. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just getting warmed up.鈥

An economics major, Rizwana landed in HR by default, joining JCI Mining as a graduate trainee on a mine about 50km outside of Witbank, before embracing the opportunity to join FMCG giant Unilever, where she also had her first management role in HR.

Rizwana was seconded to the UK to help build the Unilever research and development academy. She returned to South Africa to head HR for marketing before taking on the HR responsibility for both marketing and research and development across Africa, Middle East and Turkey.

In 2013, Rizwana took on her first global role involving a global HR systems implementation project across 106 countries, which was completed within 15 months.

Once that project was completed, Rizwana was given the opportunity to head up HR for the Unilever Nordics division, based in Sweden.

鈥淗eading HR for Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Finland was truly incredible. At the time, I relocated to Stockholm and my husband chose to remain in SA, so it was a big decision,鈥 she adds.

But these life-changing experiences did not detract her from believing that she would return 鈥渉ome鈥, so when she was approached by Capitec to become the first female executive on the group executive committee, she knew the decision to return to Mzansi鈥檚 shores was the right one.

She remains an avid traveller, though, who loves experimenting聽 and doing new and different things.

Deep-rooted values

Rizwana credits her great aunt who raised her for the first few years of her life as the inspiration behind her own personal purpose.

Back in the 1940s, most young Muslim girls in South Africa were taken out of high school and basically given household duties till the time they got married. For Rizwana鈥檚 great aunt, it was no different, except that she never forgot her dream to study further.

She decided to go back to high school at the age of 22, and went on to qualify as a teacher, which allowed her to become financially independent.

鈥淪he never married but when my grandfather passed away, she basically stepped in to help my grandmother raise my dad and his five siblings. And she could only do that because she was financially able to do so,鈥 Rizwana recalls.

鈥淗er journey instilled in me a passion for gender empowerment and financial independence through education. She proved that knowledge has the power to change lives, and that has shaped my own purpose in life,鈥 she explains. 鈥淔or me, I think that is one of the reasons I fundamentally believe that education is such a powerful tool.鈥

Everything Rizwana does is guided by a deep-rooted value system.

鈥淥ne of the things that I learnt during the Covid-19 pandemic is the fact that not all decisions boil down to rands and cents, sometimes in times of ambiguity, when we go deep into our values, our values actually provide us the much-needed guidance and clarity that we need for a decision to be made, and I guess if there is something I would like people to remember me by it鈥檚 by the fact that every decision, everything that I did, whether it was for myself, whether it was for my family, whether it was for the company I work for, was guided by a deep sense of values,鈥 she explains.

At the end of the day, it鈥檚 all about staying relevant for Capitec鈥檚 people chief.

鈥淭echnology is evolving rapidly and Capitec has embraced it at every level. Quite frankly, given technology鈥檚 rate of change, we can never say that we are done evolving along with it. We need to stay relevant and, in doing so, continuously grow our people at the same pace that we grow our business,鈥 she notes.

Essie Moses is the interim senior writer for CHRO South Africa. She is a former production editor for Business Insider South Africa, and former managing and mobile editor for News24.com. When she’s not frantically chasing freelance deadlines, she spends time with her family, five cats and beloved dog. (She does not have an addiction to stray animals.)

This article first appeared on .

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How South African Organisations are Using Tech to Succeed Despite Disruptions and Uncertainty /africa/2021/12/how-south-african-organisations-are-using-tech-to-succeed-despite-disruptions-and-uncertainty/ Wed, 15 Dec 2021 05:54:08 +0000 /africa/?p=143115 South African small, medium and large enterprises are using technology at an unprecedented scale to help manage the uncertainty and disruption caused by the pandemic...

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South African small, medium and large enterprises are using technology at an unprecedented scale to help manage the uncertainty and disruption caused by the pandemic and broader changes in the business and consumer landscape.

Hospitals are using technology to improve the patient experience, banks are changing how they engage with customers through digital channels, sales teams are discovering the benefits of real-time insights into orders and sales, and organisations across industries are powering their decision-making with data and analytics.

At a recent award ceremony recognising excellence in digital transformation among African enterprises, the extent to which organisations have embraced digital technologies to power their businesses became clear.

Market leaders such Capitec, Lenmed, and Discovery showed how technology could power innovation and operational excellence through the development of intelligent enterprise capabilities.

An intelligent enterprise integrates technology and business processes to deliver significant value to the business through improved supply chain management, better sales processes, more intelligent spend management, and a transformed talent management capability.

Simply put, an intelligent enterprise has access to accurate real-time data about every aspect of its business, helping it deal with complexity while unlocking greater scope of innovation and efficiency.

And as recent examples show, South African enterprises of various sizes are taking bold strides toward achieving intelligent enterprise capabilities 鈥 to the benefit of their customers, their employees and their long-term success.

Scaling banking service excellence

Capitec, one of South Africa’s largest and most innovative banks, faced the challenge of a rapidly growing customer base at a time when pandemic-enforced restrictions disrupted face to face customer operations.

Prior to its award-winning digital transformation project, Capitec grew from acquiring 94 000 customers a month to 160 000 customers a month. With many branches closed and customers avoiding branch visits in light of the dangers posed by COVID-19, Capitec realised its reliance on manual data capturing was hampering its ability to provide seamless customer experiences.

Powered by a dedicated project team that enjoyed full executive support, Capitec implemented a business transformation project that equipped its support services teams with improved data capturing, information analysis and business optimisation.

Capitec can now more easily ensure its support services teams meet their service level agreements and can deliver on the bank’s goal of making banking interactions easier and simpler for customers.

Technology healthcare amid pandemic

Arguably no industry has been under more pressure since the start of the pandemic than the healthcare sector. Hospitals in particular have had to run optimally and ensure no disruption to their operations while also dealing with the impact of COVID-19.

For private hospital group Lenmed, the acquisition of a new hospital in the midst of a global health crisis sparked an award-winning onboarding process to its core systems, in rapid time and with clear cost savings.

The group wanted to bring a new hospital it had acquired into its core 麻豆原创 system, but understandably couldn’t afford any delays or disruptions to the hospital’s processes.

Using extensive standardisation and templates to limit cost overruns, Lenmed brought the new hospital onboard in under twelve weeks and at a total cost saving of nearly 40%.

The onboarding is also a template for future acquisitions, enabling the group to confidently grow its footprint without the risk of unnecessary interruptions to its core operations.

Talent management transformed

The past 18 months have not only forced vast changes in the ways businesses interact with customers, but also how they attract, manage and retain their employees. When the country first entered into lockdown in March 2020, most businesses had to radically change how they engage with, motivate and empower their workforce.

In the highly competitive financial services sector, building greater employee experiences gives organisations an edge in attracting and retaining top talent. For Discovery, the quality of talent it attracts has played a vital role in the organisation鈥檚 success.

Discovery has a stated ambition to have the best people function in the industry, using a strategy that combines data, skills and technology to find, develop and retain its employees. To support and execute this strategy, the company initiated a project named SmartPeople that leverages 麻豆原创 SuccessFactors to create a standardised, transparent, objective and continuous approach to how Discovery executes its people strategy to drive positive business performance.

This includes recruitment management, which enables the company to track and report on the quality of hires, the types of applicants, where those applicants are from, and more. Using 麻豆原创 SuccessFactors gives Discovery full visibility over its talent force and pipeline and, since everything from recruitment to onboarding to offboarding is handled via SuccessFactors, the company is able to deliver a consistent and positive employee experience.

As companies continue to operate in an unstable and unpredictable business environment, the role of technology will only grow in importance. However, as these examples illustrate, organisations from all sectors 聽can supercharge their growth and success with the correct investment into intelligent technologies, full support from the C-suite and with clear business value always front and centre in their planning and execution.

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Just What is SA鈥檚 Bank of the Future? /africa/2021/12/just-what-is-sas-bank-of-the-future/ Thu, 02 Dec 2021 07:34:52 +0000 /africa/?p=143075 The rise of the super-app and competition outside the traditional banking sector raises questions about the longevity of the traditional banking model. The future, it...

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The rise of the super-app and competition outside the traditional banking sector raises questions about the longevity of the traditional banking model. The future, it seems, is decidedly digital.

Is it any surprise that banking is considered a low-growth, perhaps even ex-growth, industry? In recent years, banks have been vastly overshadowed by the growth of the big technology companies which, through the likes of Apple Pay, are already eating into their lucrative fees. In the US, the large banks 鈥 including Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Citi 鈥 together have a total value of about $2.2-trillion. But four companies that hardly existed in 2000 鈥 Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple 鈥 have a total value of $5.6-trillion.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of perhaps the most blue-chip bank on the planet, JPMorgan, says: “Banks are playing an increasingly smaller role in the
financial system.”

Funeka Montjane

To Funeka Montjane, head of Standard Bank鈥檚 consumer and high net worth business, this illustrates that banks cannot afford to stick to their current business model of taking deposits and lending money. The legacy banks are in real danger of losing clients to competitors on all sides 鈥 whether it is to the new challenger banks such as TymeBank or Bank Zero, focused lending businesses such as Lulalend, or the transactional arms of the big tech companies such as Apple Pay and Google Pay.

Today, “fintech companies” 鈥 which focus on the intersection of banking and technology, largely around payments 鈥 are far more highly prized by investors. It means there鈥檚 a danger that banks will be disintermediated from clients who will no longer look to them directly for loans.

Take WeBank, based in Shenzhen, China. It acts as a conduit for loans provided by partner banks. WeBank is part of the Naspers associate Tencent, which owns the customer relationship. In many cases, the clients don鈥檛 know, or care, which bank ultimately stands behind the loan.

For existing banks, it has been a big shock to the system.

Here in SA, the big four 鈥 Standard Bank, Absa, FNB and Nedbank 鈥 claimed for years there was no demand for anything other than what they were offering.

But the arrival of Capitec in 2001 felled this myth. It charges only a flat management fee of R5 to all clients, and has snapped up more than 16-million clients. And it鈥檚 done so at the expense of its bigger rivals.

The risk is that if the big banks don鈥檛 respond fast enough, they鈥檒l lose the best business to their nimbler competitors, leaving them with the riskier clients. There is still time for them to change course, however.

Kokkie Kooyman, manager of Global Financial Fund at Denker Capital. Photo by Ruvan Boshoff

Kokkie Kooyman, who runs the Denker Global Financial Fund, says there is no evidence that the large US tech companies have any desire to set up banks in SA and subject themselves to local regulators. And, he says, the regulator, the Prudential Authority, will staunchly support local banks against threats to the status quo, such as the wholesale introduction of cryptocurrencies.

Still, they can鈥檛 afford to be complacent: banks need to offer a seamless digital service, and learn to leverage their huge data assets.

Chris Steward, banking analyst at Ninety One, says banks need to repurpose themselves for a world with much less paperwork. Many bank branches are still configured for the days when large amounts of manual tasks were carried out in the branch.

Platform banking: silver bullet or fad?

The silver bullet often touted is “platform banking” through super-apps 鈥 mobile applications that provide multiple services in a self-contained online platform.

Standard Bank, Nedbank and FNB are scrambling to become “platform organisations”, offering their own and other nonbanking services to customers through an online platform, while still running branch networks.

Nedbank CEO Mike Brown argues that clients expect their bank to support the full range of their lifestyle.

This is why Nedbank has launched its super-app, called Avo, which retail banking head Ciko Thomas would like to have “anything legal” on offer.

Its predecessor 100 years ago was the Sears Roebuck catalogue, which offered everything from high fashion to power tools for farmers in the
remotest corners of thinly populated US states such as North Dakota and Wyoming.

For Standard Bank, which has a wide footprint across Africa, such a platform would be larger than even the Sears Roebuck catalogue. It means the bank can help small farmers in Uganda get access to good-quality maize seeds, for example.

For the banks, the main benefit from super-apps comes from what is known as embedded finance. The platform will get a nominal commission if a large flat-screen TV is sold on its platform, for example. But the real gravy comes when, with just a couple of additional clicks, the product is added to the customer鈥檚 insurance policy or a loan is given to pay off the TV over three to six months.

FNB CEO Jacques Celliers

FNB CEO Jacques Celliers believes that “super-app” is an overtraded term.

“For us it isn鈥檛 about the app, but more about what鈥檚 behind the app,” he says.

Celliers believes the focus should not be on attracting eyeballs, but on generating meaningful activity and data points. He says that unlike the new disrupters, FNB has a huge trust relationship with its clients, built over 183 years.

“It is no different from a bicycle manufacturer which has built up a reputation for reliability over more than a century, even if the product itself looks completely different, and uses entirely different materials.”

Celliers argues that FNB already has quite a few of the building blocks for platform banking through its eBucks loyalty programme. It is already the largest travel agent in the country, thanks to the range of flights and hotels available in its “catalogue”.

And it is hard for any app to compete with its banking app when it comes to the number of logins 鈥 FNB has more than 130-million a month.

“As there are more and more untrustworthy websites, providing fake news and disreputable offers, the banking app provides considerable trust and security,” says Celliers. “We certainly wouldn鈥檛 abuse the trust of our clients. For example, we would never set up a dating site. That would be a significant ethical breach.”

But part of the problem for banks is that, if anything, the telecoms companies are better placed to set up super-apps. Without the minimum capital pressures of banks, they are better able to tolerate the costs of running super-apps before they turn profitable.

In recent months, Vodacom launched VodaPay. After just one month鈥檚 trading, it has more than 500,000 customers. That makes it larger than Nedbank鈥檚 Avo, which has been in business for 18 months.

VodaPay also has access to 40-million clients 鈥 and more than 500-million in the wider Vodacom group, now that the Ethiopian and Egyptian businesses are coming on board.

Mariam Cassim, head of financial and digital services at Vodacom, says: “It is a pleasant experience in its own right, while other super-apps [such as Avo] are designed to meet a single need, such as calling a plumber.”

VodaPay partners with Bidvest on savings and deposits, and with Lulalend on loans. Niche brands such as women鈥檚 clothing boutique Michelle Ludek, which may not get prominent spots in physical malls, flaunt their brands on VodaPay.

Cassim says that because Vodacom has millions of clients at both ends of the income spectrum, it is better placed to span the entire market 鈥 from basic cash-based services to sophisticated virtual malls.

Nedbank鈥檚 Avo is certainly trying to be as comprehensive as VodaPay, and isn鈥檛 just open to Nedbank clients: 35% of its business is with clients of other banks.

Brown told a recent UBS conference he expects Avo to be a virtuous circle or “flywheel”, along the lines of Uber. If it can prove it has customer utility, it will continue growing in transactions and advertising revenue, and will attract more merchants.

Deep relationships, not superficial hook-ups

However, The Economist magazine recently ran a column debunking the myth of flywheel businesses.

The nine ride-hailing and delivery businesses listed on stock exchanges so far 鈥 including Uber and Lyft 鈥 have racked up operating losses of $11.5bn. And loyalty is also a myth: passengers often switch between the two largest platforms.

Christine Wu, head of Absa digital and retail marketing

Absa is the only big SA bank that is sceptical about super-apps.

Christine Wu, Absa鈥檚 head of digital services, asks: if a bank鈥檚 super-app offers a platform to every plumber and electrician in the neighbourhood, who is the customer going to blame if they have a bad experience?

“We simply don鈥檛 have the experience or the resources to provide the safeguards which Amazon can provide on its products and services,” she says.

According to Wu, the super-apps set up by Tencent and Alipay in China look impressive, but they cost $15bn to launch. They could take years to provide a return on investment.

It鈥檚 more realistic, she says, to have a few closely monitored partnerships intimately tied to Absa products, such as Private Property, the national real estate website.

“We believe in deep relationships, not in thousands of superficial hook-ups,” she says.

Wu believes it鈥檚 best for banks to focus on their core financial services products. So Absa is going another way: it plans to embed more financial advice in its app and is redesigning its stockbroking website to enable more self-service of unit trusts, shares and exchange traded funds.

Yatin Narsai

Bank Zero CEO Yatin Narsai also believes platform banking is simply a distraction. “The priority should be to make the core banking proposition competitive and to cut overheads to make this possible,” he says.

Denker鈥檚 Kooyman believes the best example of a super-app produced by a bank is from Russia鈥檚 Tinkoff Bank, now the world鈥檚 largest digital-only bank, with 12-million primary customers.
It was founded in 2006 and has no branches. Its main nonbanking services are hotel bookings and movies, as well as package holidays booked through Tinkoff Travel.

Yet investors treat Tinkoff more like a tech company, as its shares trade at an expensive p:e of 22 鈥 more in line with a firm such as Amazon than a bank.

The top-rated large SA bank, FirstRand, trades on a p:e of about 12.

Given the premium paid for fintech firms, it is perhaps not surprising that Celliers sometimes quips that FNB shouldn鈥檛 be called a bank any more, but a digital platform.

The reaction to Tinkoff by the main Russian incumbent bank, the state-controlled SberBank, echoes Standard Bank almost word for word.

Last year, SberBank said it wanted to transform into an ecosystem, offering movies, music, food delivery, cloud storage and taxi bookings. The only problem is that this is 14 years after Tinkoff entered the market.

Still, with a 36% share of the Russian banking market, Sber can afford to employ the best data scientists and internet marketing specialists. Its online portal has received good reviews and could start to make Tinkoff鈥檚 life difficult.

So it鈥檚 still too early to make a call on who will win this race.

No threat yet

Taureeq Keraan, CEO of Tyme Bank

As it stands, SA鈥檚 challenger banks have yet to prove a threat in the secured finance units, such as mortgages and vehicle finance. Even Capitec has made only tentative steps into these sectors, through partners such as SA Home Loans.

But TymeBank CEO Tauriq Keraan says the legacy banks would be complacent to think the challengers will remain skinny, with limited products.

“New banks have the opportunity of offering home loans and vehicle finance by partnering with other players,” he says.

Through its “buy now, pay later” option, and recent partnership with TFG, TymeBank now has a strong foothold in consumer finance.

Just last week Naspers/Prosus CEO Bob van Dijk said he expects the “buy now, pay later” option to lead to a significant increase in online purchases on its payment businesses worldwide.

Discovery Bank, part of Adrian Gore鈥檚 Discovery Group, is one of the newer banks with plenty of potential to snap up tech-savvy customers.
Its Vitality chassis, which began as an add-on to the Discovery medical aid with the goal of inducing behavioural shifts, is, in many ways, the precursor of the current super-apps. For years, it has been partnering with cinema chain Ster-Kinekor, gym group Virgin Active and airline kulula in offering discounts.

Its bank follows the same “behaviour economics model”, rewarding “good behaviour”, such as saving more and not abusing credit, with lower costs and better interest rates.

Still, Discovery Bank was criticised for paying more than R4bn for an old-school 麻豆原创 core banking system 鈥 considered an anachronism in today鈥檚 cloud-based software world.

Hylton Kallner CEO of Discovery Life at the company’s head offices in Sandton.Picture:Freddy Mavunda 漏 Financial Mail

Discovery Bank CEO Hylton Kallner argues that the bank鈥檚 technology stack is built on a modern and agile yet robust platform, able to support a full range of products, from credit cards to savings products and foreign exchange.

“Our core banking system therefore had to be fully scalable and robust and was developed on the latest 麻豆原创 platform at a fraction of the cost of traditional systems,” he says. “The system is delivering the most robust performance in the market currently.”

Kallner says the system handles more than 150,000 transactions a day with virtually 100% uptime, no failures and the highest levels of security.

The bank, he says, can also rapidly roll out significant product enhancements: this year, it was the first bank to introduce Apple Pay. It also released a financial analyser tool, and developed forex solutions.

Michael Jordaan chairman of Bank Zero. Photo by Ruvan Boshoff

Bank Zero chair Michael Jordaan believes it鈥檚 a not a binary choice between established and digital banks.

“We know the majority of Bank Zero customers have kept the accounts at their original banks. Many clients are still prepared to pay for the rich functionality of the legacy banks,” he says. “Some even get comfort from driving past a large head office 鈥 a sign of a 鈥榩roper鈥 bank 鈥 but we prefer not to waste money on marble floors.”

Jordaan argues that Bank Zero doesn鈥檛 need a call centre and has had much less need for a fraud department. “We hope that our app is so intuitive there is little need to ask questions 鈥 and so far queries have been negligible. And we have built significantly more powerful protections against fraud than the legacy banks.”

Nonetheless, Bank Zero has lost traction as, due to Covid and the perfectionism of its IT programmers, it launched more than a year after its digital competitors.

The end of cash?

Bank Zero has made a controversially big bet: that physical cash will eventually be phased out of the SA market. You can see the rationale, as cash is expensive, with most banks charging about R9.50 for every R1,000 drawn from ATMs.

Jordaan believes there will come a time when taxi fares, and even vegetables at the market, will be paid for by a debit card, or even a QR code from your smartphone.

But Kooyman says that in many emerging markets such as India, branch networks are growing, as many people still use cash, partly because of a low level of financial education.

In SA, the square metreage of branches will continue to fall as more customers become comfortable about depositing cash at ATMs, instead of at tellers inside the branch.

Branches in more sophisticated urban areas might follow the example of the Netherlands, which doesn鈥檛 allow deposits at tellers鈥 counters, given the cost of employing someone for a job that can just as easily be done by a machine.

However, Ninety One鈥檚 Steward says there will continue to be resistance to a wholesale move away from cash, as informal traders and taxi owners aren鈥檛 keen to be brought into the tax net.

Amid all these dynamics, are bank branches set to go the way of the dinosaur?

Kooyman says many banks consider their branch networks to be an asset in their home territories 鈥 JPMorgan continues to open branches (under the Chase brand) in the state of New York, for example.

And the legacy banks often come up with sentimental reasons for maintaining a branch network.

In FNB鈥檚 case, Celliers says it is a way to show commitment to the communities around the country. “I like to think of it as a Mugg & Bean in
every town. Even if clients prefer bankers to come to them, there is always somewhere to meet your banker and have a cup of coffee,” he says.

When banks have pulled their branches out of small towns and villages, they鈥檝e suffered political damage. In the UK, for example, thousands of accounts were closed in protest. In some cases, the big banks returned.

Kallner believes Discovery is in a privileged position, as it doesn鈥檛 have that baggage. He says studies show Covid has accelerated consumer preferences for digital channels, across all age groups.

He says more than 40% of contacts take place outside traditional business hours, which makes Discovery鈥檚 call centre vital. Its “live assist” function allows call centre agents to view the client鈥檚 mobile banking app, and guide them with a virtual pointer.

What It Means

For bank super-apps, the gravy comes when a purchased product is added to the insurance policy or a short-term loan is given to pay it off.

Still, Discovery Bank鈥檚 fees can be far higher than either Bank Zero鈥檚 or TymeBank鈥檚 鈥 and fiendishly complicated too.

But Kallner says even entry-level and unengaged clients get good value.

It鈥檚 clear there will always be demand for high-touch relationship banking 鈥 the model for Investec鈥檚 retail clients, for example.

So Discovery, with its affluent profile, has hired a team of “relationship bankers”, who offer private banking services to clients on the Discovery Bank Purple products, where the entry point is annual earnings of R2.5m. These customers get face-to-face or video conference consultations, as well as advice on everything from investments and insurance to estate planning.

Which suggests that while the bank of the future is indeed digital, there will always be a demand 鈥 and scope 鈥 for human interaction.

This article first appeared on Business Live.

 

 

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