Orange Money

Orange Money is the mobile money service of Orange S.A., available in most of the group's affiliates in Africa. Its users can deposit money into an account linked to their mobile phone number, and then access a range of services, in particular transferring money domestically and internationally, paying bills and buying airtime top-up.[1] Since June 2016, the service is available in France, where it enables international money transfer to Côte d'Ivoire, Sénégal and Mali.[2]

Orange Money kiosk in Cameroun

History

Orange Money was rolled-out for the first time in December 2008, in Côte d'Ivoire, with basic services: cash-in and cash-out, airtime top-up, Orange bills payment. After an inconspicuous launch, Orange organizes a large advertising campaign in 2009 and reaches between 100,000 and 150,000 subscribers within a year. After a quiet launch, Orange organised a wide-ranging advertising campaign in Côte d'Ivoire in 2009, with between 100,000 and 150,000 subscribers in a year. The planned roll-out for Mali and Senegal was delayed however, and had still not happened in January 2010, when competitor MTN announced its own deployment in fifteen African countries.[3]

In 2011, Orange Money reached three million subscribers and was launched in Senegal, Madagascar, Mali, Niger, Kenya, Botswana and Cameroon,[4] · [5] and then in Mauritius and Jordan between 2011 and 2012.[6] The service now includes water and electricity bill payment in most countries, and the possibility to access savings and insurance products. In 2013, Orange Money offered the option of making payments by VISA card and withdrawals from ATMs, a service first deployed in Botswana. By then, Orange Money was available in thirteen countries (the latest additions being Morocco, Uganda and Guinea) and counted eight million subscribers.[7] · [8] · [9] ·

In September 2015 in Côte d'Ivoire, Orange launched the first African mobile crowdfunding service, dedicated to Orange Money customers.[10]

At the start of 2016, Orange was accredited as an Electronic Money Issuer (EMI) in four countries: Côte d'Ivoire, Mali, Senegal and Guinea, and a few months later in the Democratic Republic of Congo.[11]

In June 2016, Orange announced the launch of the service in France, with a strong emphasis on transfers to West Africa, as well as hitting the 18 million customers mark.

To ensure optimal management of its activities, Orange inaugurated CECOM (the Orange Money Centre for Compliance Expertise) in September 2016 in Abidjan. Its role is to guarantee compliance for the Orange Money service in countries with Electronic Money Issuer accreditation.

Orange Money is also a core component of "mobile money" interoperability in Africa. Telma, Orange and Airtel announced on 9 September 2016 that their respective mobile payment services are now all mutually compatible. That same month, the Orange Money offer reached 20 million customers in the Africa and Middle-East zone (up 30% in a year).[12]

Customer journey

Subscription is free, at any point of sale displaying the Orange Money signage. Customers complete a subscription form and present ID. To credit their account, users can deposit cash at an Orange Money point of sale, receive money transferred by another user or have their salary paid directly into their account (depending on the country).

Customers access the service directly from their phone, using a USSD menu. Through this menu they can check their balance, change their password and carry out all the transactions offered by the operator. These transactions are all protected by a four digit password chosen by the user. The main services are cash deposits and withdrawals, domestic and international transfers, and bill payments (water, electricity, TV, telephone, school fees).[13] Professionals (companies and freelancers) can also receive payments via Orange Money, once they have opened a specific "commercial account".

Orange has also joined forces with banks (BNP Paribas, Ecobank, Bank of Africa, and Microcred) to enable customers with bank accounts to use their mobiles to transfer money easily and at any time between their bank account and their Orange Money account.[14]

Countries

As of April 2020, Orange Money is available in seventeen countries:[15]

Competition

Orange Money is comparable to the M-Pesa service launched in 2007 in Kenya by Safaricom, which revolutionised the local economy with over 17 million regular users out of an adult population of 19 million.[16] The Orange Group's other competitors in Africa for this type of service are the other pan-African mobile operators: Airtel, Millicom, MTN, and Vodacom, .[17] There are also national operators offering similar services, like Telma in Madagascar.

All these mobile money services help to improve financial inclusion on a continent where bank-based services are still the preserve of a minority of the population: the financial inclusion index stands at 34% in sub-Saharan Africa.[18]

gollark: Well, an incredibly naive way is just to concat a bunch together in some way and throw out numbers which don't fit.
gollark: Ideatic!
gollark: Except in the locale-gen thing somehow.
gollark: Also, I don't know if I ever actually configured that.
gollark: I think mine is set to `en_GB.UTF-8` or something like that but I don't get it.

References

  1. Camilo Tellez, GSMA Mobile Money for the unbanked - An interview with Orange Money, GSM Association, 20 janvier 2012
  2. Orange Money fait ses premiers pas en France, Les Échos, 6 June 2016.
  3. Faïza Ghozali, Orange Money souffle sa première bougie, Jeune Afrique, 22 janvier 2010
  4. Économie : Orange Money atteint 3 millions de clients, abidjan.net, 24 novembre 2011
  5. Hervé B. Endong, Orange Money sera commercialisé au Cameroun , Journal du Cameroun, 23 septembre 2011
  6. Orange Money revendique 4 millions d'utilisateurs, Les Échos, 19 juin 2012
  7. Orange Money permet a ses clients d'effectuer des paiements par Carte Visa en magasin ou en ligne et de retirer de l'argent aux distributeurs, Afrikeco, 6 août 2013
  8. Hilary Heuler, Bank? What bank? Orange, Visa and the changing face of Africa's mobile money, ZDNet, 9 septembre 2013
  9. Alexandra Oubrier, Orange Money permet aussi les transferts d'argent internationaux, Agefi, 18 juillet 2013
  10. "Africa Gets First Mobile Crowdfunding Platform | PYMNTS.com". www.pymnts.com. Retrieved 2017-01-17.
  11. "electronic money issuer".
  12. "Latest consolidated results - orange.com". www.orange.com. Retrieved 2017-01-17.
  13. Présentation d'Orange Money Archived 2013-10-04 at the Wayback Machine, site officiel d'Orange Côte d'Ivoire
  14. Unsworth, Adam (2016-03-24). "Orange and Ecobank launch Orange Money bank-to-wallet money transfer service - Mobile Payments World". Mobile Payments World. Retrieved 2017-01-17.
  15. https://www.orange.com/en/Group/Activities/Orange-Financial-Services/Folder/Orange-Money
  16. Le portable, un outil de développement pour l’Afrique ? sur le site one.org
  17. GSMA MMU Blog Archived 2015-05-26 at the Wayback Machine Mobile money making its mark with major groups
  18. Banque Mondiale données sur l'inclusion financière en Afrique Sub-saharienne
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