
Rethinking Mobile Money: From App Integration to Embedded Financial Platforms: By Galong Yao
However, I believe this line of thinking may be too narrow. Instead of merely considering whether to combine apps, we should ask: How can Mobile Money evolve into a foundational financial capability—one that is accessible everywhere, at any moment, and serves as the backbone for a broader digital ecosystem?
Mobile Money is not just another service to be bundled into an app. In practice, users encounter financial needs across a variety of contexts: topping up mobile data, paying utility bills, sending money to friends, or making small purchases. The true value lies in making Mobile Money ever-present—integrated seamlessly across all digital touchpoints, rather than isolated within a single application.
Looking at the Chinese fintech experience, market leaders such as Alipay and WeChat did not dominate by launching standalone finance apps. Instead, they embedded payments and financial services into social, commerce, and mobility scenarios—transforming themselves into platforms that power a wide array of digital experiences.
For telcos in Africa, Latin America, or South Asia, this suggests a practical path forward:
Develop Mobile Money as a modular capability, accessible via SDKs and APIs across all digital channels—main apps, mini apps, partner platforms, and even USSD.
Establish a Financial Capability Registry: a centralized directory of services (transfer, payments, credit, etc.) available for both internal and external use.
Reimagine the main self-service app as a container or service launcher, rather than a monolithic solution.
This shift enables greater flexibility, rapid innovation, and the ability to leverage ecosystem partnerships. Ultimately, the real competitive advantage is not in owning more apps, but in being present at more moments in a user's digital journey. Telecom operators should look beyond simple integration and embrace financial services as embedded infrastructure—fluid, scalable, and ready for the ecosystem era.
The convergence of finance and everyday scenarios is where the future truly lies.
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The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
World must be more wary than ever of China's growing economic power
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BBC News
5 hours ago
- BBC News
DR Congo's M23 conflict: BBC gains rare access to the mine powering mobile phones
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However, the authorities there deny sending military or financial US's involvement in the process seems to hinge on getting access to DR Congo's mineral resources - though nothing has so far been specified."We're getting for the United States, a lot of the mineral rights from the [DR] Congo," said US President Donald Trump ahead of the signing. During our brief visit - we were allowed access for around 45 minutes - there was no hint that the chain of command was about to supervisor, appointed by the M23, was keen to explain how the set-up at Rubaya had been reorganised over the last year and how the rebel group had brought security to allow miners to work without fear - specifying that no armed men were allowed on the site."We have already solved so many issues," Mr Musafiri said."Presently we have a mining department that regulates and monitors safety issues and also resolves internal disputes within the mines. 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It maintains it took up arms to protect the rights of the minority Tutsi group in DR the belligerents try and hammer out their preferred pathways to peace, local people at the Rubaya mine, like elsewhere in eastern DR Congo, only hope for a definitive end to the fighting and bloodshed which has seen hundreds of thousands of people flee their homes."My appeal to fellow young men and our leaders is to keep and maintain peace in our area," said Mr he prepared to go back to hours of more digging, he added: "I also appeal to the owners of the mines to increase our pay because it's very little."Additional reporting by the BBC's Robert Kiptoo and Hassan Lali You may also be interested in: Your phone, a rare metal and the war in DR CongoDR Congo-Rwanda peace deal met with scepticism in rebel-held cityHow DR Congo's Tutsis become foreigners in their own countryGoma under M23 rule: 'They killed all these young people''They took all the women here': Rape survivors recall horror of DR Congo jailbreak Go to for more news from the African us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica


The Sun
6 hours ago
- The Sun
Rachel Reeves to channel Margaret Thatcher and promise the City a ‘new era' of deregulation to boost economy
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