and domestic low-cost airline Mango have teamed up to introduce a
service that enables consumers to pay for air tickets via their
mobile phone.
including those with Mzansi accounts, a product focused on low
income, first-time banking consumers.
(CPP) service introduced in February 2007 that enables FNB mobile
banking customers to pay for internet purchases via their mobile
phone. CPP does not require a user to disclose any personal banking
details and is free of bank charges. The maximum payment that can
be made is ZAR10,000 ($1,300).
our Cell Pay Point offering and our first airline, giving our
mobile online payment solution a significant shot in the arm,” said
FNB Mobile and Transact Solutions’ CEO Len Pienaar.
recorded average month-on-month volume growth of 400 percent.
payment option on a merchant’s website and confirm their purchase
by entering a five-digit PIN, dubbed the MoPIN, on their mobile
phone. A text message is then sent to the customer confirming that
payment has been processed and showing the amount debited from his
or her account and a unique transaction reference number.
launched in March 2005 and broke even the same year.
16.5 million transactions valued at a total of ZAR3 billion were
undertaken via the service representing increases of 95 percent and
118 percent, respectively, compared with 2006-07.
mobile phone prepaid airtime, noted FNB, and reflects the
significance of mobile banking as a key enabler of its strategy to
provide banking services to previously unbanked individuals.
maintaining a physical banking infrastructure FNB predicts that it
will not be long before mobile banking becomes the most popular and
affordable banking channel in Africa.