F-Squared Podcast

Frontier Fintech

Frontier Fintech is a podcast about the business of fintech in Africa. We speak with founders, executives, investors, and regulators who are shaping financial services across the continent—helping you connect the dots in Pan-African fintech.

  1. The Evolution of Nigerian Fintech: Scale, Scars, and Strategy | Olu Akanmu

    FEB 4

    The Evolution of Nigerian Fintech: Scale, Scars, and Strategy | Olu Akanmu

    Why does Nigeria have 120 million people with digital identities but only 70 million with bank accounts? Despite a decade of growth, the "last mile" of financial inclusion remains a stubborn red ocean. Samora Kariuki sits down with Olu Akanmu, a rare leader who has navigated the "commercial battlefield" at the highest levels of telcos, Tier-1 banks, and scale-up fintechs (OPay). From his work with EFInA to his current role in academia at Lagos Business School, Olu brings a balanced perspective on why Nigeria’s fintech journey looks so different from the rest of the continent. This episode is a masterclass in the structural realities of the Nigerian market. Olu deconstructs the "Banking Lobby" that slowed mobile money, the friction between competing national identity systems (BVN vs. NIN), and why the next phase of fintech must move from simple payments to deep credit integration. He also provides a candid critique of "generic" late-stage fintech strategies and the internal politics that kill bank-led innovation. In This Episode, You Will Hear: The Banking Lobby vs. Telcos: A behind-the-scenes look at why mobile money struggled to launch in Nigeria and how fintechs filled the gap.The Prosperity Paradox: Why financial inclusion cannot scale in Northern Nigeria without solving for economic inclusion first.Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): The missed opportunity of siloed identity and payment systems (BVN vs. NIN).Open Banking & the Credit Gap: Why payments grew 30% but credit only 4%, and how Open Banking can bridge that divide.Late-Stage Consolidation: Why "regulatory arbitrage" is ending and how fintechs must find "uncontested markets" to survive.The "Frigate Elephant" Problem: Why bank-led fintech subsidiaries often fail due to traditional banking mindsets.The "Peak Mobile Money" Myth: Why declining agent revenues are actually a sign of a maturing digital ecosystem. "Strategy begins with looking at your unique capabilities... You cannot come in as a late entrant offering a generic proposition and expect to scale in a contested market." Connect with Us: Samora Kariuki (Host): https://www.linkedin.com/in/samorakariuki/Olu Akanmu (Guest): https://www.linkedin.com/in/olu-akanmu-88280a/Frontier Fintech: frontierfintech.substack.com

    1h 14m
  2. JAN 22

    From Car Wash to Exit: How Bente Krogman Built mTek (Acquired by Bolttech)

    Insurance penetration in Kenya has hovered at 2% for decades. Why? Because the industry tries to sell annual policies to people who earn daily wages. It’s a relevance problem, not a demand problem. Bente Krogman didn't start in fintech. She grew up in a German village of 300 people, managed mosquito net logistics in Tanzania, and launched a car wash in Nairobi. That grit led her to found M-Tek, an Insurtech that pivoted from a B2C marketplace to a B2B2C orchestration platform. In 2026, M-Tek was acquired by global Insurtech unicorn Bolttech, a rare and significant exit in the Kenyan tech ecosystem. In this episode, Samora Kariuki sits down with Bente to decode the journey from "idea to exit." They discuss the brutal reality of B2C customer acquisition costs, why "embedded insurance" is the only path to scale, and the specific unit economics that make micro-insurance profitable (hint: it’s not the 10-shilling premiums). In This Episode, You Will Hear: The Origin Story: How running a manual car wash in Nairobi taught Bente the fundamentals of African business. The Pivot: Why MTek moved from a B2C marketplace to a B2B2C "embedded" model to solve the trust deficit. Unit Economics: Why the "middle segment" (500 KES premiums) is more profitable than ultra-micro products. The "Netflix" Problem: Why complex claims processes kill insurance adoption faster than price. Hint - How long does it take to pay for your Netflix subscription that costs the same as a Micro-insurance premium? Partnership Strategy: How to sell to incumbents by focusing on their distribution headaches. The Exit: Inside the acquisition by Bolttech, why it was a "people decision" over a commercial one. Key Quote: "If you cannot explain a micro-insurance product to me in 20 seconds, it is not a product. Just because it is cheap doesn't mean people will buy it if the process is like buying a car." Connect with Us: Samora Kariuki (Host): https://www.linkedin.com/in/samorakariuki/ Bente Krogman (Guest): https://www.linkedin.com/in/bente-krogmann/ Frontier Fintech: https://frontierfintech.substack.com/

    1h 15m
  3. The "Supply Chain Finance" Myth: Why Retailers Really Need Capital | Fred Njogu

    12/03/2025

    The "Supply Chain Finance" Myth: Why Retailers Really Need Capital | Fred Njogu

    Most banks and fintechs misunderstand the problem at the last mile. They build "Supply Chain Finance" to fund invoices, assuming the sale has happened. But Fred Njogu explains that the real problem is the lost sale: the customer is at the counter, the demand is real, but the shopkeeper didn't have the cash that morning to stock the product. The Story: Fred Njogu, COO of Correlaction, is a "reformed engineer" who spent years optimizing distribution for Coca-Cola and Unilever. In this episode, he deconstructs why traditional banking models fail informal retailers and why the solution isn't lending, it's "smoothing the order-to-cash cycle." The Deep Dive: This conversation corrects a fundamental category error. Fred explains that manufacturers (Anchors) don't have a supply chain problem, their distribution is highly organized. The issue is the "Cash Trap" at the retailer level. He details how Correlaction uses data to help merchants "buy what they can sell, not just what they can afford," effectively financing the inventory gap to prevent stockouts. In This Episode, You Will Hear: The "Supply Chain Finance" Misconception: Why the gap isn't about financing the supply chain, but solving the working capital constraint that causes stockouts. The "Look in the Drawer" Moment: The decision-making process of a retailer who has 5,000 shillings but needs 7,000 worth of stock. Order-to-Cash Smoothing: How to design a product that allows retailers to fulfill actual market demand rather than their limited cash capacity. Unit Economics of the Last Mile: Why a $2 order cannot be delivered by a truck, and the specific math of distribution costs. Why Credit Cards Failed: A lesson on why 16-digit cards and 30-minute till processes destroy sales in a high-velocity environment. Monetizing "Idle Assets": Using historical purchase data as "goodwill" to underwrite risk without physical collateral. The "Fragmentation" Trap: Why African markets fragment rather than consolidate, and the economic incentives behind it. Active vs. Passive Distribution: The difference between a wholesaler "sitting on a high chair" and a distributor who controls the outlet. Key Quote:  "The demand is there, and because... you don't have enough working capital, you end up losing the opportunities... It's not really a supply chain finance issue. It's more of a working capital... You can buy what you can sell tomorrow, not buy what you can afford today." Connect with Us: Samora Kariuki (Host): https://www.linkedin.com/in/samorakariuki/ Fred Njogu (Guest): https://www.linkedin.com/in/frednjogu/ Frontier Fintech: www.frontierfintech.substack.com

    1h 10m
  4. 10/22/2025

    The Accidental Fintech Career: From Malawi to Scaling Chipper Cash & Ebanx | Wiza Jalakasi

    How do you build an "accidental" career in fintech? Wiza Jalakasi, famously known as "the African fintech guy" and now Director of African Expansion at Ebanx, joins Samora Kariuki to trace his remarkable journey. It's a story that begins with selling games on floppy disks in Malawi, moves through a failed startup, and lands him at the center of scaling both Africa's Talking and Chipper Cash during their hyper-growth phases. Wiza shares the unique "cheat code" that let him spot Chipper's rise, the hard lessons from his first failure, and the self-awareness that has guided his career. This entire journey culminates in his current work at Ebanx, where he's solving one of the most complex, invisible problems in global tech: how do the world's largest companies collect local payments in Africa, and more importantly, how do they compliantly get their money out in USD? In this episode, you’ll learn: How Wiza's early hustles (like selling games on floppy disks) and a failed startup built the foundation for his fintech career. The "cheat code" at Africa's Talking that let him spot Chipper Cash's explosive growth before anyone else. The core problem: Why global brands can't just "plug into" M-Pesa or OPay themselves. The harsh reality of global priorities: why a 2% payment optimization in the US can be worth more than launching in all of Nigeria. The invisible hurdles of cross-border payments: breaking down the hidden pillars of local licensing, tax compliance, and especially treasury (getting USD out). Why Africa's "prepaid psychology" clashes with the subscription models that power the global internet, and how Ebanx solves it. A $10M startup idea Wiza would build today: chargeback automation for African PSPs.

    1h 14m
  5. 09/18/2025

    The Moment Playbook: Building a Pan-African Fintech with MultiChoice | Joel Yarbrough

    In this episode, Samora Kariuki sits down with Joel Yarbrough, CEO of Moment, for a deep dive into the strategy and technology behind one of Africa's most ambitious new fintech ventures. The story of a pan-African fintech is often told through big funding rounds and flashy app features. But this narrative skips the most important part: the "unsexy," foundational work required to build a platform that can actually withstand the realities of the market. This conversation begins with a criticalinsight that explains the entire Moment playbook: the "7th of the Month Problem." Joel Yarbrough details how, for millions of Africans, digital funds run out by the first week of the month, causing debit card and digital payment authorizations to collapse. This single consumer behavior is why a sophisticated cash strategy isn't just a feature—it's the core of the business.It explains their focus on building a vast physical collection network and why meeting customers where they are is the only path to digitizing the continent. This is a masterclass in building a real enterprise fintech, focusing on reliability over roadmaps and culture over rawtalent. It covers the deliberate choice to build 97% of their own code to handle power cuts and network outages, the practical solutions for the 5-10% of debit orders that fail monthly, and why solving a company's reconciliation headache is often more valuable than the payment itself.   In This Episode, You Will Hear: ●     The Strategic Rationale: The thinking inside MultiChoice that led to the creation of Moment as its core fintech play. ●     The "Unfair Advantage": How launching with a massive partner allows you to "run water through thepipes" and de-risk a platform at a continental scale. ●     The "7th of the Month Problem": A deep dive into a key consumer behavior that explains why a sophisticated cashstrategy is still critical. ●     The "Clean Stack" Philosophy: Why building 97% of your own code is a powerful advantage for reliability in theAfrican market. ●     A Practical Fix for Failed Debit Orders: Areal-world solution for a common problem that affects recurring revenuebusinesses. ●     The Banker's Dilemma: Why traditional banksstruggle to solve the "last mile" cash problem for their corporateclients and how fintech partnerships are the win-win solution. ●     Unifying the System: How Moment gives businesses one contract, one settlement, and one clearview of their cash flow across 44 countries. ●     A Partnership-Led Approach: How Moment is creating a unified network bycollaborating with the best players instead of trying to do it all alone. ●     The Long-Term Vision: How solving payments isthe first step toward leveraging data for a more digitized and inclusive financial ecosystem. Key Quote: "When you talk to anybody in Africa, trustand reliability and resilience are critical, whether that's network outages, power outages, API outages at the partner level, etc. So we knew what we didn't want to do was put ourselves in a position that we couldn't scale resilience across the market."

    1 hr

About

Frontier Fintech is a podcast about the business of fintech in Africa. We speak with founders, executives, investors, and regulators who are shaping financial services across the continent—helping you connect the dots in Pan-African fintech.