ZAMBIA – As consumer purchasing habits evolve, Lake Harvest, Zambia’s leading fish distributors has partnered with Cellulant, a leading Pan-African payments company to enable mobile payments in all its outlets through the Tingg one-stop digital payment platform.
The move is aimed to foster a seamless payment experience by placing Cellulant’s payment platform, Tingg, in all of the 13 Lake Harvest outlets across Zambia and ensure they are able to accept all forms of mobile money.
Lake Harvest highlighted that this was necessitated by demand from their customers who kept requesting easier ways to pay for their goods that didn’t involve the hassle of withdrawing cash from their mobile money network.
“Since going live with this Tingg, we’ve noted that customers are expressing pleasure in having this simplified way of paying.
“It’s clear that this improves their customer experience when they visit our shops by reducing the morning queues at distribution points during high traffic time,” observed Lake Harvest General Manager, Steven Chidove.
The partnership is in line with Cellulant’s aim to break the fragmentation in the payments landscape and as such has rolled out Tingg to major stores across the country, placing it at the forefront of the digital payment revolution in Zambia.
The Country Manager of Cellulant Zambia, Gilbert Lungu said, “A major distributor like Lake Harvest joining the Tingg ecosystem, supports the growing trend of an increase in the use of digital payments over traditional payment methods.”
Speaking to the role of digital payments in accelerating business success, he added, “Platforms like Tingg solve for cash management issues while offering better reconciliation and settlement options for businesses. This enables them to focus on providing better services and improve customer convenience.”
The uptake in digital payments in Zambia has been accelerated by the government’s push to reduce cash handling by encouraging contactless payments as a safer method in the wake of COVID-19 restrictions in the country.
The Zambian government through regulators continues to echo this, as more than ever, mobile money wallets are a popular form of storing value but have limited shops and distribution centres accepting it.
These users now require access points to directly use mobile money where they shop every day.
This is at the heart of Cellulant’s work of enabling seamless payments for businesses and consumers across Africa.
The payments company integrates digital payments in 35 countries and works with over 2000 merchants unlocking opportunities for millions of consumers.
The value of mobile payments in Zambia as reported by the Bank of Zambia in June 2021 stood at K76.6 billion and showed a sustained upward trajectory as compared to June 2020 which was at K43.1 billion.
The acceleration of mobile money use is evidenced by The Finscope 2020 in Zambia study which reported a 44.5% growth in users over a five-year period to stand at 58.5% of adults.
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