With the outbreak of Covid 19, everything has changed and in an attempt to prevent further spread, there have been several protocols for individuals, families and organisations. Currently, there is the prevention strategy of social distancing, constant washing of hands to maintain a high level of hygiene, the use of face mask and a stay at home order. The stay at home order has made it difficult for organisations to work in conventional manner. Organisations including microfinance banks now work from home which makes it difficult to acquire new customers while devising new measures to manage existing relationship. With changing lifestyles, MfBs are having to redefine their customers. The future of customer acquisition is through digital means. The era of esusu (thrift) gradually comes to an end except where they can be done through digital means.
My experience in microfinancing has been very interesting. At times my training in commercial banking clashes with the tenets of microfinancing because both are distinctive. I get calls often from potential borrowers requesting for various types of loans but my microfinancing orientation and the type of model we have chosen to run as a bank rarely allows me to come to their aid. When I decline such request, I always hear a sign of disappointment from the other side of the phone. It is not easy to say NO to a potential borrower with a juicy loan request. Naturally, I would say yes to all viable businesses but the microfinance business was designed to attend not to everybody or every business but a select and peculiar persons and groups.
The discussion this week focuses on identifying who a microfinance bank customer is under a pandemic. It is important for potential investors to know the dynamic profile of their potential customers before investing as this would determine the extent of investment on ambience. The quality and expectations of your clientele should determine how much you spend decorating your banking hall or how much you invest in building a solid IT infrastructure. I have seen where customers feel inferior in certain banking halls and they stopped visiting the bank. Conversely I have also seen where customers patronise a bank because of its quality and ambience. Will this remain the same? Should the microfinance bank serve everyone?
For a potential customer to qualify to be targeted by a microfinance bank, it should have the following qualities.
- If you earn a monthly minimum wage in Nigeria or you earn up to two times monthly per capital income of Nigeria (whichever is higher).
- If you have total productive assets of not more than five hundred thousand Naira [N500, 000.00] only, irrespective of your means of financing but excluding the cost of land.
- When you are not a regular employee of any organization
- If your age is between 18 and 60 years.
- If you are a poor person
- If you are a micro-enterprise.
- If you belong to any of the above and have been adversely impacted by covid 19