Helping entreprenurial African women access financial services
CategoriesSustainable News

Helping entreprenurial African women access financial services

Spotted: In Nigeria, it is estimated that women’s earned income is 65 per cent of men’s, due to fewer work hours and the fact that women dominate the lower-paid, informal job sector. This means they have fewer opportunities for networking and fundraising than men. Now, an app called Herconomy, is helping to bridge that gap.

Herconomy began as an Instagram page, created by entrepreneur Ife Durosinmi-Etti, who showcased local and international opportunities like grants and fellowships available to entrepreneurs in Africa. The site soon became a hub for thousands of female entrepreneurs looking for information.

The page eventually became a Telegram group, but scaling was an issue, as the team behind it found it difficult to coordinate the large number of conversations on the site. So, the team has now launched a subscription app (which also has a free tier). The app gives members access to a community and opportunity board, grants, weekly capacity-building workshops, and discounts from over 60 brands.

In June this year, Herconomy announced that it was receiving backing from Google for Startups, as one of the recipients of Google’s Black Founders Fund, which will help the femtech startup accelerate its mission.

This is not the first bank Springwise has spotted targeting an underserved market. Other financial innovations in the archive include a banking platform for workers in Africa’s informal sector and nano-credit for low-income entrepreneurs.

Written By: Lisa Magloff

Reference

Financial literacy training for Gen Z
CategoriesSustainable News

Financial literacy training for Gen Z

Spotted: There are worrying signs that a generational gap is opening when it comes to financial literacy. A recent survey by Investopedia, for example, found that only 31 per cent of Gen Z individuals – aged 18 to 25 – said they understood investing. And this age bracket also scored lowest of all the generations surveyed on their perceived knowledge of taxes, borrowing, insurance, and retirement.   

When they do consume financial education content, those in Gen Z rely overwhelmingly on the internet. And in another survey by the Current Account Switch Service in the UK, almost half of respondents between the ages of 18 and 24 reported that a TikTok influencer has helped them make a financial decision. This reliance on TikTok and other social media platforms is worrying given that credible bodies such as the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority have highlighted the dangers of heeding the advice of unregulated social media ‘fin-fluencers.’ 

Hoping to improve the financial literacy of young people is UK startup Prograd, one of several companies leveraging the engaging formats used by social media platforms to provide reliable financial information. 

Prograd’s free platform allows users to create personalised financial targets, and highlights earning, saving, and borrowing opportunities to help them meet those goals. These opportunities range from product discounts and job opportunities to savings accounts and credit cards from partnering organisations. The company’s AI-powered technology performs soft credit checks to highlight appropriate credit products without impacting the users’ permanent credit history. And to make finance understandable, key terminology is explained in simple, jargon-free language.  

In highlighting these ‘paths’ to fulfilling financial goals, Prograd acts as a broker (it may be paid a fee if one of its partners’ products is taken up through the platform). But what sets the startup apart is its slick Gen-Z-friendly user experience and its social-media-like ‘community’ through which users can interact with each other and watch snappy, short-form videos explaining important financial concepts.

In the archive, Springwise has spotted other innovations improving financial inclusion, including a free platform for unbanked communities and a banking platform that’s accessible to everyone.

Written By: Matthew Hempstead

Reference

Assessing the financial value of biodiversity
CategoriesSustainable News

Assessing the financial value of biodiversity

Spotted: How much value does an animal species, such as a shark or a peregrine falcon, offer? And how can this value be expressed financially? We are not used to thinking in these terms, but these questions are extremely important if nature is to be effectively considered in important decisions – from business investments to urban planning. 

Estonian startup Endangered Wildlife OÜ is providing answers. The company has developed a new, multidisciplinary technique for providing credible and reliable financial values for biodiversity. This delivers a total conservation value for an individual species that is composed of a broad range of considerations, from carbon value and aesthetic value to species existence value, among others. And, crucially, this value is applied to species within a specific location. 

How these valuations are used depends on the needs of the organisation. But, to name one example, a municipality calculating the ROI of an investment in green space could add the financial value of the species supported by such a green space to other considerations, such as carbon sequestration.  

Another tangible example came in 2022, when Endangered Wildlife OÜ worked with non-profit organisation Shark Allies to calculate the financial value of wild, living sharks in the entertainment industry.  

Organisations receive biodiversity valuations through Endangered Wildlife OÜ’s consulting services. And, on top of this, the startup has been developing a machine learning software solution – called the Biodiversity Valuator – that is also used as a tool to calculate the financial value of biodiversity. 

Making sustainability measurable is a task innovators are solving in a variety of ways. Springwise has spotted a platform that helps investors monitor the sustainability of their investment portfolios and an SaaS system that helps organisations ensure traceability and compliance along the entire supply chain.

Written By: Matthew Hempstead

Reference