• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Nigerian fintech Hervest wants to bring financial inclusion to more African women

September 21, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

After years of working in marketing for a number of financial services companies, Solape Akinpelu came to a conclusion: There was an “alarmingly low adoption” by women for financial services in her home country of Nigeria and all of Africa as a whole.

“I could see women living the reality around me,” Akinpelu recalls. “These women could not make sound financial decisions. Some of these women that do not even know that they could do better with their money.”

She found that the problem is particularly acute for women living in rural areas, especially those working on farms.

Nigerian fintech Hervest wants to bring financial inclusion to more African women. Founder Solape Akinpelu

Image Credits: Hervest

So in August 2020, she teamed up with Yomi Ogunleye to found Lagos, Nigeria-based Hervest, a startup that describes itself as “an inclusive fintech company” serving underserved and excluded women in Africa through a gender lens. The company presented today at the Startup Battlefield.

Broadly speaking, Hervest aims to bridge the $42 billion gender finance gap for urban and last-mile women in the country with an emphasis on women in agriculture. 

The startup, she said, provides familiar access to savings, fund transfers, impact investment, financial insights and tools to underserved women while offering blended finance to smallholder female farmers in underserved African communities. Put simply, it offers a way to invest in female farmers while seeing a return on that investment, and giving the farmers the financial literacy, education and opportunities they might not have otherwise had access to.

“We want to address the gender gap in Africa by giving access to savings, impact investment and credit to women, regardless of who they are and where they live,” she said.

Today, just over one year after Akinpelu started the company, over 4,000 women are on the Hervest platform.

Earlier this year, Hervest raised a friends and family funding round of $100,000. The company plans to use the capital to add to its nine-person team, strengthen its digital infrastructure and accelerate marketing efforts. It started operations as a distributed company and still mostly operates as one.

Before becoming CEO at Hervest, Akinpelu’s last role was head of marketing for capital market conglomerate Mersitem, and prior to that, she worked in marketing for various financial brands.

The experiences gave her insight into the need to provide more access to financial services for women. And the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting economic crisis, Akinpelu believes, have only emphasized the vulnerability of low-income women.

“This makes financial inclusion ever more critical as a means for women to recover from the global crisis and build resilience in the long term,” she told TechCrunch.

While starting with Nigeria, where Akinpelu says is home to over 57 million working women, Hervest has plans to roll out its platform into other West and East African countries in 2022.

“The problem we’re solving is an African finance gender gap, not just Nigerian,” Akinpelu said.

To get the word out, Hervest has relied on referrals and partnerships with co-operatives and social media. The company has a live app on iOS and Android and recently launched a desktop application.

According to its website, Hervest says that its cooperative members “can earn as high as 25% annualized returns while strengthening the financial capacity of female farmers” through access to capital, trainings and markets. What this means, Akinpelu said, women with disposable income pool funds together as credit (impact investment) for small holder women farmers  as a cooperative.

“In addition, women also get to create automatic savings plan towards their personal goals. Picture an ‘inclusive neobank for women,” she told TechCrunch. “To assure our stakeholders, our funds are held in trust by a trustee firm, FBNQuest Trustees Limited. This is an added layer of accountability and transparency of our funds management.”

By investing in these women, Hervest aims to provide growth opportunities towards specific crops, grain banking, livestock and provision of digitized e-extension services to female small-scale farmers in rural areas.

 

Source Link Nigerian fintech Hervest wants to bring financial inclusion to more African women

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. Plentywaka founder Onyeka Akumah on African startups and global expansion
  2. S.Africa’s first black free dive instructor turns tide on apartheid history
  3. Athletics – Thompson-Herah ends stellar season on a high
  4. Squad Mobility eyes shared platforms as target for its compact solar electric quadricycle

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • Are There Body Parts You Can Live Without? Find Out More In Issue 37 Of CURIOUS – Out Now
  • New Study Unearths Humanity’s “Hidden” Crossings Out Of Africa
  • Trichonephila Clavipes: The Spider That Spins “Golden” Silk
  • The Southern Delta Aquariids And Alpha Capricornids Meteor Showers Will Dazzle The Skies Together Soon
  • Virus Found In Black-Eyed Pea Plants Could Be Used To Treat Cancer
  • Many People Have No Idea Where Oil Actually Comes From. It’s Not Dinosaurs
  • “World’s Rarest Elephant”: Meet Motty, The Only Known Elephant Hybrid
  • Missing 40 Percent Of Matter In The Universe Finally Discovered, Could We Be On Track For A Universal Cancer Vaccine, And Much More This Week
  • Solar Power Producing Heliostats Could Get A “Night Job” Finding Asteroids
  • COVID-19 Can Lead To Build Up Of Alzheimer’s-Linked Protein Clumps In Eyes And Brain
  • The Wild Life Of Snowflake, The Only Albino Gorilla Ever Known
  • Stunning Drone Footage Reveals Largest Turtle Nesting Site In The World, Containing 41,000 Females
  • New “Different Form” Of Type 1 Diabetes Found In Sub-Saharan African And Black American Patients
  • Neanderthals May Have Feasted On Maggots, Which They Harvested From Rotting Flesh
  • Common Cannabis Substitute May Be Far More Psychoactive Than Previously Thought
  • This Is The Most Bizarre International Border In The World
  • Earth Will Not Fall Into Darkness Next Week – But There Is An “Eclipse Of The Century” In 2027
  • 850,000-Year-Old Remains Suggest Prehistoric Child Was Decapitated And Eaten By Its Own Kind
  • How To Watch The ISS As It Crosses The US Night Sky In The Next Few Days
  • “Robo-Bunnies” Are Florida’s Newest Weapon Against Python Invaders
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version