SA payments startup Yoco raises funds worth $16m
A South African-based Point of Sale payments provider, Yoco, has raised $16million in a Series B funding round led by Partech, a venture capital firm based in Silicon Valley, Europe and Africa, with participation from Orange Digital Ventures, FMO (The Dutch Development Bank) and existing Series A investors Quona Capital and Velocity Capital.
Yoco will leverage its Series B to grow its network of small business merchants, invest in product development, operational scalability and attracting top-tier fintech talent. It brings the company’s total investment to $23million. Cyril Collon, general partner at Partech and co-lead of the Partech Africa Fund will join Yoco’s board.
Yoco builds tools and services to help small businesses accept card payments and run their day to day activities. Since the launch of its first product in late 2015, a card reader that connects with a merchant’s smartphone or tablet, the company has grown its base to over 27,000 South African small businesses, 75% of which had never accepted cards previously.
The company is South Africa’s largest and fastest growing independent card payments provider by number of merchants, more than tripling in size since raising its Series A in early 2017, because it adds more than 1,500 new merchants every month.
Yoco and Mastercard have however, announced a collaboration that will see the rolling out of 15,000 mobile Point of Sale devices to small and medium-sized businesses.
According to Maphai, “Small businesses, fundamental to sustainable economic growth, are generally underserved in our part of the world due to their size. Running a business is hard enough; we believe accepting money shouldn’t be. We built Yoco on the key pillars of access and trust, transforming the long and prohibitive process of applying for a card machine into a simple consumer-like product purchase that can happen online or at the store in minutes.”
“Our Series B investment allows us to continue to scale our operations and deliver a world-class product experience that enables small businesses to thrive,” he added.
Yoco’s plan is to collaborate with small businesses early in their life cycle and actively help them grow. It has been adding services to its payments solution, which now includes point of sale software, business intelligence, accounting integrations, and working capital financing, in its bid to create an operating system for the small business.
According to Cyril Collon, a partner at Partech “Yoco has built a product set and quality operations placing it as a top fintech company not only in South Africa but also globally. We are excited to have Yoco as the second investment from our Africa fund. Consumer spending in Africa amounts to over $1.4 trillion, much of which is driven by small businesses. Yoco’s ability to use technology to solve real problems for African small businesses at scale makes it a unique implementation of our investment strategy.”
“We envision that millions of small businesses across the continent will one day use a connected, digital platform to run their businesses and we want to be that platform. The model and approach will differ per market and we are playing a long game. Our new investors are global with strong African footprints and will be great partners in this journey,” Added Wazen, co-founder and chief business officer.