At CashAfrica we conducted an independent case study. The results? In a 1,000+ person survey, 64% of Nigerians preferred Tap-to-Pay over alternatives.

This poll was run via an independent voting platform. Despite the limited availability of contactless payment across banks and fintech, early user feedback continues to be overwhelmingly positive.

While only 30% of Africans own a debit card, over 70% use mobile phones. This highlights an undeniable opportunity in distribution and accessibilityโ€”but early validation alone isnโ€™t enough.

As we roll out with banks and fintechs leveraging our infrastructure, our obsession rises with one of the hardest parts of scaling contactless payments: changing user behaviour.

We want you to tell us:

โ‰๏ธ What do you love or dislike the most about Tap-to-pay?

โ‰๏ธ Whatโ€™s the best way to create user awareness for you?

โ‰๏ธ How do you want to interact with Tap-to-Pay?

โ‰๏ธ What truly influences your behaviour change?

Introducing CashAfrica Lately - our yearly event where we bring together existing users, future users, and industry leaders under one roof to have real, honest conversations about our puzzling curiosities in building and scaling contactless payments.

This year, it's CashAfrica Lately 2.0, and weโ€™re inviting you to our HQ in Victoria Island, Lagos, to discuss Tap-to-Pay with us.

๐Ÿš€ Youโ€™re officially invited. (Limited Seats Available)

๐Ÿ”— RSVP here โ†’ http://cashafrica.co/cashafricalately

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