4 examples for innovative mobile phone use in Africa

Aug / 29 / 2007

According to the latest statistics from the New York Times and the World Bank, the African continent is lagging behind in mobile phone subscribers and Internet users. However, African countries have one of the highest quota of mobile phone subscribers. The rate of subscribers varies a lot –between 724 in South Africa to 32 in Rwanda per 1. 000 inhabitants. But what do these figures say when so little is known about the creative use of mobile phones? Let alone the business sprung up through a single mobile phone in a village.

Recently, some interesting published blog posts and articles showed the innovative use of mobile phones and their “communication breakthrough” for economical boost and social change.

Mobile reporters in Africa
Ben, from Voices of Africa, has already hinted me about this initiative, while White African has also posted about it. Mobile reporters can now potentially report from all corners of Africa. The project is a cooperation between skoeps.com (a Dutch mobile reporting portal) and the Africa Interactive Media Foundation. Most articles have a “blogging character,” deliver intriguing stories, and report about all kinds of topics. Mobile phones are used to write the articles by using an additional keyboard, to film material, and lastly to send from every GPRS available. It is amazing to see how mobile phones are used to film interviews, give the impressions through photos, and write stories. One example is Kenya: Clean water is luxury for slums.

Mobile financing in Zimbabwe
The pioneering concept of mobile financing came first from Kenya. But for awhile now, Mukuru.com has been bridging the diaspora with its friends and family in Zimbabwe. Under scarce circumstances in Zimbabwe, Mukuru.com allows to transfer money over mobile phones. For instance, gas fuelling can be paid over the Internet from anywhere to anybody with a mobile phone in Zimbabwe, then the petrol station owner gets his money back through vouchers. “Africans in general have pioneered the use of cellphones to transfer value by using airtime as a virtual currency.”

Rwanda health sector
Mobile phones to tackle HIV in Rwanda. An interesting citation of how mobile phones can be used for reliable data transfer in the health sector.

Healthcare facilities often lack the appropriate supplies, reliable Internet connections, and have a limited ability to track patients or the spread of HIV across the country. With Phones-for-Health, health workers in the field can use software on their mobile phones to submit critical health information directly into central computer systems, allowing health officials and service providers to view, analyse and respond to this vital data immediately writes Manasee Wagh in Biotech360.

Critical health data and information can be delivered throughout the country in no other way more efficient than this. From the New York Times, “In Rwanda, the system started being used to track H.I.V./AIDS patients two years ago and now connects 75 percent of the country’s 340 clinics, covering a total of 32,000 patients.” All Africa and Herald Tribune also wrote about it. Starting in Rwanda in 2008, the project shall be extended to six more countries.

West Africa Agric Trade Network
This network, also called TradeNet, is a sophisticated market information system for efficient trading. It connects sellers and buyers over the mobile phone via sms with necessary information about prices and crops, and offers new markets in four different languages.

“Users can request prices which are provided in real-time on the network from many market enumerators that are active throughout 380 markets spread across the continent.” (Mobile Africa)

This gives farmers a better income while production is more orientated on demand. The Economist talks already of a Pan-African market based on mobile phones, and first hand experiences can be seen by Prince Deh from GINKS, who did a video interview about the usage for that portal. Ethan Zuckermann discusses in his post the further research being done to forecast prices and needs for commodities.

Related posts:

  1. Mobile Activism in Africa Why and how does the mobile phone play a...
  2. Culture of social networks in Africa on the example of trade There are over one billion Internet users worldwide according to...
  3. The many potential channels for mobile services There is a wide variety of information and communication...

{ 3 trackbacks }

News On GSM Cellphone: 4 examples for innovative mobile phone.. » Mobile Phone Info . net
Aug / 31 / 2007 at 10:49 pm
Digital vardag » 1 minut i mikron
Feb / 18 / 2009 at 8:35 pm
CMT Blog » Móviles para el África emprendedora
Oct / 16 / 2009 at 11:42 am

{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }

Christian Kreutz Aug / 30 / 2007 at 6:31 am

New blog post: 4 examples for innovative mobile phone use in Africa at http://tinyurl.com/ywzps6

Ben Aug / 31 / 2007 at 8:51 am

Another great post.

We are looking to link our own mobile initiative to that of others. In addition to finding creative uses for the mobile phone it is also important that we interlink the projects needed to build momentum.

Look forward to more on this subject.
http://www.africanews.com/site/page/voicesofafrica

Katrin Verclas Sep / 07 / 2007 at 7:40 pm

Christian — it’s time that we meet! I run MobileActive.org (http://www.mobileactive.org where there are many more stories and posts about mobiles in civil society (albeit not just development). Check it out – mobiles in election monitoring, microfinance, disaster relief and advocacy. It’s a big, revolutionary wide mobile world out there — very exciting.

We also seem to have one degree of separation — I am good friends with Beth Kanter on your blogroll, as well as Ethan and Tobias. And we seem to be reading the same books (David Weinberger is a friend as well). In my day job I run NTEN, the Nonprofit Technology Network – http://nten.org.

And finally — ich komme aus Hamburg aber lebe schon seit langen Jahren in den USA aber spreche natuerlich Deutsch.

So – hello :-) and very nice to meet you. And — if you want to write anything/cross post for MobileActive you just let me know! We welcome guest bloggers and publish everything under Creative Commons.

Bis bald!

JD Moore Sep / 27 / 2007 at 2:33 pm

If you are interested in stories about innovative or simply logical use of mobiles in primarily ‘developing’ regions, I recommend scoping out:

ShareIdeas.org

It’s a wiki, so I’d also strongly encourage you to submit any true stories not currently on their.

mandaza Mar / 11 / 2008 at 2:09 pm

mobile phones are key to poverty alleviation

Zimseller.com Mar / 15 / 2008 at 12:59 am

ZimSeller.com is a website which sells delicious Zimbabwe food, fuel, mobile phones, generators, solar panels and various other household goods. They deliver orders in Harare and Chitungwiza for only £5. They also have an auction page (www.auction.zimseller.com) where other people can sell their own products.

Zimseller (www.zimseller.com) seem to have redefined the art of selling Zimbabwe groceries online. Compared to other online grocery shops serving Zimbabweans in the diaspora, Zimseller.com has by far the largest selection of products-from green vegetables to solar panels. The layout of the shop front is simple and intuitive, best for customer who want to buy individual products rather than pre-packed hampers.

Christian Kreutz Apr / 28 / 2008 at 10:30 pm

digested some interesting presentation I listened to: Mobile everything: 3 new dimensions of citizen engagement http://tinyurl.com/yt737u

T-Mobile TRENDMOBI Sep / 07 / 2009 at 3:24 pm

Vier Wege innovativen Mobilfunkgebrauchs in Afrika: http://bit.ly/mvUWB (via: Trendmobi: http://bit.ly/3y6Oop)

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: