POD: Beyond Free Banking—Chijioke Dozie on Carbon's journey to profitable digital banking in Nigeria

Chijioke Dozie, co-founder and CEO of Carbon, shares insights on building a sustainable digital bank in Nigeria and the evolving neobanking landscape across Africa.

POD: Beyond Free Banking—Chijioke Dozie on Carbon's journey to profitable digital banking in Nigeria
Photo by Sadiq Ali / Unsplash

Meet Chijioke Dozie, co-founder of Carbon, who, alongside his brother Ngozi, is navigating Nigeria's increasingly crowded neobank scene. In this candid chat with Andile Masuku, Dozie makes a case for zigging while others zag—specifically, charging for value while competitors burn cash on free services.

It's a stance that might raise eyebrows in Nigeria's price-sensitive market, but as you'll hear, it's backed by 12 years of hard knocks and savvy iteration.

Episode overview:

Carbon spotted a massive gap in Nigeria circa 2012 - imagine a market of 180 million people where barely 200,000 had credit cards. It's the kind of statistical disparity that makes you do a double-take. The conversation reveals how this reality shaped Carbon's contrarian approach to building a licensed digital bank in Africa's largest economy.

Key topics:

  • The distinction between neobanks across different markets
  • Trust-building in digital banking through institutional frameworks
  • The evolution from free services to value-based pricing
  • The impact of founder experience on investor confidence
  • Market size challenges in African banking

Notable points:

  1. Carbon achieved profitability in 2018 and 2019, having raised only $12 million in equity
  2. The company has processed loans for over 5 million Nigerians across three economic cycles
  3. Nigeria's credit-to-GDP ratio was only 6% compared to South Africa's 70% when Carbon started
  4. The company is shifting away from digital-only to include offline touchpoints

Be sure to listen out for a particularly candid moment when Dozie reflects on two key decisions made during pivotal moments in Carbon's history—choices he admits he would reconsider if given the chance.


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