Thus Spaketh Idd Salim

And then came the Real Safaricom

by on Mar.04, 2010, under Symbiotic

On Tuesday, I had the pleasure of being in the same room with some very influential development oriented people. Meeting was held at ICT board, hosted by PK. Invited were Symbiotic, MobileMonday, Safaricom, Top PRSPS and Developers in then Kenyan Mobile Arena

It was a good meeting of minds and well worth the time and effort. For Once, I was in a room with some guys from Safaricom who had their brains bigger than their Egos.

Present

Paul Kukubo – Head of ICT, Lewela and Kaburo

2 Peters from Safaricom, Sylvia Mulinge,

Salim, Timo from SMC, Wesley from Letti Games, Cellulant, Adtel and IMS teams.

Absent

All other Jokers in the country.

Agenda

  • Why Safaricom is seen as a monster by Kenyan Software developers. Perception being that most ideas sent to Safaricom disappear at the Marketing department and and get ‘stolen’ to make Safcom all this BILLIONS, while the real inventors languish in poverty.
  • How do we as inventors and developers work together with Safaricom and make a living out of code.
  • What are the key failure factors met by developers while dealing with Safaricom.

Mangumi na Mateke

The top 2 issues and responses are as listed below.

ISSUE: The current locus standi is grim and really pathetic. Wesley argued that Apple Automatically gives the developer 70% shares and keeps only 30%. This encourages the developers to innovate and pays them immediately. Safaricom and the PRSPs take over 75% leaving the developer with a measly and satanic 25%. As if that is not enough torture and an abuse of human rights, the developer WILL NOT get paid until after 4 months. A Kenyan Mobile developer CANNOT live on code, unless they decide to follow the path of the weak and prostitute themselves and get employed

RESPONSE: Safaricom expressed willingness to shift the revenue shares to the favor of the developer. Developers will get as high as 90% of the money they bring. Systems that bring DATA traffic and thus bring residual income to Safaricom, e.g. Sembuse from Symbiotic, will also attract special treatment and revenue share models from Safaricom.

ISSUE: There are SO MANY requirements from Safaricom before a developer can get to the platform where their services reach the market. CCK Licence, PRSP Licence etc.

RESPONSE: This challenge fell to the PRSPs. It is, obviously out of the Safaricom domain. Adtel and IMS expressed willingness to incubate developers and their systems [Apps, Games, Ideas] at a very sexy revenue share.

There is a positive vibe from Safaricom at last which might indicate the following:

  • The actual problem and cause of the ‘Safaricom ni Madogi’ movement in Kenya by coders is due to the red-tape between the entry-level marketing department and the upper tier. I remember going with a proposal to SafCom and Evah from VAS asking if we were read to accept 5% revenue share while SafCom kept 95%. I felt like crying. Maybe she was Joking. Meeting people higher up makes you realize that SafCom aint all that bad.
  • Safaricom have started to realize that Voice and SMS are dead! The next frontier for MSP Mkwanjalization is DATA and DATA driving solutions. Step in Java Developers!
  • Safaricom have started to smell the coffee. Which is good. Of late, they have just been inhaling the AC!

Lemmi go back to code. Mbugua is giving me that ‘you have not coded for 12 minutes straight’ eye! And No, Deno, Safaricom have not ‘onad me kando’ to do a positive blog about them. Good stuff is happening.

:, , , , ,

  • Marvin Tumbo

    Interesting. I guess all the developers who have in the past couple months been calling Safaricom's BS in their blogs and tweets and recently at MWEA will be seeing returns at last, if the revenue shares ACTUALLY shift in their favour. But it is a positive step that will encourage people out of prostitution (as you put it) and into self employment.

  • Martin

    Thanks for keeping us up-to date with the happening of the industry.

  • murigimuraya

    Too much cussin (foul language for me) but informative blog. Where & when was this meet with Safaricom announced?

    What's wrong with developers getting employed (on occasion) if it helps them come up higher and learn new stuff they would not ordinarily learn on their own (due to time & human limitations) – like humility, team work and good communication skills (while mentoring other developers)?

    Step in Java Developers! How about .Net Developers?

  • iddsalim

    Thanks for your kind comments muraya.
    Pole Muraya. Am slowly getting saved. Will curse less.

    Kuna employees na kuna developers. Employees get employed.. Developers.. well.. develop. code teaches u humility. configuration of a FreeBSD cluster teaches you team-work.

    .Net is not a Programing Language. #avitzisnotACar … Maybe this invite for the meeting with saf haikuja kwa .NET fellas. Jokes!

    :)

  • iddsalim

    Welcome bro. Always a pleasure..

  • murigimuraya

    Kool. Am sure most your readers like your way of telling it as it is – myself included. 98% marks for good content -2% for cussin.

    If not today, you will be an employer tomorrow. Your words may come back to haunt you.

    Otherwise very infomative blog. Cheers!

  • iddsalim

    @Muraya – Wazi.

    What I do in my company, http://www.symbiotic.co.ke, is NOT employing developers… We partner with coders and bring their products on board.

    The only persons employed are the sweepers and receptionists. and these are not developers.

  • jeremykk

    you sold out

  • http://twitter.com/kiagiri kiagiri

    Safaricom revenue share: Safaricom 75%, Developer 25%
    Apple revenue share: Apple 30%, Developer 70%
    Google revenue share: Google 20%, Developer 80%

    http://developer.googleapps.com/marketplace/fees

  • ICT dude

    Nice blog. I like the concept of working with developers as partners rather than as employees.

    Just wondering… How can I get in touch with Top Kenyan developers? I have some ideas that may be interesting. Is there some community that exists (I remember there used to be Dev communities back in the early 2000s when I was in Nairobi)…

  • iddsalim

    @ICT – Nice. Thanks.

    keny's tech blog is here: http://blog.my.co.ke/

  • Martin

    You mentioned that Safcom promised to review the revenue sharing percentages, wud you know if the same has been implemented? Am a content developer under a PRSP and i doubt they would notify me in such eventuality.

  • Guest

    Safaricom have started to realize that Voice and SMS are dead! The next frontier for MSP Mkwanjalization is DATA and DATA driving solutions. Step in Java Developers!

    I don't see how SMS is dead. How do you explain Sembuse platform?

  • iddsalim

    Incase the question about sembuse is in reference to 'SMS is Dead' , then all I can say is that messaging [sms and web] is just a tiny part of sembuse.

    More info on sembuse at – http://www.sembuse.com

  • muhimbiseandrew

    Nice stuff (thanks to the Bankele blog i follow) Mr developer,
    have learnt pointers, my small consultancy firm in uganda creates concepts in public procurement and i have submitted some over there, currently there is one they are incorporating in the Public Procurement law (ironically i only know this informally- could they be passing on my concepts as there?).
    Salim please advise further on how i can take them on so as to let my time and effort's worth go to waste.
    muantus@gmail.com

  • http://www.theonlinekenyan.com/ TheOnlineKenyan

    An interesting read as always.

    Can’t believe I hadn’t yet featured your blog on http://twitter.com/#!/Blogs_Kenya
    Anyway, nice read

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