Revio, a South African fintech startup that powers SaaS businesses, is set to expand across the continent.

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Revio, a South African fintech startup that provides a subscription billing and payments platform for software-as-a-service (SaaS) businesses, plans to expand into other African markets in the near future.

Revio is a SaaS company founded in 2019 by venture builder The Delta and a private investor. It powers growing or scaling e-commerce and subscription-based businesses.

In its most basic form, Revio provides recurring billing automation, electronic invoice delivery, acceptance of any payment method, and simple reconciliation. Louis Buys, CEO of The Delta and one of the initial co-founders of South African fintech startups Revix and Karri Payments, leads the startup.

He claims that Revio takes billing and payments to the next level by proactively identifying and managing customer churn through the use of real-time customer payment analytics and machine learning, as well as using reward mechanisms to build customer loyalty and pre-approving merchants for access to growth capital.

“While providing customers with the payment methods they expect is important, there is more to collecting recurring revenue on an ongoing basis, especially in a market where more than 75 per cent of consumers have at least one account in arrears,” Buys said.

“In South Africa there are numerous banks, fintechs and card payment providers that allow businesses to accept payments in every shape and form, however, very few assist businesses to resolve their real pain-points, which is failed payments, customer churn and loyalty.”

Revio was created with this in mind. It enables businesses to connect with customers in real-time by making clever use of machine learning and analytics.

“Our no-code architecture means that engagement strategies can be set up on the fly to proactively reach out to customers at risk of churn, automate customer arrears management, reward customers and even drive cross-sell and up-sell campaigns,” said Buys.

At the time of its launch, the startup raised a US$1 million seed funding round, and given its contracted client pipeline, it is expected to operationally break even in Q2 of 2022.

“In a very short time Revio has been able to contract with many middle SMEs looking to scale their e-commerce and subscription offerings, as well as larger businesses in the insurance, private security and VAS industries looking to centralise billing and reconciliation across brands in one platform,” said Buys.

“Very interesting, however, is the surge in other SaaS companies looking to integrate billing and payments capabilities via API. Many more savvy businesses are looking to source no-core capabilities to support their overall business offerings. Revio is also white-label-enabled and we are working with non-traditional financial services players to target specific sectors.”

Revio, which is currently focused on the South African market, plans to expand to other African countries in support of multinational clients by the end of 2021. The company intends to officially launch in East Africa in 2022.

Part of its appeal, Buys says, is its simplicity, especially when it comes to pricing.

“In the industry we have seen many providers aggregating bank or card tech that have complicated and expensive pricing structures to deal with inefficiencies in their platforms and operations,” he said.

“With Revio we wanted to simplify pricing. Potential clients are able to sign-up online for free, integrate and test, and when they are ready, request to have their profile and payment methods set to live. Revio has a volume-based tiered pricing model. No monthly or onboarding charges apply. Revio has also pre-negotiated the best card, bank and alternative payment method pricing.”

While the platform has seen significant growth in the middle-SME segment, the majority of revenue is now generated by mid-to-large corporates.

“For larger businesses, legacy technology architecture remains a challenge for integration. With Revio however, we have been able to overcome this by providing the platform standalone, have businesses test the capability whilst integration is on-going, and migrate to the fully integrated solution when ready,” said Buys.

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