MobiVi Establishing Credit Lending, Micro Donations, and Allied Services in Vietnam Using Telecom Technologies

By Hau Lee, Christopher Tang, Jawad Masood
2014 | Case No. GS82 | Length 20 pgs.
In 1984, Trung Dung fled political persecution in Vietnam, the country of his birth, to arrive in the United States as a refugee with only $2 in his pocket. Over the next two decades, he proved his mettle as one of the most astute and successful Vietnamese-American entrepreneurs. Although Dung had never thought that he would return to Vietnam, the instinctive entrepreneur inside him recognized the opportunities presented by country’s rapidly developing and modernizing economy. Dung returned in 2007 to found MobiVi, an Electronic Financial Transactions (EFT) firm. This case explores the intersection of mobile network operators, the ETF industry, and social entrepreneurs to pursue an innovative approach to providing financial services to the approximately 2 billion people worldwide who lacked access. The focus is on three of MobiVi’s areas: the Nationwide Distribution System (NDS) unit, MobiVi’s innovative offerings around financial services (MFS), and MobiVi Foundation. In 2012, Dung was looking at how to address market inefficiencies, help MobiVi’s investors and business partners create and capture more value, and make credit more accessible to the middle and lower income classes in Vietnam. Dung was optimistic given the positive state of the Vietnamese economy, the patented MobiVi payments processing technology, and the most recent developments in telecommunication technologies.

Learning Objective

To learn about how MobiVi, a Vietnamese Electronic Financial Transactions firm, pursued an innovative approach to providing financial services.
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