Velmie and Flot Partner to Accelerate Payments and Banking Infrastructure in Africa

Quadri Adejumo
By
Quadri Adejumo
Senior Journalist and Analyst
Quadri Adejumo is a senior journalist and analyst at Techparley, where he leads coverage on innovation, startups, artificial intelligence, digital transformation, and policy developments shaping Africa’s...
- Senior Journalist and Analyst
6 Min Read

Digital banking integrator, Velmie has announced a partnership with Flot, an emerging fintech building a next-generation neobank for consumers and businesses across Africa.

This is a move aimed at addressing long-standing execution and infrastructure challenges in the continent’s financial technology sector.

The collaboration reflects a growing shift in African fintech, where success is increasingly defined not only by product innovation but by the ability to execute complex, regulated digital banking systems across fragmented markets.

“Launching regulated fintech products in African markets requires more than software — it requires execution capability across integrations, compliance, payment rails, and operational delivery. With Flot, we are helping deliver a scalable digital banking platform designed to operate reliably in complex, multi-market environments,” said Slava Ivashkin, CEO & Founder, Velmie.

What you need to know 

Across Africa, fintech operators continue to face structural barriers including disjointed payment ecosystems, difficult mobile money integrations, regulatory complexity, and the challenge of scaling from minimum viable product (MVP) stages into fully operational banking platforms.

Under the partnership, Flot will leverage Velmie’s integration-first delivery model to accelerate the rollout of its digital banking platform.

The approach spans core infrastructure components including payment rails, card issuing systems, KYC/AML workflows, mobile money connectivity, and production-grade digital banking channels.

The platform is being designed with African market realities in mind, including mobile-first user behaviour, agent banking networks, hybrid payment ecosystems, and locally adapted financial infrastructure.

Rather than operating as a traditional software vendor, Velmie positions itself as a services-led execution partner, responsible for solution architecture, integration management, implementation delivery, go-live support, and ongoing operational stability.

Building Financial Products for Complex Markets

Velmie’s ecosystem integrates across card networks, payment processors, banking rails, mobile money providers, and compliance vendors. This enables fintech operators to reduce time-to-market while maintaining regulatory alignment and operational control.

The platform will support both consumer and enterprise financial services, including:

  • Digital wallets with onboarding and identity verification
  • Virtual and physical card issuing
  • Mobile money funding and transfer systems
  • Merchant payment collection tools
  • Utility payments and airtime services
  • Bank transfers and account linking
  • Agent banking and cash-in/cash-out networks

This breadth reflects the increasing demand for unified infrastructure that can support multiple financial services without requiring fragmented third-party systems.

Industry Shift Towards Modular Financial Infrastructure

Industry observers say the partnership highlights a broader transformation in African fintech architecture.

Instead of standalone products, operators are increasingly adopting modular, API-driven systems supported by execution partners capable of handling full lifecycle delivery, from integration through to live operations.

This shift is being driven by the complexity of scaling regulated fintech products across multiple jurisdictions, where compliance requirements, payment interoperability, and infrastructure reliability remain significant hurdles.

A Competitive Fintech Landscape Defined by Execution

According to Ivashkin, the collaboration with Flot is focused on delivering a platform capable of operating reliably across multiple markets while maintaining regulatory and technical robustness.

As competition intensifies across African fintech markets, infrastructure readiness and execution capacity are emerging as key differentiators.

For fintech startups, EMIs, and digital banking providers, the ability to move beyond prototypes into stable, compliant, and scalable systems is increasingly shaping long-term success.

The Velmie–Flot partnership signals a broader industry reality in Africa’s evolving financial ecosystem, that execution may now matter as much as innovation.

Talking Points

The partnership between Velmie and Flot highlights a critical but often under-discussed reality in African fintech: building products is no longer the main challenge, but executing and scaling them across fragmented financial systems is.

Velmie’s integration-first approach is particularly significant because many African neobank and fintech initiatives struggle not at ideation stage, but at the point of connecting payment rails, compliance systems, and mobile money infrastructure into a stable production environment.

At Techparley, we see this as a clear signal that the next phase of fintech growth in Africa will be defined less by product launches and more by infrastructure orchestration and delivery capability.

The emphasis on modular, API-driven systems also reflects how financial services in Africa are evolving into interconnected ecosystems rather than standalone platforms. This makes execution partners like Velmie increasingly central to how fintechs scale responsibly across multiple markets.

As more fintechs like Flot emerge, there is a clear opportunity for deeper collaboration between infrastructure providers, regulators, and local operators to reduce fragmentation.

If executed well, this model could significantly shorten the path from fintech idea to fully operational neobank across Africa’s diverse financial landscape.

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Senior Journalist and Analyst
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Quadri Adejumo is a senior journalist and analyst at Techparley, where he leads coverage on innovation, startups, artificial intelligence, digital transformation, and policy developments shaping Africa’s tech ecosystem and beyond. With years of experience in investigative reporting, feature writing, critical insights, and editorial leadership, Quadri breaks down complex issues into clear, compelling narratives that resonate with diverse audiences, making him a trusted voice in the industry.
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