The digital wallet divide: Why Sri Lanka’s young startups should master Fintech

Tuesday, 10 March 2026 00:10 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

 


In the bustling digital  marketplace of Sri Lanka, a paradox is  emerging. Imagine a 23-year-old  undergraduate running a thriving clothing  brand entirely through Instagram. Her  content is viral, her engagement is high, and  her designs sell out in minutes. Yet, when a  customer asks to pay, the seamless digital  experience hits a wall. She hesitates,  eventually sending a text: "Please bank  transfer and send a screenshot of the slip." 

This scenario highlights a critical skill gap  in our startup ecosystem: a generation of  "digital natives" who are masters of social  media marketing but remain novices in  Financial Technology (Fintech). While  young entrepreneurs are eager to launch  ventures, their lack of knowledge regarding  digital payment infrastructures—specifically  LankaQR and "easy pay" online  gateways—is becoming a silent killer of  scalability. 

The irony of the "Digital Native"  

It is a peculiar irony that a generation  capable of editing 4K video on a smartphone  finds the concept of a payment gateway  daunting. Many young founders view digital payments as complex systems reserved for  large corporations like supermarkets or  established retail chains. They operate under  the misconception that cash or manual bank  transfers are "safer" and "free," unaware that  they are trading efficiency for outdated  habits. The result is a startup culture that  looks modern on the surface but runs on the  archaic rails of the traditional banking past. 

The hidden cost of the skill gap 

The reluctance to adopt fintech is not just an  inconvenience; it is a business risk. The  "manual verification" model—where an  entrepreneur must pause their work to check  a banking app for a fund transfer—creates a  bottleneck. It limits sales volume; one can  check five receipts a day, but what about five hundred? Furthermore, the lack of  professional invoicing makes these  youth-led startups appear amateurish to  premium customers. By clinging to the  "screenshot method," young entrepreneurs  are inadvertently placing a ceiling on their  own growth. 

Unlocking the power of LankaQR 

For the undergraduate entrepreneur setting  up a stall at a university fair or a pop-up  market in Colombo, LankaQR is the  ultimate equaliser. Introduced by the Central  Bank of Sri Lanka, this interoperable  standard allows a business to accept  payments from almost any local banking app  (like Q+, SOLO, or Frimi) just by displaying  a printed code. 

The gap here is one of awareness, not  accessibility. Students often fear expensive  hardware rentals for Point-of-Sale (POS)  machines. They need to be taught that  LankaQR requires zero hardware  investment, offers instant money crediting,  and carries transaction fees significantly  lower than traditional credit cards. It is the  perfect tool for the "lean startup"  methodology we study in our degree  programs. 

The "one-click" standard: Mastering online gateways 

For ventures operating purely in the digital  realm, the "Easy Pay" revolution is the  missing link. Services that generate simple  payment links (Internet Payment Gateways)  allow entrepreneurs to send a digital invoice  via WhatsApp or email. The customer  simply clicks, enters card details, and the  transaction is complete. 

This is where the skill gap hurts the most.  Without this knowledge, students lose out on  impulse buys. When a customer has to log  into their bank app, add a beneficiary, and type in account numbers, the friction is often  too high. They abandon the cart. Mastering  "easy pay" tools is about capturing that  revenue before the customer changes their  mind. 

The "flawless transaction" experience 

Ultimately, the goal of any startup is to solve  a customer's problem, and the payment  process is the final hurdle of that solution. A  "flawless transaction"—where money  changes hands instantly and  securely—builds immense trust. In an era  where scams are prevalent, a professional  payment link or a registered LankaQR code  signals legitimacy. It tells the customer,  "This is a real business, not just a hobby." 

A call to curriculum reform 

As we pursue our Entrepreneurship degrees,  it is clear that our curriculum must evolve to  meet this reality. It is no longer enough to  teach business model canvases or marketing  theories alone. We must integrate fintech  literacy into our studies. Workshops on  digital onboarding, understanding Merchant  Discount Rates (MDR), and navigating  payment security should be as fundamental  as Accounting 101. 

Sri Lanka’s next great startup will not be  built on cash-on-delivery. It will be built by  an entrepreneur who understands that a  seamless payment is the ultimate act of  customer service. It is time for us to close  the gap, swipe left on cash, and click  'confirm' on the future.

(The author is a Final Year Undergraduate, Department of Entrepreneurship, University of Sri Jayewardenepura)

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