For most Nigerians, the end of the month brings a familiar sense of dread, not just because the sapa might be looming, but because of the mental gymnastics required to settle utility bills.
From failing webpages and forgotten passwords to the literal pitch black moment when you realize you forgot the electricity token, the process has traditionally been built for the banks’ convenience, not the customers’.
However, one Abuja-based customer, Temitope Aliu, an entrepreneur living in the Garki area, says she has finally found a cheat code to the monthly stress.
“It’s Not Just the Money; It’s the Fatigue”
“Let me be real with you,” Temitope shared in a recent testimonial. “The one monthly task I absolutely dread, apart from deep cleaning my apartment, is paying bills. It’s not just the money; it’s the process. Endless sheets of unpaid dues, different websites, and that annoying moment when you realize you paid the same bill twice.”
Temi’s experience reflects a common frustration in the Nigerian digital banking space: complex interfaces that expect users to have superhuman memory and unlimited patience.
“A lot of organizations build systems that work for them, not for us. Nothing remembers you or makes your life easier,” she remarked.
The Saturday Morning Switch
The game-changer for Temi came late last year on a Saturday morning when her motivation to handle a stack of bills was at zero.
Out of sheer frustration, she decided to test the UBA Mobile Banking App, curious to see if the bank’s “It’s All About U” slogan was more than just a marketing gimmick.
The Result? A Three-Tap Revolution:
- Electricity: Paid in exactly three taps.
- Cable Subscription: Paid in two taps.
- The “Magic” Moment: The app automatically saved the details.
“The next month, all I had to do was select, confirm, and go,” Temi told techeconomy. “No re-entering account numbers or searching for IDs. It was literally all about my time, my convenience, and my peace of mind.”
In a highly competitive fintech landscape where user experience (UX) is the new battlefield, United Bank for Africa (UBA) is doubling down on Customer-Centric Design.
By reducing the friction of repetitive tasks, like saving decoder numbers and meter IDs, the bank is moving away from internal process thinking toward a lifestyle integration model.
For customers like Temi, the value isn’t just in the transaction; it’s in the reclaimed time.
As she puts it: “A bank that actually designs around my life, not around their own internal processes? That’s super rare and valuable.”




