Case Study
Report of the Findings from the LAPO Client Exit Study: Nigeria 2003
Why are clients leaving Life Above Poverty Organization's microfinance program?
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30 pages
This paper describes a client-exit study that was designed to advance the implementation of the Life Above Poverty Organization (LAPO) imp-act project. The study aimed to:
- Find out the reasons for clients' withdrawal from LAPO;
- Serve as a learning process towards the development of imp-act assessment systems.
The study used:
- Quantitative surveys;
- Focus group discussions;
- In-depth individual interviews.
The data analysis focused on:
- The profile of the exit clients;
- Their responses to issues considered helpful and problematic during their years with LAPO;
- Possible relationships between these responses and the clients' rural-urban location, poverty level, business type and the number of loans they had taken before leaving LAPO.
The exit reasons, as per the analysis, included:
- Too small loans with too short interval between repayments;
- Inefficient loan disbursement;
- The burden of paying for others who had defaulted;
- Expulsion from unions;
- Poor business performance;
- Wrong client-targeting and inefficient service from staff.
Finally, the study highlights that:
- Loan size is an important factor;
- Wrong targeting of clients is a costly proposition;
- The inability of the staff to follow strict procedures of client selection led to the inclusion of clients who did not value the loan offered by LAPO;
- The distribution of ex-clients was skewed in favor of urban areas;
- The organization has now adopted a simple and regular client-exit monitoring procedure.
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