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Kartik Mehta moves out of Silverpush

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Mumbai: Kartik Mehta moves out of Silverpush. Mehta was with the company for nearly seven years. In his capacity he led the company’s overall revenue and operations function.

During his tenure, Silverpush grew its business from India across to SEA, Middle East, Africa, Europe and North America.  

Prior to Silverpush, Mehta worked with YouAppi (acquired by Affle) and Vserv.

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Ezeepay’s Banking Mitras fuel rural jobs and digital reach

Fintech network widens access, backs women entrepreneurs

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Shams Tabrej

MUMBAI: Ezeepay is taking banking to the back roads and bylanes, turning small shops into digital lifelines for communities that often sit outside the formal financial grid. Through its expanding Banking Mitra network, the fintech platform is not only delivering essential services to rural and semi urban pockets, it is also quietly stitching together new livelihoods along the way.

At the heart of the push is a simple idea. Equip local retailers with digital tools, and they become the neighbourhood’s go to counter for banking, payments, and insurance. From Aadhaar enabled withdrawals and domestic money transfers to bill payments and micro insurance, these outlets now offer a mini bank experience where traditional branches are few and far between.

The ripple effect is visible in the form of self employment. As the network grows across tier 2, tier 3, and rural India, it is opening doors for thousands of small entrepreneurs. Women, in particular, are stepping into the role of Banking Mitras, turning kirana counters and small retail points into hubs of financial activity.

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Ezeepay co-founder and chief executive Shams Tabrej, said the network is designed to do more than just process transactions. He noted that the initiative is helping women entrepreneurs gain confidence in fintech tools, strengthen their businesses, and create sustainable sources of income in their communities.

The effort also aligns with the government’s She Mart announcement in the Union Budget 2026, which aims to promote women led enterprises and self help group businesses. Ezeepay’s approach combines digital infrastructure, financial literacy training, and income opportunities, giving local retailers the tools to grow while bringing more people into the formal financial system.

With its last mile model, the company is betting that the next wave of digital adoption will not come from big cities, but from the country’s smaller towns and villages. And if its Banking Mitras have their way, the future of finance may arrive not through a bank branch, but across the counter of the local shop.

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