"At the moment, India is our number one growth market," Mxit chairman Michael Jordaan told the weekly Sunday Times here as he expanded on the company's internationalisation strategy.
"Part of our rollout strategy is to be in 11 local (Indian) languages in the next six months, with a good user base in each of those 11 regions. The goal we are working towards is 10 million active users by the end of this year," Jordaan said.
Conceding that the competition in the Indian mobile messaging market was strong, Jordaan said the other players were almost exclusively focused on the smartphone market, while Mxit worked across all platforms.
Jordaan also said that its strongest competitor was the vanilla SMSD, which had the cheapest SMS rates in the world.
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"Changing that behaviour from SMS to chat-based communication via Mxit will be most challenging and exciting," he said.
"The three significant revenue streams we see are advertising, market research, and creating customised app solutions for enterprises. We may also look at introducing paid services like stickers and ringtones down the line," he told the weekly.
After launching on January 28 in Hyderabad, Mumbai, and Delhi, Mxit will now be placing greater focus on localisation.
"The 35 Indian states and territories are so different in their culture and diversity - they are more like individual countries, so we've got enough to keep us busy here for some time," Jordaan said.