Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • SigFig Buys SmartWealth from UBS.

Around the web

  • Compass Plus migrates Brazilian prepaid card issuer, BPP, to its platform.
  • UBS shutters its robo advisor, SmartWealth, selling technology to SigFig.
  • Azimo forges strategic partnership with African payments business, Interswitch Group.
  • BehavioSec unveils its Behavioral Biometrics Platform, which boosts security with invisible, continuous authentication.
  • PayPal’s Xoom partners with Ria Money Transfer to accelerate global expansion in 86 countries.
  • Bluefin and SoftPoint partner for comprehensive PCI-Validated P2PE solution for POS systems.
  • NCR appoints Andre Fernandez as Chief Financial Officer.
  • Kony teams with Payveris to help banks deliver digital money movement services.
  • Cryptoline News: Payfone’s technology now used to prevent SIM swap attacks.

This post will be updated throughout the day as news and developments emerge. You can also follow all the alumni news headlines on the Finovate Twitter account.

“Skills Can Be Learned, but Values and Character Matter Most.” Ghela Boskovich on #WomenInTech

“Skills Can Be Learned, but Values and Character Matter Most.” Ghela Boskovich on #WomenInTech

Ghela_Boskovich_women_in_tech“Don’t tolerate disrespect or discrimination against you or anyone else. Don’t wallow in imposter syndrome because someone gaslights you. Don’t apologize and don’t explain/justify/mitigate your existence in the room. Be accountable, and hold others accountable for themselves.” Ghela Boskovich, head of fintech/regtech partnerships, Rainmaking Innovation, spent the last ten years focused on business development for core insurance and banking system solutions, and is the founder of FemTechGlobal that bridges the gender gap in fintech and the financial services industry. We speak to her about her career, inspirations and advice for fellow #WomenInTech.

Finovate: How did you start your career?

Ghela Boskovich: In grad school, unbeknownst to me, my committee chair put me forward for an internship with the state utility commission. The phone call telling me I got it was a total surprise. That started my journey into rate-of-return and pricing regulation modeling. My career took a bit of a detour from regulatory analysis, but the path eventually lead to being involved in tech business development. Exposure to core policy admin systems for insurance bled into dynamic pricing solutions for financial services. Pricing, for me, came full circle. It introduced me to the ins and outs of core banking systems, strategies for product development, looking at the whole architectural landscape of product workflows and processes. It was the beginning of my love affair with fintech. Now with regtech playing such a key role in the industry, my career-long romance with regulatory and policy impact is in full bloom.

Finovate: What sparked your interest in fintech?

Boskovich: I was head hunted to join a fintech dynamic pricing solution company to help build out the business pipeline. Fintech, as a hashtag, was still a nascent term at that time. My history with pricing modeling and the fact that I was working with tech that automated relationship pricing created an atmosphere for my curiosity to flourish. I had the perfect perch from which to see how systems, data, modeling, product and customer all fit into a puzzle; pieces which could take different shapes depending on how they were deployed or organized. That puzzle fascinates me, and now all I do is play with these puzzle pieces.

Finovate: What was your lightbulb moment?

Boskovich: There are a few moments in my life when the spotlight suddenly shone on truth, but most of the time it’s little candles that have flickered here and there, one or two being lit by a conversation with colleagues and peers, that combined to eventually light up the room enough to remove the shadows in the corners: the slow dawning of realization. Oddly enough, most of those have revolved around language, grammar, and sentence construct. I see fintech as an alphabet of sorts, piecing it together to craft a sentence (workflow) that has meaning (purpose and output/product and service). The tech itself is built by (logic) language, the way it integrates and speaks to other systems is a communications structure. It all maps back to that, and we’re in a position to refine the language of financial services through fintech.

Finovate: What inspires you?

Boskovich: Language. I adore language and its power, and how the careful, conscious use of language can inspire others. Language of course is a double-edged sword, it can be the most beautiful, constructive, inclusive thing, or it destroys, condemns, and reveals the ugliness inside. Lately I’m trying to pay attention to the former use of language, and in our industry I’m seeing more and more of it inspiring people to be open to change, embrace diversity, and include others who’ve previously been on the sidelines. The language of collaboration is inspiring: improving service through fintech collaboration, expanding inclusion to reach the un- and underbanked, empowering through personal insights with an aim towards financial health. How we talk about our industry is becoming more positive, and that is inspiring.

Finovate: Why is the #WomenInTech movement important?

Boskovich: Taxation without representation is tyranny. At the fundamental level of social organization, the notion that anyone would submit to a government taxation scheme without due representation is antithetical to the idea of democracy. That’s how I see #WomenInTech: a push towards fair representation and say in how tech is deployed, especially as tech as policy is a reality. Women are 51% of the population, and women control 80% of (all and any type of) household discretionary spending. We are a distinct minority in deciding how the money system is designed or run, it impacts us disproportionately to our representation in the industry. That smacks of tyranny. There are myriad business cases for women in tech, so if we’re driven by ROI, there’s justification aplenty. There is, however, a more fundamental reason: representation and justice.

Finovate: What piece of advice would you give women starting their careers in fintech?

Boskovich: Find your tribe. Seek out those that would challenge your assumptions, those who will teach you, and those who will encourage you to do the crazy, irrational, new thing – but who have similar core values and respect for others. They are out there, and they’ll be the best safety net and cheerleading squad you could ask for. Don’t tolerate disrespect or discrimination against you or anyone else. Don’t wallow in imposter syndrome because someone gaslights you. Don’t apologize and don’t explain/justify/mitigate your existence in the room. Be accountable, and hold others accountable for themselves. Fintech is like any other industry (albeit with a dearth of women), and like in any other industry, skills can be learned, but values and character matter most.

Deserve Raises $17 Million in Equity Funding

Deserve Raises $17 Million in Equity Funding

Credit-building payment card innovator Deserve just closed $17 million in equity funding this week. Contributors to the round include new investor Sallie Mae, as well as existing backers Accel, Pelion, Aspect Ventures, and Mission Holdings. This brings the company’s combined debt and equity funding to $95.5 million.

The California-based company will use the funds to build out its platform and add partners to its reward programs. The company currently offers users deals with six partners, including Amazon Prime, T-Mobile, and Wikipedia.

Originally known as SelfScore, Deserve rebranded in 2017 to enhance its focus on serving college students and Generation Z. The company offers Mastercard-branded credit cards for young, financially underserved consumers and others with thin credit files. The cards are made to appeal to international students and others, such as the company’s Founder and CEO Kalpesh Kapadia, who have recently moved to the U.S. and are having difficulty accessing credit. When it came to applying for credit in the U.S., Kapadia told Business Insider, “I got rejected every time. It was mostly for credit cards and student loans, given that I didn’t have a credit card history in the country.”

Deserve has three card options: Deserve Edu, which offers student benefits such as 1% back on all purchases and a free subscription to Amazon Prime Student; Deserve Pro, which offers no foreign transaction fees and 1% to 3% back on purchases; and Deserve Classic, which is specifically designed to help users build their credit.

The company leverages non-traditional data such as current financial health, education history, future employability, and projected potential earnings. Deserve combines those factors into a machine learning algorithm to determine applicants’ credit eligibility. The company’s cards are open to U.S. citizens, green card holders, registered international students, and H1B or L1 visa holders.

Founded in 2012, Deserve demoed a consumer behavior analytics service at FinovateFall 2014 under the name SelfScore. The company’s accounts are issued by Utah-based Celtic Bank. In April, Deserve closed on $50 million in debt financing to drive growth in accounts receivables.

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: Saylent

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: Saylent

A look at the companies demoing live at FinovateFall on September 24 through 26, 2018 in New York. Register today and save your spot.

Saylent, a leading provider of data analytics and marketing automation, enhances customer engagement with data-driven insights and relevant actions that continuously advance and evolve.

Features

  • Automated data analytics across all business lines
  • Actionable insights, predictive ROI, behavioral outcomes, and channel proficiency
  • Adaptive models for smarter targeting and improved customer impact

Why it’s great
The Saylent platform will allow you to finally unlock the power within your data and realize the promise of translating your data into real value.

Presenters

Damien Hayes, Senior Revenue Consultant
Hayes has two decades of experience committing his energy to financial institutions that want to realize the elusive promise of wealth within their data.
LinkedIn

 

Russ Prettitore, Chief Revenue Officer
Prettitore is a 25-year veteran in the fintech industry and leads Saylent’s business development efforts. Prior to Saylent, he worked at Mastercard, First Data, Metavante, and NYCE.
LinkedIn

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: PasswordPing

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: PasswordPing

A look at the companies demoing live at FinovateFall on September 24 through 26, 2018 in New York. Register today and save your spot.

PasswordPing helps organizations prevent attacks from compromised credentials by checking each login against billions of previously exposed username and password combinations that are on the dark web.

Features
PasswordPing’s compromised credential screening draws from a cloud database of billions of exposed login credentials, which enables our customers to screen employees and customer logins.

Why it’s great
Passwords are the weakest link in cybersecurity and customers rarely know that their credentials have been exposed. Screening for compromised credentials is an easy and safe way to protect them.

Presenters

Michael Wilson, Founder and CTO
Wilson has spent 20+ years in technology roles with an emphasis on security at organizations like Webroot, LogicNow, NASA, and a few other software companies.
LinkedIn

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: Prisma Campaigns

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: Prisma Campaigns

A look at the companies demoing live at FinovateFall on September 24 through 26, 2018 in New York. Register today and save your spot.

Prisma Campaigns is a marketing automation tool designed for banks that uses machine learning. The demonstration will show how to use it for a 100% digital onboarding experience.

Features

  • Close the gap between marketing and sales by letting the FIs administer everything from a central place
  • Define and deploy required conversion processes with a super-fast time to market

Why it’s great
With Prisma, FIs can effectively and quickly leverage machine learning to build a digital account opening process with customized offers from a central location.

Presenters

Felipe Gil, CEO, Prisma Campaigns
Gil is an executive with 10+ years in payments, ecommerce, and banking. He is focused on innovation and new technologies for financial institutions.
LinkedIn

 

Ana Ines Echavarren, CEO, Infocorp
Echavarren has a solid international background in the development and commercialization of software for the financial sector. She is focused on digital banking transformation.
LinkedIn

 

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: FI.SPAN

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: FI.SPAN

A look at the companies demoing live at FinovateFall on September 24 through 26, 2018 in New York. Register today and save your spot.

FI.SPAN enables banks to provide bank-branded ERP connectors and adapters to their most valuable commercial clients.

Features

  • Opens up the business banking channel of the future
  • Makes banking transactions automated and auditable
  • Manages permissions explicitly and securely

Why it’s great
APIs mean business.

Presenters

Lisa Shields, CEO and Founder
Shields is the founder and Chief Executive Officer at FI.SPAN, where she leads the company with a dual emphasis on people and product. She is an engineer by trade and an entrepreneur at heart.
LinkedIn

 

Clayton Weir, Co-Founder, Chief Strategy Officer
Weir is the co-founder and Chief Strategy Officer at FI.SPAN, leading product strategy, partnerships with ERPs, and marketing.
LinkedIn

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: Ak Bars Digital Technologies

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: Ak Bars Digital Technologies

A look at the companies demoing live at FinovateFall on September 24 through 26, 2018 in New York. Register today and save your spot.

Ak Bars Digital Technologies provides a payments video validation SDK for financial institutions and fintechs to upgrade their level of customer experience.

Features

  • New way to interact with clients
  • Plug & play technology
  • Inexpensive solution

Why it’s great
Ak Bars Digital Technologies’ solution helps FIs develop an unhindered payment environment.

Presenters

Ilya Velder, MBA, Head of Strategy, Managing Director
Velder has more than 10 years of experience in banking (strategy, digital, project financing, direct debt, investments). He is also a lecturer at Innopoilis University in Kazan.
LinkedIn

 

Damir Galiev, MBA, Business Development
Galiev has more than six years in banking experience (digital, business discovery, investments).
LinkedIn

 

 

 

Yaroslav Shuvaev, Head of R&D
Shuvaev has more than 10 years of experience in digital business (product design, UX/UI, AI, fintech). He is also a lecturer at British Higher School Art and Design in Moscow.
LinkedIn

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: Spreedly

FinovateFall Sneak Peek: Spreedly

A look at the companies demoing live at FinovateFall on September 24 through 26, 2018 in New York. Register today and save your spot.

Spreedly gives you one connection to more transactions. With the Spreedly payments infrastructure, you can use tokenized card data to transact with virtually any payment API or gateway worldwide.

Features

  • Connect payment systems to partners to scale scope of offer
  • Process transactions even when multiple merchants are involved
  • Build innovative payments solutions on a powerful, complete infrastructure

Why it’s great
Spreedly’s PCI-compliant payments infrastructure helps teams build innovative payment solutions that support their unique, growing, and global businesses.

Presenters

Justin Benson, CEO
Benson has helped drive Spreedly’s dramatic growth via a successful pivot, fundraising, and evolution of the company’s go-to-market strategy. He has a strong sales and technical background.
LinkedIn

 

Daniel Wideman, VP of Product
Wideman has two decades of experience in high-tech as a manager and business executive specializing in product strategy, product management, software development, strategic partnerships, and business development for startup and high growth companies.
LinkedIn

Finovate Heads East this Fall

Finovate Heads East this Fall

For the first time, Finovate heads east for three events this fall. Each event features a unique agenda focusing on regional financial services trends and technology, plus insights and analysis of fintech on a global scale.

With FinovateFall less than a month away, the complete roster of 80+ demoing organizations, including stealth companies, is now available online. With the amount of interest in AI right now, you can expect to see many products and services focusing on chatbots, virtual agents, and business intelligence on stage. 

The FinovateAsia demo lineup has recently grown to include two stealth companies and other exciting additions. See a preview of their efforts here.

Additional demoers and speakers will be announced throughout September. In the meantime, check out key speakers from Alipay, WeLab, ANZ, Startupbootcamp and more.

This week we’re also happy to announce the first wave of demoers for the launch of FinovateAfrica. From insurance coverage for crops using satellite imagery to a move for open banking, these companies illustrate the unique fintech emerging from Africa to address equally unique needs.

More information on these fall events and how to get involved is available at Finovate.com.

Diebold Nixdorf Receives $650 Million Capital Commitment

Diebold Nixdorf Receives $650 Million Capital Commitment

Financial services, software, and hardware provider Diebold Nixdorf secured a commitment of $650 million in capital this week. The loan is coming from two unidentified, institutional lenders and repayment is due in August 2022.

The Ohio-based company will use the loan to acquire remaining shares of Diebold Nixdorf, repay debt, and fund its DN Now operational improvement plan. The loan is expected to be completed within the coming days.

Bloomberg reported earlier this month that the company may be experiencing a “potential liquidity crisis” and that “Diebold is trying to negotiate easier terms with its lenders, the second change in four months, to allow for greater leverage in its debt covenants.”

Diebold Nixdorf demoed on the Finovate stage alongside Zenmonics at FinovateFall 2014, showcasing an in-lobby terminal. Founded in 1859, the company is partnered with almost all of the world’s top 100 banks and most of the top 25 global retailers. Diebold Nixdorf’s employees help bring solutions to more than 130 countries.

A Framework for Your 2019 Fintech Strategy

A Framework for Your 2019 Fintech Strategy

FinovateFall is going beyond the demos again this year to bring you more content. In addition to two days of live demos from 80 fintech companies, we’ll have an extra discussion day to help you break down and digest some of the new technologies. You’ll also have a chance to present your own thoughts and questions to fintech thought leaders.

The discussion day will take place on September 26, following two days of demos on September 24 and 25, at the Marriott Marquis Times Square in New York. These are the conversations that will shape your bank’s 2019 strategy, so be sure to register.

Here is just a handful of topics we’ll cover:

The future of payments

Payments have changed since the dawn of fintech. However, many old habits, such as writing checks and swiping magstripe credit cards, have not changed. Other ideas, such as mobile wallets and tap-to-pay technologies have struggled to gain ground. We’ll discuss these thoughts, as well as voice-driven payments, new technologies, and how millennials are determining the future of digital payments.

Digital transformation

Is digital transformation simply a buzzword or is it a requirement for success and survival in 2019? Digital Transformation involves a broad scope of banks’ operations and we’ll have a chance to hear the experts break down what it means to them and why they think it’s worth paying attention to.

Cybersecurity and risk management

In order to stay one step ahead of hackers, techniques in cybersecurity are constantly advancing by leveraging technologies such as AI and the blockchain. We’ll host a team of analysts, bankers, and hackers as they discuss the threats and opportunities in this space.

Voice banking

AI, natural language processing, conversational banking, and chatbots have bubbled to the top as some of the hottest new fintech trends this year. Voice has been called the next user interface and there’s been plenty of discussion on how consumers will usher in the new era of conversational banking. We’ll hear from banks, analysts, and successful startups on developments they’ve seen in this space and advice they have on where to invest for the future.

Blockchain uses and crypto exchanges

It wouldn’t be a fintech conference without a blockchain discussion– and for good reason. The enabling technology has opened up new possibilities for old banking ideas such as currency, payments, contracts, audit compliance, and more. If you’re feeling behind on leveraging blockchain opportunities, be sure to tune into one of these sessions. And don’t miss discussions on crypto exchanges– because the blockchain and cryptocurrencies are way more than just bitcoin.

Building partnerships

While we can’t settle the build vs. buy dilemma for you, we will offer up our thoughts on the importance of partnerships in banking and fintech. Most fintechs need banks to survive, and many banks thrive off the new ideas and capabilities that fintech companies open up for their institutions. These sessions will capture ideas on how to create a win-win partnership that focuses on utility and efficiency.

Data

From its role in alternative credit scoring technologies to the latest robo advisory tools, data has a place across the fintech sector. As evidenced by the title of our data session, Data as Oxygen, we think it’s a pretty important resource. We’ll hear from top-tier banks, startups, and other financial services companies as they discuss how they use data and where they see the data revolution headed next.

Financing

As a staple banking activity, lending will take one of the starring roles in our discussion day. While lending basics have remained the same, new enabling technologies have recently opened up new opportunities in the space. Artificial intelligence and machine learning have changed the way underwriters look at risk and credit scoring, while point of sale financing technologies have advanced far beyond layaway thanks to real-time risk analyses. These are just some of the topics that will be featured on the Digital Lending Stage at FinovateFall next month.


We’ll also feature highlights such as:

  • Analyst all-stars
  • Debates on the future of digital financial services
  • Accelerator showcase

And be sure to check out our loaded list of 80 demoing companies that will take the stage on September 24 and 25. On the Finovate blog, we’re highlighting select companies in our Sneak Peek series to give you an advanced look at what to expect on stage.