Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com:

  • “BBVA Acquires Holvi for Undisclosed Sum”
  • “Swipely Rebrands as Upserve to Focus Exclusively on Restaurants”

Around the web

  • TransferTo forges strategic partnership with emerging markets telecom, Millicom.
  • Digital Insight adds Android Fingerprint ID to its mobile banking app.
  • Nomis Solutions hires Frank Bria as vice president and go-to-market leader for new presentment optimization and personalized pricing initiative.
  • Xero extends partnership with MidPoint to make cross-border procurement easier.
  • Hyperwallet adds two new VPs: Tomas Likar and Daniel Berardo. See Hyperwallet at FinDEVr 2016 in New York this month.
  • Kasasa accountholders can now use their institution-issued credit card to qualify for rewards.
  • USA Today interviews Brendon McQueen, CEO of Tuition.io.
  • BioCatch granted new patent to detect user ID on electronic devices.
  • Lighter Capital has funded seven new clients so far this year.

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.

 

DoubleNet Pay, Token Earn Spots at Plug and Play Accelerator

DoubleNet Pay, Token Earn Spots at Plug and Play Accelerator

PlugandPlay_homepage

Two Finovate alums – DoubleNet Pay and Token – are among the 23 startups picked for the third cohort of Plug and Play’s Financial Technology Platform of Innovation.

The companies will spend three months of mentorship, “structured deal review, pilots, investments, and even acquisitions” with Plug and Play Fintech’s “ecosystem” of corporate partners. Companies are chosen by members of the Plug and Play venture team, as well as VC and corporate judges. The 23 startups will pitch their technologies to investors and industry professionals at Plug and Play’s EXPO in May.

Scott Robinson, founder and director of Plug and Play FinTech, pointed to its new corporate sponsors as a key to the program’s continued success. “This unprecedented level of support will result in new levels of innovation from our startups.”

See a list of all 23 companies.

DoubleNetPay_logo_box_snaggit_resizeDoubleNet Pay helps people better manage their finances by focusing on cash flow, or what the company calls “the problem of having ‘too much month’ at the end of the money.” The company’s technology tracks expenses and due dates, and schedules payments around payday cycles so that users know exactly how much discretionary spending they really have. Founded in 2013 and headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, DoubleNet Pay was highlighted in Human Resource Executive Online last fall in a look at workplace wellness. The company, led by co-founders Brian Cosgray and Cody Laird, demonstrated its platform at FinovateSpring 2015. Check out our Finovate Debut feature from last August.

Token-LogoToken also made its Finovate debut at FinovateSpring 2015 (read our debut profile of Token), and followed up with an appearance at FinDEVr 2015 in San Francisco later in the year.  The company offers an end-to-end, secure payment system that uses digital signatures to authorize transactions instead of both “shared secrets” like passwords and account numbers, as well as traditional tokenization. Launched in 2015, Token was a winner at Innotribe 2015 New York last summer (along with fellow alums, SizeUp and Pendo Systems), and was a finalist in the BBVA Open Talent competition in August.  The company is based in Palo Alto, California.

Update: An earlier version stated the duration of the program at three weeks.

SocietyOne Appoints Former WestPac Exec as CEO

SocietyOne Appoints Former WestPac Exec as CEO

SocietyOneHomepage2016

SocietyOneCEOAustralia-based P2P lender SocietyOne announced it has appointed Jason Yetton, former senior executive at Westpac, as its new CEO.

Prior to his position at Westpac, he played a variety of roles at BT Financial Group. Yetton, a graduate of Harvard Business School’s General Manager program, was recently selected as a member of the federal government’s fintech advisory group.

Yetton will begin in his new role on Monday. SocietyOne’s current CEO & co-founder Matt Symons will assume a new role as chief strategy and innovation officer.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, Yetton will face a number of challenges in his new role:

  • Building awareness of P2P lending (a concept that has been slow to take root in Australia) and ramping up marketing to promote the SocietyOne brand as a leader in the space.
  • Adding retail investors to the SocietyOne platform
  • Preparing the company for a potential IPO

Since launching in 2012, SocietyOne has matched more than $78 million in loans. This week alone, the startup originated a record $8.7 million in loans. According to The Australian Business Review, The company has secured 2% to 3% of the nation’s $100 billion unsecured lending market.

SocietyOne launched ClearMatch at FinovateAsia 2012 in Singapore. ClearMatch connects borrowers with lenders by allowing investors to bid at different interest rates on a single loan. This minimizes data entry for the borrower while broadening the reach of investor portfolios.

Personal Capital Exceeds $2 Billion AUM

Personal Capital Exceeds $2 Billion AUM

PersonalCapitalHomepage2016

This week, digital wealth management and advisory platform Personal Capital surpassed $2 billion in assets under management (AUM), up from $1.6 billion in November of last year.

In a press release, the San Francisco-based company reported that one third (just north of $660 million) of the total AUM comes from clients with more than $1 million in assets held at Personal Capital. Furthermore, half of Personal Capital’s one million clients come from traditional adviser relationships, while the other half stem from simpler, self-service brokerages.

On the Personal Capital platform, users aggregate an average of 15 different financial accounts. The company’s active members who track up to $100k in investable assets log into the platform on average of 12 times per month. Those who are tracking up to $1 million or more log in 17 times per month.

Read Personal Capital CEO Bill Harris’s announcement of the news on the company’s blog.

Personal Capital most recently presented to a crowd of developers at FinDEVr 2015 in San Francisco. The company launched One Click Investment Proposals at FinovateSpring 2014 in San Jose.


FinDEVr New York 2016 is coming up on March 29 & 30.Register today to save your seat.

WorkFusion Raises $14 Million Series C Round Led by Nokia Growth Partners

WorkFusion Raises $14 Million Series C Round Led by Nokia Growth Partners

WorkFusion_homepage_Mar2015

Here’s some investment news we missed when it broke in late December: WorkFusion, a company that combines machine learning and crowdsourcing to automate business processes, raised $14 million in Series C investment. The round was led by Nokia Growth Partners, and featured participation from existing investors Greycroft Partners, iNovia Capital, Mohr Davidow Ventures, and RTP Ventures.

The investment takes WorkFusion’s total capital to more than $36 million. The company says the new funding will help fuel its business development initiatives around the world.  

WorkFusion_stage_FF2014

Pictured: WorkFusion CEO Max Yankelvich demonstrating his company’s Active-Learning Automation technology at FinovateFall 2014 in New York.

Calling 2016 “the year of automation,” Yankelvich pointed out that WorkFusion’s customers have reduced operational costs by 60% and gained what he called “business agility.” For financial services companies, WorkFusion’s SaaS technology is deployed for customer onboarding, claims processing, and compliance, among other processes.

Among the more recent financial services companies to deploy WorkFusion’s technology is fellow Finovate alum, Markit, which announced its partnership with the machine learning specialist in February. The company has been profiled recently in the New York Business Journal, as well as in  AlleyWatch, which features a Q&A with WorkFusion VP of Marketing, Adam Devine.

Founded in 2010 and headquartered in New York City, WorkFusion demonstrated its Active-Learning Automation platform at FinovateFall 2014. Eighteen out of the top 20 information services businesses use WorkFusion’s technology, as do leading financial, global commerce, and business process outsourcing providers. Check out our Finovate Debut post featuring WorkFusion.

 

Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • “Personal Capital Exceeds $2 Billion AUM”
  • “WorkFusion Raises $14 Million Series C Round Led by Nokia Growth Partners”
  • “DoubleNet Pay, Token Earn Spots at Plug and Play Accelerator”
  • “SocietyOne Appoints Former WestPac Exec as CEO”

Around the web

  • Payoneer powers international payments for South American e-commerce merchant, Linio.
  • TSYS certifies the new mobile EMV solution from Handpoint.
  • Global Retail Banker interviews Dilip Rao, head of business development and operations for Ripple in the Asia-Pacific region.
  • “Micronotes Names Artificial Intelligence Innovator and MIT Expert Dr. Luis Perez-Breva to Board of Advisors”
  • “Avoka Named Top Ten FinTech Worldwide by KPMG”
  • Notable features Financeit’s COO, Casper Wong.

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.

CFPB Issues New Policy Encouraging Fintech Innovation

CFPB Issues New Policy Encouraging Fintech Innovation

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Guest post by Erica A.N. Kramer and Justin B. Hosie*
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On February 18, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) released the final version of its Policy on No-Action Letters. The policy is part of the CFPB’s Project Catalyst Initiative whose stated mission is to “support innovators in creating consumer-friendly financial producfpb project catalystcts and services.” The new policy is designed to further the initiative’s mission by allowing developers of new consumer financial services to submit a request to the CFPB for a “No-Action Letter” regarding their innovation’s regulatory compliance.

The most important feature of the No-Action Letter is that it will include a statement indicating that “[CFPB] staff has no present intention to recommend initiation of an enforcement or supervisory action against the requester in respect to the particular aspects of its product under the specific identified provisions and applications of statutes or regulations that are the subject of the [No-Action Letter].” In other words, a No-Action Letter provides an innovator with a green light indicating that the proposed product or service does not conflict with cited statutes or regulations.

mastercard pricelessIn fact, the Supplementary Information included with the policy goes so far as to indicate that CFPB staff would not recommend an enforcement or supervisory action against the holder of a No-Action Letter, absent new or extraordinary circumstances. To borrow from MasterCard’s commercials, the value of a regulatory green light from the CFPB in today’s environment is “Priceless.”

In addition to the No-Action Letter itself, the CFPB believes the new policy encourages informal preliminary discussions. This presents a unique opportunity to participate in an open dialogue with your regulator while still in the development stage. Ultimately, this dialogue will likely increase your chances of producing a final product perceived as both legally compliant and beneficial to consumers.

When the CFPB initially proposed the policy, some critics argued that requiring innovators to produce voluminous information and identify rules that may conflict with the product was overly burdensome. Unsurprisingly, the CFPB declined to remove this requirement in the final policy. Contrary to the way product development works in the real world, the CFPB expects you to either thoroughly analyze potential regulatory risks before launch, or face its wrath.

Since this policy is in its infancy, there is no way to know whether it will be efficient or effective. The CFPB admits it will only provide No-Action Letters in “exceptional circumstances.” However, that does not mean you should pass up the opportunity to request one, especially if you think you have something “exceptional” to offer.

We encourage you to view this policy as a useful tool in your arsenal. We recommend that you first engage in an objective and thorough analysis of the perceived risks and benefits of the new service. Once you’ve done so, contact a lawyer experienced in the fintech industry (hint, hint*) who can assist you in identifying potential regulatory pitfalls and help you draft a persuasive request for a No-Action Letter. While the process may seem overwhelming at the outset, having a No-Action Letter will allow you the freedom to move forward while avoiding the stress of costly regulatory enforcement activity.

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*Justin B. Hosie is a Partner at Hudson Cook LLP, licensed to practice law in Florida and Tennessee. Erica A.N. Kramer is an Associate at Hudson Cook, LLP, licensed to practice law in Florida. You can contact Justin for more information at (423) 490-7560 or jhosie@hudco.com.

Prosper Appoints USAA Exec as New CFO

Prosper Appoints USAA Exec as New CFO

ProsperHomepage2016

KimballUSAA2U.S. peer-to-peer lending platform Prosper announced it has selected David Kimball to take the seat of Macy Lee, who served as the company’s CFO from April 2014 until July of 2015. Kimball most recently held a position as a senior financial officer at USAA. Prior to that, he worked at Ford Motor Company where he held multiple finance-related roles. Kimball, a graduate of Brigham Young University, will begin working at Prosper on March 18.

This news comes about a month after the California-based company announced it raised its rates to keep up with both the Federal Reserve, which raised the benchmark rate by 25 basis points in December and its main competitor, Lending Club, which increased rates by an average of the same amount as the Fed.

Prosper presented at FinovateSpring 2009 as well as the inaugural Finovate in 2007.

Finovate Debuts: Innofis Enhances the UX for Banks and Customers

Finovate Debuts: Innofis Enhances the UX for Banks and Customers

InnofisHomepage2.16

Customers shouldn’t be the only ones enjoying a great user experience. That’s the driving factor behind Innofis, a company that furnishes a suite of digital banking tools providing a beautiful user experience for both bankers and their customers.

In 2012, the company saw an opportunity in offering digital banking services. The initial team, whose roots stem from banking, IT, and digital offerings, launched Innofis that same year. By the end of the year, they already had two customers, and they knew they were onto a great idea.

Company facts

  • Headquartered in Barcelona, Spain
  • Founded in 2012
  • Privately owned
  • 80+ employees
  • €6M in revenue
  • >3 million digital end customers (retail and corporate)

InnofisDemoIMG

The company’s back-end management tools make it simple for any bank employee to control banking campaigns across all channels. The company uses big data combined with contextual customer behavior to help banks extend relevant calls to action.

DMorenoWe caught up with the company’s CEO, David Moreno at FinovateEurope 2016 for an interview to learn more about Innofis.

Moreno, who has served as CEO of Innofis since 2012, started his career at a bank where he worked in retail and corporate banking, marketing, IT, and consulting. During his 11-year tenure, he saw and experienced many different functions of the bank.

Finovate: What problem does Innofis solve?
Moreno: Many banks are still in the process of either starting up their digital platform or looking for modules which complement their existing offer. Established banks are often struggling with legacy systems and little or no connection between the new digital channels and the more traditional ones. Innofis helps banks solve these issues by either implementing a complete digital platform or providing the missing parts with specific modules. Furthermore, banks face a challenge in keeping up with continuous market innovation, such as wearables, augmented reality and geolocation. Innofis keeps a tab on these developments and adds them to their digital service offering as they appear.

Finovate: Who are your primary customers?
Moreno: Our clients are banks. We are working with some of the world’s largest banks and have millions of their customers using our digital platforms.

InnofisOmnichannel
Innofis multi-channel interface

Finovate: How does Innofis solve the problem better?
Moreno: We do not necessarily propose a complete digital ‘reset’ for banks. We are mindful of the investments made and difficulty of infrastructure switching costs. Our modular approach is the ideal answer to this situation. We often actually reuse existing applications and provide an efficient combination between old and new.

Finovate: Tell us about your favorite implementation of your solution.
Moreno: We did recently have the opportunity to help a bank in the Middle East start from scratch and implement our entire range of digital channels (mobile, tablets, desktop, wearables) together with our administration platform that allows to manage completely the channels and the way they interact with their clients . It was great to see these go live and see customer usage rates jump up right away.

Dashboard

Innofis administration dashboard

Finovate: What in your background gave you the confidence to tackle this challenge?
Moreno: I have many years of experience working in banks. I do not approach the constant financial innovation as a threat for banks, but rather an opportunity to adapt existing resources and provide better service for banking clients. I believe that my background, together with a strong technical team who made our platform a reality, have allowed us to position ourselves as a trusted advisor and provider for banks.

Finovate: What are some upcoming initiatives from Innofis that we can look forward to over the next few months?
Moreno: We continue working on some ground-breaking modules that complement our platform. At FinovateEurope, we showed our approach of focusing on the UX for the people inside the bank who actually have to work with the systems. And the response has been tremendous. We believe banks understand now that a good customer-facing UX is a must. The real challenge now is to provide products that can actually be used easily and efficiently by the banks.

EditCampaignsGeolocationInnofis geofenced offer capability
CampaignsCampaign dashbaord

Finovate: Where do you see Innofis a year or two from now?
Moreno: We are on a road of international expansion. We are experiencing increasing demand from Asia, South America, Eastern Europe and others and we are planning to build out our organization in order to keep delivering the quality of implementation that customers have come to expect from us.


Innofis CEO David Moreno, along with David Falk, demoed the company’s Omnichannel Predictive Banking at FinovateEurope 2016 in London.

Expensify Leverages Uber Partnership to Create the Lazy Man’s Expense Report

Expensify Leverages Uber Partnership to Create the Lazy Man’s Expense Report

ExpensifyHomepage2016

As many startups seek to become the Uber of their field by creating easy and addictive user experiences, expense management startup Expensify has done just that by completely automating a portion of expense management.

The San Francisco-based company today announced it will power Uber’s new Auto-Expense feature. The new feature is part of Uber’s Business Profile selection that separates work rides from personal ones. Founder of Expensify and CEO David Barrett says, “Expensify is thrilled to partner with Uber on this awesome new feature to help our customers save time and money by making sure they never pay out of pocket for a business-related Uber ride again!”

In the Uber app settings, users connect their business profile with Expensify. From there, Uber business travel receipts are automatically emailed to Expensify for reimbursement.

UberAutoExpense

Expensify first partnered with ride-sharing service Uber in 2014 to automatically send an Uber driver to the airport when a user’s flight arrives. The company describes this capability, called SmartRides, as “the VIP travel experience for everyone.”

Last month Expensify launched a London office to fuel further European expansion. All new European-based users who sign up for Expensify before the end of May will be able to use the service for free until the end of the year.

Forbes named Expensify one of the Hottest Startups of 2015, and Fast Company has listed it as a Top 10 Most Innovative Company in 2015. At FinovateSpring 2013, the company’s CEO and founder David Barrett debuted Expensify Invoices.

Finovate Debuts: Designed for Women, Spiff Introduces its Social Savings Service

Finovate Debuts: Designed for Women, Spiff Introduces its Social Savings Service

Spiff_homepage_Feb2016

Spiff is a straightforward concept: a “simple and fun” savings service designed with women in mind. Founder and CEO Carl Wessmann credits the women in his life for helping him understand the importance of savings, and he’s returned the favor with a new technology that, as he explains it, “helps connect money with what it can accomplish” for users and their loved ones.

Spiff is poised to take advantage of the disconnect between the rising economic power of women and the fact that women are still a disproportionately small portion of the world’s savers and investors.

Spiff_stage_FEU2016

Spiff CMO Kristin Juland Møller and CEO Carl Wessmann demonstrated their technology at FinovateEurope 2016 in London.

“Our key demographic, women between 25 and 35, play an essential part in our mission to reduce wealth inequality,” said Spiff CMO Kristin Juland Møller. Noting that 1 in 4 millennial women are “already parents,” she pointed out that “by providing them with inspiration and savings tools they need, we will not only empower millions with good saving habits, but also empower future generations as they pass on their saving habits to their children.”

Spiff_image_0In Spiff’s Finovate debut, Møller showed three of Spiff’s key features:

  • Setting up a savings plan for oneself
  • Setting up a savings plan for a dependent
  • Sharing that savings plan with a relative, such as an aunt or grandparent

Møller presented the Spiff Dashboard, where she was able to choose between different types of savings plans (options included themes such as “Your Future,” “Your Kids,” and “Rainy Day”). The Savings Plan can be personalized with an image, as well as a description of the specific savings goal for the plan.

The user then chooses the amount of monthly savings to be automatically drawn from a connected account and set aside into either a savings account or a pre-selected investment fund. Choose a day of the month for the transaction and, after confirming the information, the savings plan is set.

“Saving is a family affair,” Møller said, showing next how a child’s savings plan built with Spiff could easily be shared with grandparents or other relatives via social media. “It’s something parents do for their kids, and grandparents do for their grandkids,” she said.

The stats

  • Founded in January 2015
  • Headquartered in Oslo, Norway
  • Carl Wessmann is CEO and founder
  • Raised $500,000 from investors in five countries

Spiff_Kristin_MollerHow it works

We sat down for a quick conversation with Møller during rehearsal day at FinovateEurope, and followed up with a few questions about Spiff, its focus on helping empower women financially, and what to look forward to from the company in 2016.

Finovate: What problem does Spiff solve?

Kristin Juland Møller: Spiff is a saving service, designed with women in mind. We want to empower women with smarter finance tools for saving, so we created a simple, social and fun savings app. Spiff connects money to what it can accomplish, for you and your loved ones. In simple, straightforward language. 

Finovate: Who are your primary customers?

Møller: Women 25-35.

Spiff-PR-Dashboard-iPhoneFinovate: How does Spiff solve the problem better?

Møller: You need to build products that people love, not products that will only make you more profit. That means that you need to design products for key demographics, and we choose to focus on a key demographic that has been widely neglected from banks for the past hundred years. It’s time we shake it up. 

Finovate: Tell us about your favorite implementation of Spiff.

Møller: Saving is a family affair. Grandparents save for their grandkids, parents for their kids, friends save for trips together, and young couples save for their first home. Spiff is a social savings app that allows you to share saving plans, give savings as a gift, and reinvent the charm of saving together. We cheer you on, and celebrate when you reach your goals!

Finovate: What in your background gave you the confidence to tackle this challenge? 

Møller: Our founders are strongly influenced by Nordic values, equality, and the universal notion that women and men are worth the same. Our one founder Calle has written a Facebook Note on why this is important in his life. Keyword: Women https://www.facebook.com/notes/carl-nicolai-wessmann/the-women-of-my-life/10153213470391190

Strong and independent women around us have taught us the value of kindness, fairness and empathy—and the importance of saving. Spiff is built on these values. 

Finovate: What are some upcoming initiatives from Spiff that we can look forward to over the next few months?

Møller: Testing has begun. And the early signs are that people love it. We are launching in Norway this year. Expansion will follow. We welcome everyone to join the Spiffy waitlist (www.getspiff.no), and be one of the first to try Spiff. We will also be part of one of the world’s best accelerators, TINC, in Silicon Valley.

Finovate: Where do you see Spiff a year or two from now?  

Møller: We will have empowered one million women with smarter savings. 


Check out Spiff’s demo video from FinovateEurope 2016.

Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • “Expensify Leverages Uber Partnership to Create the Lazy Man’s Expense Report”
  • “Finovate Debuts: Innofis Enhances the UX for Banks and Customers”
  • “Prosper Appoints USAA Exec as New CFO”

On FinDEVr.com

  • “PayStand to Power New Online Payments Service from ONE UP”

Around the web

  • Luxoft integrates P2P payment technology with connected, self-driving car.
  • Thomson Reuters teams up with Hong Kong-based accelerator, SuperCharger.
  • Misys unveils Standardized Approach for Counterparty Credit Risk (SA-CCR) module for FusionRisk.
  • PYMNTS interviews Richard Stegall, CEO and Co-founder of Urban FT.
  • NPR highlights Blooom for helping manage student-loan debt.
  • The New York Times features Narrative Science in a look at artificial intelligence.

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.