ShopKeep Rings Up $60 Million Investment

ShopKeep Rings Up $60 Million Investment

ShopKeep_homepage_July2015

In a Series D round led by Activant Capital, ShopKeep has raised $60 million in new funding. The investment boosts the company’s total capital to more than $97 million.

The company plans to use the new financing to “grow its overall customer base, strengthen industry partnerships, and launch international operations, starting with the U.K. this month.”

Steve Sarracino, Activant Capital founder, who will be joining ShopKeep’s board of directors, put ShopKeep at the front of an “evolution” in the world of mobile payments and small business technology. “We see tremendous opportunity for the company to build on its existing success as the operating system for small business and retail.”

ShopKeep_stage_FF2012

From left: ShopKeep co-founders, CEO Jason Richelson and COO David Olk, demonstrated ShopKeep POS at FinovateFall 2012 in New York.

ShopKeep president and CEO, Norm Merritt added that he sees his company’s role as more than just providing SMEs with a point-of-sale system. “We now play the role of an IT department to small business owners, democratizing invaluable business-management tools previously accessible only to the big-box retailers.”

ShopKeep has developed an iPad-based point-of-sale system and business-management platform for small businesses. The company has more than 2,000 users of its technology; more than 18,000 customers; and processed more than $6 billion in transactions via its network in the past year.

The company was honored with a 2015 Silver Stevie Award for Customer Service in March. Also that month, ShopKeep acquired Payment Revolution for an undisclosed sum. The acquisition added payment processing to the ShopKeep platform. In January, ShopKeep launched its Pocket app that included real-time reporting functionality.

ShopKeep was founded in 2008 and is headquartered in New York. The company demoed its point-of-sale system, ShopKeep POS, at FinovateFall 2012. While no valuation was released, based on this funding we added the company to our Fintech Near-Unicorn list.

Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • “Behalf Closes $119 Million Series D”
  • “Neon Release Adds Touch ID and Enhanced Notifications to Oink 2.0″
  • “ShopKeep Rings Up $60 Million Investment”

Around the web

  • Citibank India and MasterCard launch digital wallet, Citi MasterPass, in India.
  • This is Money features TransferWise in a look at the lack of transparency in exchange fees.
  • LoanNow earns #4 spot in Orange County Business Journal’s “Best Places to Work in Orange County 2015” roster.
  • PYMNTS looks at how PayPal’s Paydiant is powering Subway’s mobile-payments app.
  • Payments Views talks with Doug Yeager, HCE inventor and CEO of SimplyTapp, in its latest podcast.
  • Expensify launches New Investment Fund, Expensify Ventures, for fintech startups.
  • American Banker considers how banks are using startups such as Social Money and Qapital to bolster their offerings.
  • Dashlane launches One-Tap Password Changer for Apple Watch and iPhone.
  • John Hancock Retirement Plan Services now offers Morningstar’s HelloWallet financial wellness tool to plan-sponsors on its Total Retirement Solution platform.
  • Arroweye Solutions to provide EMV Credit and Debit Cards for Mountain America Credit Union.
  • TechCrunch: Betterment tops 100,000 customers and $2.5 billion AUM.
  • Taulia reports record revenue and ten customer wins for Q2 2015.
  • Mobile Payments Today looks at InComm’s drive to bring open-loop prepaid to mobile wallets.

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.

 

The Full FinDEVr: A Look at the Final Line-Up for FinDEVr 2015 San Francisco

The Full FinDEVr: A Look at the Final Line-Up for FinDEVr 2015 San Francisco

FinDEVr2014_stage_large

We’ve been teasing you for weeks with previews of the companies that will be taking the stage at FinDEVr 2015 San Francisco.

Today we’re happy to unveil FinDEVr 2015’s full roster of platform-builders, API-developers, and tool-makers whose cutting-edge technologies are an indispensable part of fintech innovation.

FinDEVr returns to San Francisco, 6/7 October, for two days of demonstrations, discussions, and networking with a diverse group of fintech CTOs, engineers, and builders. Visit our registration page today and take advantage of “very early bird” savings. We hope you’ll join us.

FinDEVr 2015 will also feature at least two additional companies, one still in stealth mode.

The premier event for fintech developers, FinDEVr 2015 brings together everyone from CTOs to independent builders, engineers, and hackathon veterans. Read our Guide to FinDEVr 2015, and find out:

  • What makes FinDEVr special?
  • How big is the audience?
  • Who will attend?
  • Information about our 2-day, dual-track format, with more than 14 hours of demonstrations and presentations on the latest in platforms, APIs, software tools, and more.

See for yourself what all the talk is about. Check out our demo videos from last year’s inaugural FinDEVr event.

Early bird discount pricing is still available. But the savings won’t last forever. So visit our registration page today and save your spot at the fintech developer event of the year. We’ll see you in San Francisco!


FinDEVr is sponsored by Yodlee Interactive. Our event partners are the Bank Innovators Council, BankersHub, BayPay Forum, bobsguide, California Bankers Association, Celent, The CoinTelegraph, Mercator Advisory Group, and SF Fintech.

Design: Mixed Verdict as Chase Bank Mimics Mobile Look on New Desktop UI

Design: Mixed Verdict as Chase Bank Mimics Mobile Look on New Desktop UI

chase_new_v_old_homepage

Chase unveiled a new homepage (on right above), the second in the past three years. While the first (on left above), unveiled in Oct 2012, was a massive rebuild, the latest is a more of a large remodel. I was not a huge fan of the 2012 version, so I’m glad to see the improvement, especially the downsizing of the page-dominating log-in area.

The first impression is good and the overall look and feel supports the Chase brand. But I think other homepages (e.g., Umpqua Bank, Verity Credit Union or even Capital One) do a better job showcasing banking products as opposed to “lifestyle” content that Chase seems enamored with (see #5 below). However, website design is much more than the homepage, and Chase’s previous design is a top performer in Change Sciences overall 2014 website usability and conversion ratings. So clearly Chase knows how to convert their massive website traffic. I’m sure they will be closely following the metrics after the change and will tweak any under-performing areas.

Chase’s press release provides a handy outline to lay out a few thoughts on its website. (And I apologize in advance to the Chase team for a bit of snark sneaking through; press releases have a way of doing that to a person.)

So here are the five points taken verbatim from the press release along with our comments:

1. Feel at home: Localized images personalize the site for returning visitors.

My take: This is a great feature brought over from Chase’s mobile app. Customized images are a nice and a relatively easy way to localize—still important in a country with 10,000 banks and credit unions, 99% of which are locally oriented. However, Chase’s implementation is a bit jarring. The eight images dizzily zoom right-to-left every 7 seconds and never stop. Luckily, they don’t begin until after you’ve been on page for 20+ seconds, so you can log in before the show begins.

2. Take a scroll: As with any newsfeed, customers can scroll down the homepage and have access to relevant content.

My take: Take a scroll is a clever bit of wordsmithing, but it’s a bit unusual to claim it as a benefit. That said, I do like the comparison to a newsfeed, a more modern concept generally not associated with banks.

3. Navigate with ease: The easy-access menu stays clearly in sight as customers scroll down the homepage.

My take: Chase’s fixed navigation is a UI feature that’s important on longer pages. But is it smart to mimic the mobile UI so closely? A universal complaint about mobile websites is their inconsistent navigation compared to desktop websites where nav has become well standardized. Yes, the design looks cooler, like a ginormous iPhone screen, but does the aesthetic win come at the expense of usability? With those jumbo images flashing by every 7 seconds, you do not want to linger. There is also inconsistent navigation: The homepage uses the mobile approach while the inner pages have the older navigation—do we assume that’s temporary?

4. See the choices: Customers can find which checking accounts, credit cards or mortgages best fit their lifestyle.

My take: Chase claims: “Customers can find which checking accounts, credit cards or mortgages best fit their lifestyle.” I’m pretty sure real people don’t think about their bank accounts that way, but what I believe the bank is saying here is that exposing readers to products within the “news and stories” section (see below) will lead to more sales. I have my doubts, and Chase can alter this quickly if the metrics aren’t supporting the tactic.

5. Learn from both experts and customers: News and Stories’ timely advice and insights move to a more prominent place.

My take: Big brands have been toying with “content marketing” off and on for 20 years. I understand the bank’s desire to market this way, but with so many other credible sources of personal finance info, you just end up looking amateurish compared with the NY Times, CNN Money, not too mention the hundreds of personal finance blogs. And even if you pay Pulitzer prize-winning journalists to write original content, you cannot avoid the fact that the article is POSTED TO A BANK SITE. My advice, stick to facts, tutorials, and links to third-party resources.

FinDEVr APIintelligence

FinDEVr2015LogoV2Date

Are you building new financial technology? Be sure to register soon for the only event exclusively for fintech developers, FinDEVr 2015, on 6/7 October in San Francisco.

Industry news

  • SETL uses blockchain to help facilitate settlement of market transactions.
  • PaymentsViews interviews Doug Yeager, inventor of Host Card Emulation (HCE)
  • Let’s Talk Payments looks at how the financial services industry is learning to love the blockchain.

The latest from upcoming FinDEVr 2015 presenters

  • Worldpay and Paymetric team up to launch integrated payments solution for international commerce.
  • Marketing Mag interviews new VP of marketing for Thinking Capital, Roshni Wijayashinha.
  • ScriptRock updates its DevOps platform with new data visualization and search.
  • Coin Telegraph talks with Fidor Bank AG Product Manager for Cryptocurrencies and Assets, Vladimir Tomic (in German).

Alumni updates

  • Giftbit earns spot in Techstars Seattle 2015 accelerator.
  • Google Cloud Platform’s customer-supplied encryption keys now available in beta.
  • Bitcoin.com ranks Blockchain.info as the most-visited website in the bitcoin ecosystem.
  • Pich Technologies launches new website.
  • SimplyTapp President Ted Fifelski quoted in Mobile Commerce Daily feature on mobile payments.
  • CopSonic wins two prizes at Innocherche Awards, is named “Favorite of the Public.”

Stay up to date on daily developments by following FinDEVr on Twitter.

Finovate Alumni News

Around the web

  • i-exceed introduces Appzillon 3.1, featuring new widgets, style editors, over-the-air (OTA) support and more.
  • OnDeck unveils mobile app for small business owners.
  • Ripple Labs appoints former Treasury Department official, Michael Barr, as an adviser.
  • Zooz teams up with Bitnet to enable bitcoin payments on its platform.
  • Bendigo and Adelaide Bank to deploy Appian BPM platform.
  • NAMU Systems wins “Most Personalized Banking Experience” award from EPAM at the 2015 Citi Mobile Challenge in EMEA.
  • Coinbase earns a spot in MIT Technology Review’s 50 Smartest Companies in 2015.

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.

FinDEVr Alums Featured Among Top Hackathon Payment APIs

FinDEVr Alums Featured Among Top Hackathon Payment APIs

DevPost_homepage

Devpost, the self-described “home for hackers” formerly known as ChallengePost has released data from nearly 10,000 student programming projects that finally answers the question: When the going gets tough and the competitive coders get coding, which language do they choose?

You can find the answer to that question here—hint: rhymes with HTML/CSS—along with the full report from Devpost. JavaScript came in second, and Python in third, but what caught our eye were the top payments APIs. After more than 150 hackathons involving more than 13,000 hackers, which payment APIs were most in demand?

  1. Venmo
  2. PayPal
  3. Stripe
  4. Braintree
  5. Blockchain

It was no surprise to see Finovate and FinDEVr alums among the pack. Venmo is a Finovate alum, having demonstrated its Venmo Touch technology with Braintree at FinovateSpring 2013. And PayPal, Blockchain and Braintree all presented at the inaugural FinDEVr 2014 conference for developers in San Francisco last fall. Braintree will be back again this year for FinDEVr 2015 in San Francisco.

WebDevpost’s survey of student hackers is based on the 2014-2015 academic year. The data set included 13,281 student hackers from 160 student hackathons featuring 9,898 individual projects.

In a note about the report, the authors emphasized that sponsorship matters when it comes to being “the one that gets used” by builders. “If you show up and participate,” the authors wrote, “hackers will use your technology.”

paypal_logo_new“We looked at the 20 companies that sponsored two or more student hackathons in 2014 and had 50 or more overall projects tagged with their technologies,” the authors wrote. “Nineteen of those companies had a higher prevalence of tags when they sponsored, including 11 tagged more than twice as often when they sponsored.”

As ChallengePost, the platform served as a place for online competitions in general. But as the number of software and technology competitions began to grow, the company shifted direction to focus on “software-developer hackers.”

braintree_logo_new“Hackers make stuff and exhibit imagination, ingenuity, self-confidence, and a collaborative spirit,” wrote Brandon Kessler, company founder and CEO. “That’s who we are too, and we wanted to support the community around it.”

BlockChain_logoDevPost has powered more than 700 in-person hackathons, and partnered with companies like Uber, AT&T and IBM to help build developer communities. The company was founded in 2009 and is headquartered in New York City. The student report was DevPost’s first, but the company plans to publish rankings periodically, and encourages hackers to tag the technologies they use.

*Post updated to add FinDEVr 2014 alum, Blockchain.


If you’re interested in learning more about the technologies engineers and developers are using to build the fintech innovations of tomorrow, join us in San Francisco, October 6-7, for FinDEVr 2015: the premier event for fintech developers.

Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • “FinDEVr Alums Featured Among Top Hackathon APIs”

Around the web

  • New partnership gives Lending Tree customers access to financing solutions, line-of-credit products from Dealstruck.
  • Backbase named “most visionary” in Gartner Magic Quadrant for Mobile Application Development Platforms.
  • Chris Skinner interviews Giles Andrews, Zopa CEO and co-founder.
  • INETCO Insight and Analytics help BECU win finalist spot in BAI-Infosys Finacle Global Banking Innovation Awards.

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.

The Next FinTech Unicorn? Rumored $150 Million Heading to Kabbage

The Next FinTech Unicorn? Rumored $150 Million Heading to Kabbage

Kabbbage_homepage_July2015

The Atlanta Business Journal blog is reporting that Kabbage is making its way through a $150 million Series E round. The report adds that $120 million of the round has already been raised. Once completed, the company will have total capital of more than $585 million and a valuation of more than $875 million.

Participating in the round were BlueRun Ventures, Santander UK, Thomvest Ventures, and UPS Strategic Enterprise Fund. The round is expected to close within weeks.

The new capital will help Kabbage grow its staff—adding as many as 100 new workers—as well as “double” its office footprint. The fundraising had been more than hinted at by Kabbage CEO Rob Frohwein last month, who said that a raise was “likely.”

Kabbage_stage_FS2015

Jason Dell, Kabbage’s head of product, demonstrated the Kabbage Card at FinovateSpring 2015 in San Jose.

A small business lending innovator, Kabbage uses data generated by business activity—rather than relying exclusively on credit scores—to provide small businesses with a range of financing options. Kabbage has provided more than $550 million in funding, and says that its loan-application volume is up more than 200% year over year. Approximately 70% of Kabbage borrowers are brick-and-mortar merchants, according to the company.

Earlier this month, Kabbage announced a partnership with Experian that would bring its lending platform to Experian’s institutional clients that had small business and consumer customers. In May, following the company’s demo of its Kabbage Card at FinovateSpring, it teamed up with Sage Payment Solutions to launch a small business loan product.

Kabbage was founded in 2009, and is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. The company will be presenting at FinDEVr 2015 in San Francisco, 6/7 October. To save your spot at our upcoming event for fintech developers, register here.

Reparo Loves Mambu: Partnership Brings New Loan Options to UK SMEs

Reparo Loves Mambu: Partnership Brings New Loan Options to UK SMEs

Mambu_homepage_July2015

Cloud banking innovator Mambu has been selected by Reparo Finance, an SME business-financing company, to provide a new line of business loans for small to medium companies in the United Kingdom.

Andrew Ward, managing director of Reparo Finance, pointed to the ability to provide financing to “neglected yet viable U.K.-based businesses.” Ward said that “partnering with Mambu has allowed our company to quickly bring more sophisticated loan offerings to market, while offering the necessary expertise and scalability to meet growing customer demand.”

Eugene Danilkis, Mambu CEO, added that his company’s technology would help make it easier for Reparo to develop “new and more accessible loan offerings” to market to the historically underserved small businesses.

Mambu_stage_FA2013

From left: Mambu founder and CEO Eugene Danilkis, and David Hamilton, advisory board member, presented at FinovateAsia 2013 in Singapore.

Mambu has had a busy 2015. The company announced earlier this month that Ferratum Group selected its technology to power SME lending, and in June added a variety of new features such as multi-account credit arrangements, balloon payments for real estate and auto lending, asset-backed lending, and more. Mambu began the year being named to FinTechCity’s FinTech 50.

Reparo Finance provides SME financing options such as asset-secured loans, that range from 50,000 pounds to 1 million. Terms range from one to 24 months and a lending decision takes only two business days. The company plans to use Mambu to provide greater flexibility when it comes to payment schedules. Reparo was founded in 2014 and is headquartered in Manchester, United Kingdom.

Founded in December 2011 and headquartered in Berlin, Germany, Mambu made its Finovate debut at FinovateAsia 2013 in Singapore.

Finovate Alumni News

On Finovate.com

  • “The Next FinTech Unicorn? Rumored $150 Million Heading to Kabbage
  • “Reparo Loves Mambu: Partnership Brings New Loan Options to UK SMEs”

Around the web

  • Datamonitor looks at how “wealth giants” are responding to the challenge of robo-advisors like Betterment.
  • Atom Bank chooses front-office technology from Intelligent Enviornments and back-office technology from FIS.
  • Fujitsu’s PalmSecure biometric technology comes to Fiserv’s DNA account-processing platform.
  • e27 reviews technologies like LoopPay and the prospects for digital wallet use in Asia.
  • Brian Armstrong, Coinbase CEO, says bitcoin will be the world’s reserve currency within 15 years.
  • The Telegraph highlights Zopa in its look at the safety of peer-to-peer lending.
  • Kony launches the latest version of its mobile backend-as-a-service (MBaaS) solution, Kony MobileFabric 6.5.
  • Fox Business News interviews Realty Mogul founder and CEO Jilliene Helman.
  • itBit hosts Bankchain Discover Summit for financial industry professionals.

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.

Friday Feature Request: Banking/Card Transaction Annotation via Email

Friday Feature Request: Banking/Card Transaction Annotation via Email

simple_annotation

On Fridays, I try to post a new digital banking feature I’ve recently discovered. But with nothing to report this week, I will instead take the easy route and make a request for a new feature:

Feature: Transaction annotation by email

BBVA’s Simple has been a leader in adding richness to transaction detail. We reported here on its web-based solution for annotating transaction in late 2012 (see screenshot at top of post). Basically, that capability needs to be ported to email for, forgive me, simpler access.

The specs:

  1. After each transaction that hits my account (preferably ALL my aggregated accounts), I get an email confirmation of each transaction with whatever data the bank/PFM can already provide on it (amount, date, merchant, category). Using a free-form field, I add whatever text I want to the description, attach a photo or file (if I so choose), and categorize it (if I’m that kind of a user).
  2. Depending on how the feature is implemented, I press enter or hit reply and my annotations are recorded into my permanent transaction archives at the bank/PFM. Note: You must have a long-term archive solution in place for this feature to have value.
  3. The transaction details must be in the email message itself so that I can use my email client to forward the message to others, flag for later attention, or file.
  4. The same thing could be done via text (with a link) or notifications, but email is the key for me.

Bottom line: For me, this would be one of the best things a bank, card issuer or PFM could do to cement my loyalty—and perhaps even cough up a modest subscription fee. I want my transaction history to be both a personal diary, e.g., traveling or dining out; a tax record, for business or charitable transactions; and a searchable resource for future questions, e.g., What did I pay last month for cable?

——–

Note: Hit me on Twitter (@netbanker) if you know someone already offering this.