Alumni News– June 24, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgAmerican Banker looks at Wipit’s partnership with prepaid mobile wallet, Boost Mobile.
  • Iceland’s Acquiring Bank, Borgun, launches mPOS solution powered by Handpoint.
  • e27 examines TradeHero’s mobile app.
  • San Francisco Business Times: Taulia taps Fortune 500 to finance small businesses.
  • Geezeo announces partnership with Payveris.
  • Seasons FCU (18k members; $140 million assets) to deploy Verde International’s Corona, Aurora solutions for loan decisioning.
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.

Geezeo Announces Partnership with Payveris

Geezeo Announces Partnership with Payveris

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PFM innovator Geezeo announced today that it will partner with Payveris to provide a new suite of financial tools geared toward helping people better manage their finances.

The leaders of both companies were understandably complimentary of what each brings to the equation. Here’s Geezeo CEO Shawn Ward:

“The ability to pay bills or make payments from their online or mobile devices is a natural complement to Geezeo’s market-leading PFM, and unique web-based, data-driven marketing platform.”
And Fran Duggan, President of Payveris, was no less complimentary, saying:
“Geezeo is a thought leading company that understands the importance of giving their users a holistic view of financial assets, liabilities, cash flow, goals and budgets.”
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Makes you wonder what took so long for these two to get together!
Seriously, the idea of PFM solution developers allying with mobile payments specialists is a welcome one for those looking for further innovation in both spaces. As consumers begin to adopt new technologies, they seem to be as eager to see “what’s next” as they are in ensuring that the solution they do have is as capable of solving their problems as possible. And there may be no clearer example of this in fintech than the union of PFM and billpay.
Geezeo was last in the headlines this spring, announcing its HTML5-inspired redesign of its mobile app. The Boston-based company was born in 2006 and demoed its Enterprise Marketing Platform at FinovateFall 2010. See a demo of the company’s technology here.

Verde Corona, Aurora to Drive Loan Decisioning at Seasons FCU

Verde Corona, Aurora to Drive Loan Decisioning at Seasons FCU
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Seasons Federal Credit Union announced late last week that it would adopt loan decisioning technology from Verde Advisor.

Howard Brady, Chief Lending Officer for Seasons FCU highlighted the way the technology would help the credit union improve its lending strategy by being able to provide credit to a greater percentage of its membership.

“Specifically, Verde’s model enables us to responsibly serve the entire credit spectrum while increasing our net credit margin,” he said.

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The announcement means that Seasons FCU will run Verde’s Aurora and Corona solutions in tandem. Aurora is Verde’s automated, decisioning optimization engine. Corona is the company’s loan origination technology. Verde Advisor demoed Aurora at the company’s Finovate debut earlier this year at FinovateSpring in San Jose.
Patrick Reily, Verde Advisor co-founder and CEO, said, “As one of the first credit unions to deploy Verde Aurora, we look forward to helping them better serve their members through more effective pricing and instant, optimized underwriting.”
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Based in Middletown, Connecticut, Seasons FCU has more than 18,000 members and more than $140 million in assets. Seasons FCU offers a number of services (namely, Kasasa) courtesy of another Finovate alum, BancVue
Verde Advisor was founded in 2006, and is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. Read our Behind the Scenes conversation with the company here.

Alumni News– June 23, 2014

  • CEOs and founders from eToro, BehavioSec, TransferWise, The Currency Cloud, and Nutmeg earn spots on FN’s 40 fintech leaders list.
  • Bill Harris, Personal Capital CEO, featured on CNBC to Personal Capital and how it differs from robo-advisors.
  • Investment News looks at the humans behind FutureAdvisor’s robo-advisors.
  • Betterment adds municipal bonds asset class to make client’s non-IRA portfolios more efficient.
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.

Alumni News– June 20, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgBillGuard expands internationally, now available in Australia, New Zealand and the UK.
  • Simple speeds up money transfers: 1 business day for xfers from Simple and 3 business days for xfers into Simple.
  • Credit Sesame attracts 1 million + users to enroll in its free ID theft protection service.
  • American Banker talks about Check in its feature on the role of mobile bill pay in helping banks retain customers.
  • Fiserv announces that its CUnify account processing platform will be deployed by United Credit Union.
  • The National Bank (TNB) in Palestine signs deal with Temenos to replace current platform with T24.
  • Check announces billpay partnership with Direct Energy.
  • Gremln raises $100,000 as participant in SixThirty Accelerator Program.
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.

Behind the Scenes with Digital Retail Apps and Verde International

Behind the Scenes with Digital Retail Apps and Verde International

And so, because all good things must come to an end, we’ve reached the final installment of our Behind the Scenes series. It has been a pleasure highlighting the companies that became new Finovate alums after being accepted to demo at FinovateSpring 2014.

We’ve taken a good look at 23 Finovate newcomers in the week since our spring conference in San Jose. If you’re looking to get caught up, here’s a list that will connect you with all the previous installments in the series.

So now that you’re ready to go, come with us and meet two more newcomers to the Finovate family: mobile shopping innovator, Digital Retail Apps, and alternative credit decisioning specialist, Verde International.

What they do
From the perspective of Digital Retail Apps, it doesn’t matter how efficient your payment device is if you are still waiting in line with everybody else.
Instead, Digital Retail Apps has launched Self-Pay. Self-Pay is a technology that allows consumers to pay for items in store with their mobile devices, and have those purchases confirmed by mobile device-equipped sales personnel rather than waiting in line.
The goal, in the words of company founder and CEO Wendy MacKinnon Keith, is to have consumers spending more time shopping and buying, and less time standing and waiting.
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Digital Retail Apps launched Self-Pay last December at a beauty salon in Edmonton, Canada. During an anniversary event in the store the following spring, Self-Pay represented 8% of in-store transactions, with 78% of the Self-Pay shoppers opening accounts that day. From the company’s perspective, this is evidence that consumers will readily download and use a mobile app alternative to waiting in line.
The stats
  • Founded in March 2012
  • Launched SelfPay in May 2014
  • Has $500,000 in self-funded capital
  • Less than 10 employees
The experience
“We’ve finally integrated shopping and paying in one seamless flow,” says Wendy during a conversation at FinovateSpring 2014. And seamless is an apt description for the Self-Pay experience. Shoppers in a store where Self-Pay is available simply scan the QR codes of the items they want to purchase with the camera on their mobile device. The Self-Pay mobile app keeps the product data in a cart, just as shopper would encounter while doing online e-commerce.
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When the shopper is ready to check out, rather than head over to the register and hope the line isn’t too long, all she needs to do is bring her mobile device to a salesperson who is also carrying a Self-Pay enabled mobile device. The salesperson can then confirm the sale, and the shopper is quickly on her way. 
What’s interesting – and what was in evidence at the Lux Beauty Salon Self-Pay launch noted above – is that the time spent not waiting in line is often instead spent doing more shopping. Wendy found that the receipts for Self-Pay transactions were 17% higher than non Self-Pay transactions during Lux’s anniversary day event, and doubts that is a coincidence. “Lines change behavior,” she says.
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Self-Pay leverages Beacon technology in a number of ways, from welcoming shoppers when they enter stores where Self-Pay is available, to reminders to “come back soon” the next time the shopper is in the area. It is easy to imagine this technology being leveraged further, with highly-targeted offers, for example.
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Over the balance of the year, Digital Retail Apps hopes to pilot with much larger retailers. Self-Pay is fully-integrated with Beanstream, LightSpeed, Shopify, and Vend POS software, helping pave the way for wide adoption. A pilot with a major retailer by 2015 is among the company’s goals.
In the meanwhile, Digital Retail Apps remains focused on solving the needs of end users, reducing friction as much as possible. Technology should help consumers focus on what Wendy calls “the delight of the shopping experience” as opposed to the payment experience, where she sees most of the innovation focusing. “We are not payers, we are shoppers,” she says.

What they do
Are borrowers more than just credit risks to be managed? Or are borrowers fully financial and economic entities that are often more than the sum of their credit scores?
It may sound crazy in this post-financial crisis era, but Verde International is making a strong case for the latter.
In the words of Verde International’ s Chief Operating Officer Jason Daniels, Verde International’s goal is to help financial institutions capture the $140 billion in net income of dollars “left on the table” due to the inability of FI’s to properly serve retail and business customers deemed poor credit risks. Unveiling their loan decisioning technology, Aurora, at FinovateSpring, the company is showing how big data and big analytics can help lenders catch many potential borrowers who are otherwise falling through the cracks.
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My conversation with Verde International CEO Pat Reily was a fascinating excursion into the world of lending at the margin. “As we move beyond the very best credit customers,” he explained. “Denial rates go up in part because models are poor.”
“Looking at out of the mainstream customers with mainstream tools,” he said, is a sure path to what he calls “alienated customers.” It also offers us a new way of looking at a lending market, the subprime market, in a way that is also very much out of fashion in recent years.
“Subprime isn’t bad,” Pat said. “There may not be enough information or a life event. These factors go unseen.”
The stats
  • Founded in June 2006
  • Product launched in April 2014
  • Headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia
The experience
Verde Aurora looks to both improve loan terms and to help FIs meet the unmet demand Jason and Pat spoke of. The technology starts by predicting payment behavior and uses these predictions as a basis to set up pro forms for each set of loan terms.
Each possible loan term option is given optimal terms that satisfy both the customer and investor return expectations. Verde International calls this part of the process “getting to the best guess” and explains how it differs from the “fast” but “crude” traditional approach that focuses almost exclusively on “rates on scorecards.”
Instead, Verde International relies on advanced, market-specific modeling, as well as customer experience, to predict not only repayment behavior (including default risk), but repayment timing and magnitude, also. This nuanced attention to behavior helps the company understand the complex relationship between behavior and pricing. “This is a simultaneous problem requiring a simultaneous, convergent solution,” said Jason.
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Aurora lets clients test their financial assumptions around their policy thresholds. Everything from fees and costs, collateral and cost of capital can be seen alongside real world loan application scenarios. These initial loan terms are compared with optimized terms calculated by Verde Aurora to provide clients with a base from which to make further adjustments.
In the examples provided, the adjustment for the given loan included a term adjustment that extended the life of the loan. The idea in this instance was that a loan with a potential charge-off later in its life was more valuable than a loan that had the potential for an earlier charge-off date.
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The goal is to create a win-win for all stakeholders involved: competitive pricing for borrowers, a fair return for shareholder risk, and terms that meet the letter and spirit of fair lending. Above is a screenshot showing a comparison of cash flows for the optimized solution versus collateral value in the sample loan.
And below is a screenshot of Verde Aurora’s loan origination system (although the platform plays well with most common loan origination systems). Aurora provides a final evaluation of the loan terms as requested, an evaluation that even includes a counteroffer in the event that it can improve on the terms initially offered.
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Looking forward, Pat seems a number of opportunities for Verde International and Aurora, real estate and the mortgage area is one, particularly as it relates to the economics of the secondary market. He said the company is also looking into the possibility of integrating a mobile web app for loan origination with top fraud and ID verification resources. “If you’re going to lend well in a non-traditional environment, you need to meet (people) where they are,” Pat said, adding that features as straightforward as push alerts and similar reminders could also become a part of the platform by early 2015. The goal, he said, “is to increase the quality of the engagement.”
But in many ways it is the underlying insight that not only guides the technology, but the mission of the company as well. “If you take away nothing else,” said Jason from the Finovate stage, ” it’s that underwriting loans is not just a credit risk decision.”
In conversation late on Wednesday as the conference attendees were making their way downstairs for the Best of Show announcements, Pat echoes those sentiments: “I’m passionate about giving people a rung on the ladder.  For example, the nature of the job matters. Consider a farm worker. What kind of cash flow can we expect from this borrower? Making the payment easy to digest is critical.”

Check Announces BillPay Partnership with Direct Energy

Check Announces BillPay Partnership with Direct Energy

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Did you think Check (FinovateSpring 2010) might miss a step in the days and weeks following its acquisition by Intuit?

Think again.

Check announced this morning that it has signed a new partnership with Direct Energy. This means the customers of Direct Energy, one of the largest retail producers of electricity and natural gas in North America, will have the ability to pay their utility bill via their smartphone and Check’s mobile app.
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Check COO, Steve Schultz, said in a statement:
 
“(Direct Energy) understands how important the mobile experience is to customers’ satisfaction today. Partnering with Check complements Direct Energy’s great efforts to successfully attract and retain customers.”
Direct Energy serves six million customers in the U.S. and Canada. The  company operates in 46 states and in 10 Canadian provinces.
Check’s technology makes it easy for consumers to track and pay bills by consolidating and automating the bill pay process. Consumers can rely on Check to let them know what bills are coming due when, and then pay them automatically via the mobile app.
Partnerships with utility companies like Direct Energy are a major component of Check’s overall strategy for growth. Local, state, and regional partnerships with Alltel Wireless, New Jersey Natural Gas, and Arlington Water have helped Check grow the number of consumers who consistently take advantage of the technology. Payments costs are lower, and the amount of time spent tracking and paying bills is greatly reduced.
Founded in 2008 and rebranded as Check early in the summer of 2013, the company was acquired by Intuit in May, a transaction that closed on Monday. More than 10 million consumers use the Check app to pay bill using their mobile device.

Gremln Raises $100,000 as Participant in SixThirty Accelerator Program

Gremln Raises $100,000 as Participant in SixThirty Accelerator Program

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Social media management innovator Gremln picked up a $100,000 seed investment this spring as a participant in the SixThirty accelerator program.

Combined with the $523,500 raised last October (according to Crunchbase), Gremln’s total funding now stands at $1.4 million.

The investment comes with 16 weeks of mentoring in St. Louis, where the program is headquartered. As one of four startups in the current cohort, Gremln will also be introduced to some of the many major financial services organizations that are based in the area.
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Also participating in the current class are Form Zapper, PromisePay, and WealthAccess.
Gremln helps financial institutions manage their social media presence While many banks are reluctant to participate in social media because of compliance and regulatory issues. Gremln’s platform makes the process both easier and safer. 
The company’s latest innovation, demoed at FinovateSpring 2013, provides features such as keyword and key phrase filtering, custom permission settings and approval process, all within an attractive and engaging user interface.
Gremln was founded in May 2011 and is headquartered in St. Louis. Ryan Bell is CEO.

Alumni News– June 19, 2014

  • Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Finovate-F-Logo.jpgIxaris announces payments “app store” for banks to allow product development and customization before making new technologies available to customers.
  • Dwolla Direct will allow users to send money without requiring fully registered Dwolla accounts.
  • Archer Daniels Midland Company to use Tradeshift’s global e-invoicing platform.
  • Taulia’s new eInvoicing Rescue Service offers free consultation for businesses whose eInvoicing and ePayment platforms are delivering unsatisfactory returns.
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.

4 Amazon Fire Smartphone Features that Should Be Used in Mobile Banking

imageSeattle was abuzz today with the launch of Amazon’s long-rumored smartphone, dubbed Fire. Naturally, I look at everything through a digital banking lens. So here are its innovations that could be leveraged or imitated for mobile banking.

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1. Tilt to scroll
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imageDescription: Fire users can tilt or swivel the phone to navigate through an app. For example, on the Kindle app, users can advance the page by tilting the phone so they don’t have touch the screen every time you get to the end of the page.

Mobile banking use: Tilting would make a convenient way to page through transaction records. It could also be used to open additional functions such as tagging transactions or initiating a payment (e.g., Starbucks “shake to pay”).

Verdict: Until I get my hands on the phone, it’s a little hard to know how useful this feature will be. But it sounds like a nicely useful UI improvement (note 1).

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2. Mayday button
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image Description: Like the Kindle Fire, the Fire smartphone has one-button access to 24/7 video customer service with response time measured in seconds. Amazon calls it the “mayday” button. 

image Mobile banking use: Most mobile banking applications include telephone integration for a voice call to the call center. Instant video conferencing could be a good premium feature for high-value and/or fee-paying customers.

Verdict: While video customer support is not a killer feature, it has a nice ring to it when listed on your feature/benefit list. Certainly, banks should work on quicker response times for various types of products and/or customers.

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3. Unlimited cloud storage
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image Description: Amazon raised the bar for photograph storage, promising unlimited storage for all the pictures snapped from your Fire’s camera.

Mobile banking use: Unlimited cloud storage for all transactions and statements.

Verdict: I know your compliance team gets queasy when discussing long-term data storage. But it’s time to rise above all that and invoke one of the best customer-retention tools imaginable, unlimited secure storage of all banking records (see note 2).

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4. One year of Amazon Prime membership
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image Description: Fire smartphone buyers get one year of Amazon Prime membership free of charge. This savings of $100 covers half the cost of the 32GB phone ($199 with 2-year contract).

Mobile banking use: Premium channel

Verdict: Digital banking channels need an identifiable revenue stream to help pay for needed innovations and specialized services. A $4 to $5/mo “bank prime” membership program would go a long way in making digital a profit center (see previous post, note 2).

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Notes:
1. For more info, see our latest OBR Report on advanced mobile features (published June 2014, subscription). 
2. For info on fee-based financial services, see Online Banking Report (subscription) on fee-based online services (May 2011); paperless banking and online storage (late 2010); and lifetime statement archives (2005).

Alumni News– June 18, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgThreatMetrix integrates with Ping Identity’s PingFederate ID bridge to provide contextual employee authentication.
  • Kony brings in $50 Million in Financing Led by SoftBank Capital.
  • Eight Finovate alums earn spots on CNBC’s Disruptor 50 list: Motif Investing, TransferWise, Personal Capital, Wealthfront, Lending Club, Coinbase, Bill.com, and Betterment.
  • Umpqua Bank announces plans to transition to a scalable core solution from FIS.
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.

Kony Brings in $50 Million in Financing Led by SoftBank Capital

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With expansion into the mobile channel no longer an option but a necessity, it’s no wonder that enterprise mobility company, Kony Solutions, received additional backing today.

The Florida-based company pulled in $50 million from SoftBank Capital, who led the round, followed by Delta-V and Hamilton Lane, along with existing investors:

    • Insight Venture Partners
    • Telstra Ventures
    • Georgian Partners

This newest installment brings Kony’s total funding to $98.4 million.

Kony helps a variety of verticals deliver mobile apps by helping with everything from design, to deployment, to management of the app. It specializes in creating unified multi-channel solutions that run across multiple platforms. It plans to use the funding to expand its global reach and expand services for existing clients.

Kony demonstrated at FinovateSpring 2011 where it debuted mobile banking technology. You can check out the demo video here.