Finovate Alumni News– February 26, 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.jpgOn Budget wins 2014 Paybefore Award as “One to Watch.”
  • United Bank Limited picks VoiceTrust for voice biometrics.
  • InComm partners with Asia-based Money Online to launch POS-activated gift card mall solutions in Southeast Asia.
  • Rezzcard to integrate with InComm’s Cashtie to enable Rezzcard cardholders to pay their rent in cash at over 70,000 retail locations.
  • American Banker reports: Western Union to use NICE Customer Analytics. Come see its new tech at FinovateSpring.
  • Xero reaches 100,000 paying customers in Australia.
  • Check out an interview with BRIDGEi2i Director and Co-Founder, Ashish Sharma.
  • SecondMarket considering U.S.-based bitcoin exchange.
  • Live Gamer customers to get access to MasterCard’s MasterPass digital payment service.
  • authenticID enhances ID proofing technology to help combat cloned credit card fraud.
  • Green Dot wins top honors in four categories at 2014 Paybefore awards.
  • Global Banking & Finance Review takes a look at Kalixa Group’s American expansion.
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.

FinovateEurope: Behind the Scenes with CRIF, Mobino, and SaaS Markets

Here’s more “behind-the-scenes” coverage of some of the companies that presented at FinovateEurope 2014.

If you missed our previous installment from last week, click here to read “FinovateEurope: Behind the Scenes with AdviceGames, Nous.net, and Yseop.”


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What They Do:
CRIF specializes in leveraging big data to help small and medium sized banks make sound credit decisions.
In a conversation the day before the company’s Finovate demo, CRIF’s Marketing Director Sheila Donohue noted that what’s critical for banks is flexibility: “Banks are more and more requesting the ability to change and make changes,” she said. “They don’t want to be dependent on vendors, or have their hands tied.” 

CRIF Credit Framework serves this need by helping financial institutions use the platform to create end-to-end products such as custom apps for loan origination or tools for business analytics and intelligence. The company’s solutions have been deployed widely, from the Bank of Georgia in Central Europe to Interra Credit Union in north central Indiana.
Stats:
  • More than $106 million in equity
  • More than 2,400 financial institutions use CRIF technologies daily
  • More than 1,500 employees/associates worldwide
  • Total revenues in 2012 were 285 million euros
  • Founded in Italy, CRIF recently celebrated its 25th anniversary
Use Case:
The new release of CRIF Credit Framework will be especially helpful for banks looking to deploy a 21st century sales force equipped with productivity-enhancing mobile solutions. The company’s mobile app can be used in-branch, as well as at the point-of-sale when customers are considering a variety of financing options.
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CRIF is also unveiling a new version of its business-intelligence product, also optimized for mobile, which provides a dashboard that allows business executives better transparency and the ability to monitor KPIs.
This technology allows executives, rather than IT staff, to dig into the data behind their KPIs and make changes immediately. Changes are visible, graphical (not in programming language), and are tracked.
“You want to be fast,” Donohue said. “But if the regulators come by tomorrow, you want to be able to substantiate the changes you made.”

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What They Do:
Mobino’s project is straightforward, if not simple: to enable everybody with a phone in their pocket to make mobile payments as easily as paying with cash.
“We are both independent from the card networks and the telcos,” said Mobino CEO Jean-Francois Groff in a conversation the day before his company’s Finovate demo. “But we are working very closely with the banking industry. We want to enable bank account holders to circulate real money just as easy as they would circulate virtual money.”
How Mobino Works:
Smartphone and feature phone users alike are able to take advantage of Mobino. With a smartphone, the solution is a downloadable app (available for both iOS and Android). “Dumb” phone users can utilize a voice-based service that provides the same basic functionality.
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Users can load money to their Mobino accounts through a variety of methods, including bank account direct deposit, wire transfer, and by purchasing prepaid cards. The company’s independence from the card networks means that funding Mobino accounts via credit cards is not a part of the plan.
The service is free to use for consumers, both for making P2P payments as well as transacting with merchants. Merchants accepting Mobino pay a 1% commission, substantially less than card fees.
Use Cases: 
Groff sees use cases for Mobino everywhere: from online transactions to point-of-sale shopping at brick and mortar retailers, to peer-to-peer payments, merchant payments and more. 

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Here’s an example of how a merchant using Mobino might interact with a Mobino-paying customer:
Step One:
The process starts with the merchant entering the transaction amount in the Mobino app.
The merchant will then receive a one-time token number, and will be instructed to show the token number to the customer.

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Step Two:
The customer then enters the token number given by the merchant. 
The customer agrees to pay the amount, and enters his or her private passcode. 
The merchant and the customer receive notification confirming the payment by SMS.
Mobino allows the merchant to have funds transferred to the merchant bank account, and charges a 1% fee for the transaction.


During our discussion, Groff previewed yet another use case he would be sharing with Finovate audiences: “Each merchant who participates, who uses Mobino at their point-of-sale, can act as a cash machine. A sort of reverse ATM.” This is because Mobino operates on a prepaid basis. And in the same way Mobino allows consumers to exchange “e-money” for goods and services, Mobino also allows consumers with cash in pocket to exchange that cash for the merchant’s accumulated “e-money.”
Role for Banks:
Groff makes an interest
ing point about our relationship with our banks: 
“(Online banking) was marketed toward us as banking without waiting. But in the end we do all the work, and the bank is not available when we need them. They are there when we need credit or want to buy a house or set up investments. But when we just want to do the basic movements of money that are paired with daily life, the banks are really in the background.”
How do move banks to the foreground? Groff suggests that the success of PingIt, launched in the United Kingdom by Barclays, reveals that there is a “latent, unmet demand from the population for simpler services coming from the banking world.”
Looking forward, Mobino is optimistic about the growth of his company and in the technology that makes his service work. Distribution is a major focus, the hard work especially of getting “mom and pop” shops with older POS hardware to consider Mobino. 
And, as always there are regulatory issues. Here, however, Groff remains confident:  “The regulators, in general, are quite open,” Groff said. “When we show them the potential the innovation has to enhance what they call ‘financial inclusion’ – helping people who would never have access to finance to actually do something with money –  they really, really are open to experimenting.”


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SaaS Markets

What They Do:
Saas Markets helps financial institutions build app stores to help their small and medium business clients solve their business challenges.
This is no small accomplishment. In addition to capital, one of the things that can help make a difference in the success of SMEs is their access to resources, especially business solutions that will save them money, create more efficient processes, and help them compete more effectively in the marketplace.
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“We address three things,” Ferdi Roberts, SaaS Markets CEO said in a briefing in advance of his company’s Finovate appearance. “One, helping banks understand the challenges facing their business customers.Two, to help them provide solutions to those challenges. And, three, to give them a platform that helps them gain new customers and keep the customers they have longer, so there’s a stickiness to the product.”
To this end, SaaS Market’s MarketMaker cCloud platform provides a personalized, cloud-based marketplace containing more than 1,500 curated business apps from accounting to invoicing. Use of these SME apps is convenient for the business operator, who can take advantage of these app while never being more than one click away from their bank. It also increases stickiness and the potential for greater engagement for the financial institution that hosts the platform.
Benefits for Financial Institutions:
Making it easier for small and medium-sized enterprises to get the accounting and invoicing technology they need is a worthwhile business in and of itself. But in conversation with  Roberts, and with Director of Marketing, Jay Manciocchi, it becomes clear that, in some ways, the app store is only the beginning.
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This path toward a personalized app store is optimized by a technology called MarketMentor. MarketMentor works like a search engine within the platform, associating highly specific business problems to no less specific responses and solutions.  “Even if you don’t know what you want,” Roberts said. “You know what your problem is – so let’s start with that. And Market Mentor helps crystalize that.” 
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The challenge for banks is that small and medium sized business customers tend to be the most numerous, the most profitable, and the most difficult to engage. Part of what SaaS Markets is trying to accomplish with its cCloud platform and Market Mentor technology is to boost engagement via personalized problem-solving. This helps banks become a more collaborative partner when it comes to helping SMEs solve their business problems.
The result is a win-win for banks, who benefit from greater engagement and less churn, as well as for their customers, who become better businesspeople with more resources at their disposal and a deeper understanding of their own business environment.

Stay tuned for next behind-the-scenes look at FinovateEurope 2014 later this week.

Startupbootcamp’s FinTech Program Launches in London

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Startupbootcamp is a 3-month accelerator program that aims to give startups exposure to key players in their industry, while connecting them to a community of top-level mentors and advisors.

The organization recently launched a FinTech-exclusive accelerator in London, which will begin August 11. It is accepting applications from startups now through June 22, but the earlier you apply, the better chances you have to get into the program.

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In exchange for 8% equity, you get:
    • Extensive mentorship from +100 entrepreneurs, investors, and partners
    • Access to top markets in London, U.S. and APAC
    • 3+1 months free office space
    • €15K in cash per team
    • €450K+ in partner services
    • Exposure to 200+ Angels & VCs
    • Invitation to SBC global alumni network and growth program

Startupbootcamp’s other programs have so far proven their worth. In fact, over 70% of participating startups have gone on to receive funding.

In addition to the FinTech accelerator, Startupbootcamp has seven other programs located in Europe with unique foci:

    1. Istanbul serves as a hub for startups in the Middle East and North Africa regions.
    2. Israel is focused on startups within internet and mobile technology. 
    3. Amsterdam focuses on intensive mentoring from industry leaders across Europe and beyond to bolster their funding.
    4. Copenhagen works primarily with startups focusing on mobile devices and related technologies and solutions.
    5. Berlin helps entrepreneurs launch their business ideas into the global market.
    6. Another Amsterdam-located accelerator focuses on innovative solutions based on Near Field Communications and Contactless Interactions Technologies. 
    7. Eindhoven’s HighTechXL is the fastest way to accelerate your tech ideas-in-progress.

If you’re interested, check out the application page here

authenticID Enhances ID Proofing Technology to Help Combat Cloned Credit Card Fraud

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authenticID has announced new enhancements to its CatfishID identity proofing solution that make it even harder for fraudsters to use cloned credit cards.

CatfishID combines authenticID’s sizable library of government-issued identification cards with techniques to verify micro prints, read bar code and magnetic stripe data, and make front-to-back card data comparisons. This provides an additional layer of verification that makes once major source of credit card fraud – cloned cards – that much more difficult to pull off.

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This technology – automated forensic document authentication (AFDA) – is not new, according to the company. But what is innovative is the way authenticID is deploying the technology to the specific task of detecting fraudulent or counterfeit identification.
Blair Cohen, CEO of authenticID said, “We are the only technology company specializing in identity authentication offering a solution that eliminates the use of a cloned credit card.”
Learn more about CatfishID here.
Based in Atlanta, Georgia, authenticID was founded in 2012. The company demoed its PictureID technology as part of the FinovateFall 2013 show in New York.

SecondMarket Considering U.S.-Based Bitcoin Exchange

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There has been a flood of negativity shed on bitcoin thanks to the recent Mt. Gox drama. Despite that, SecondMarket, which originally launched as a trading platform for pre-IPO companies, plans to launch the first New York-based Bitcoin exchange.

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This announcement comes after SecondMarket dipped its toes into bitcoin waters last fall with the launch of the Bitcoin Investment Trust (BIT), a private, open-ended trust that is invested exclusively in bitcoin.

To support the new, yet-to-be-named exchange, SecondMarket will contribute approximately $20 million in cash and bitcoin. SecondMarket CEO Barry Silbert will likely serve as CEO for the new exchange, which will be self-regulated.

According to Fortune contributor Dan Primack, who first covered this story picked up by CNN Money,

“The goal would be to reduce Bitcoin price volatility, by using spot pricing once or twice per day (like gold spot pricing) and serving as a clearing company in which member firms would clear all transactions by day’s end. Members also would keep enough cash in Bitcoin to keep the exchange liquid.”

The new exchange is pending approval by SecondMarket’s board, which meets next week.

SecondMarket demonstrated at FinovateStartup 2009. Check out the demo video here.

Finovate Alumni News– February 25, 2014

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  • Netbanker considers why the BBVA Simple Bank deal is extraordinary.
  • American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators selects Authentify for NSTIC Trusted Online Identities Pilot.
  • ThreatMetrix wins Most Innovative Anti-Malware Solution and Best Product Network Access Control Solution at 2014 Cyber Defense Mag Awards.
  • Tyfone unveils Fluide mobile banking platform.
  • PayPal to be the first payment provider on the latest Samsung Gear 2 smartwatches.
  • Lendio marks a year of record growth.
  • Kapitall announces $13 million in funding in round led by Linden Venture.
  • Wallaby launches Google Glass payment app.
  • ShopKeep POS wins global Gold Stevie Award for Sales & Customer Service for 2nd year in a row.
  • MasterCard partners with Syniverse to pilot location-based, anti-fraud service.
  • MoadBus to offer Allied Payment Network’s PicturePay.
  • ACI Worldwide to power online banking for Trustco Bank.
  • Bankers’ Bank to deploy Aptys SolutionsPayLOGICS originating and processing wire service.
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.

Why the BBVA Simple Bank Deal is Extraordinary

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I was on vacation when the Simple deal went down last week. So, today I read the 25 or so unique articles published Thursday and Friday on BBVA’s $117 million acquisition of Simple. Of the bunch, only Ron Shevlin dove under the covers as to why a global financial powerhouse plunked down nine figures for a relatively small prepaid debit card portfolio. His take: the brand.

I’ve been a huge Simple junkie, publishing 22 posts on the startup in the past four years. And I was delighted it chose to make its first industry appearance at Finovate in Fall 2011 (video here). But I’m even more excited about this deal, which was remarkable for several reasons:
  • Other than ING’s regulator-mandated divestiture of its U.S. unit to Capital One, this is the first major retail digital bank acquisition in the United States EVER. Yes, EVER.  Since the dawn of what we called “Internet-only” banks in Oct 1995 (note 1), not a single one has been acquired at other than a fire sale (e.g., ING Direct purchase of Netbank after it was closed by the FDIC), (see note 2). 
  • The revenue multiple was off the charts. Simple says it processed $1.7 billion last year. Assuming this was all debit card volume and they split the revenues relatively equally with their processor, The Bancorp Bank (which is Durbin-exempt, note 3), the startup generated somewhat less than $10 million in revenues last year. That’s not at all bad for a bank in its first full year of business. Founder Josh Reich says they were on a path to profitability, not a small feat for a tech company with nearly 100 employees.
  • Banks are usually acquired for some premium of their assets and deposits. Simple had zero financial assets since it only collected deposits. We don’t know their deposit totals, but with an average of 65,000 customers (note 4) making $1.7 billion in purchases, that means each spent about $2,000 per month. Let’s say that each of its 100,000 accounts held double that on average ($4,000), the bank had around $400 mil in deposits at year-end 2013. I’m not sure what banks are paying for demand deposits these days, but it’s not 25%.
  • Simple raised $18 mil since inception, but we don’t know at what valuation. But with the $117 million cash deal, it appears that investors were rewarded adequately. It was no 10x exit, but it could have been 2x to 3x, or more.
  • BBVA paid almost $1,200 per customer. Given that Simple’s entire funding amount of $18 mil had already generated 100,000 customers ($180 per customer), clearly acquiring this customer base was not the main driver of the valuation.
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What it means:
  • Moven, Holvi, Tink, Numbrs, and other digital-only banks will see a bump in their valuations. 
  • Y-Combinator and other accelerators will see a surge in retail banking startups (which leads to more great Finovate presenters)
  • Simple under BBVA will be a fantastic case study with plenty of material for fintech bloggers and analysts (and especially blogging analysts)
  • There will be more legacy financial institutions following this strategy (clearly, there were other bidders to push the valuation above $100 million); however, don’t expect a stampede. Two or three acquisitions in 18 years is hardly a trend.
  • BBVA could very well make Simple its ING Direct-like brand (“BBVA Simple”?) across multiple new international markets (hat-tip to Venture Beat for being the only tech blog to focus on the international opportunity).
  • At least for a few years, before the founding team scatters to new ventures, it will be useful to have a semi-autonomous unit in Portland building out the services.
Finally, I’ll need a new VC-backed retail banking startup to obsess over. Time to get my Moven card activated.
——————
Notes:
1. The first pure digital bank was Security First Network Bank (SFNB) which was dumped for $13 mil in 1998 after attracting $50 mil in deposits and $14 million in credit card receivables).

2. One could argue that E*Trade’s ill-fated purchase of Telebanc for $1.8 bil in 1998 qualifies, but Telebanc was primarily a direct bank built through the phone channel.
3. Interestingly, as part of BBVA, which is not exempt from Durbin price controls (as far as I can figure), Simple’s interchange rate will likely fall dramatically, making the revenue multiple much higher going forward.

4. The bank started the year with 30,000 accounts and now has 100,000. So, assuming growth was even over the year, the average annual number of accounts = 65,000.
5. For more on pure-play digital banks, see our full Online Banking Report here (published in late 2011, subscription).

Lendio Marks a Year of Record Growth

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Alternative financing has become increasingly mainstream with small business borrowers, as well as traditional and non-traditional lenders.

Lendio, a startup that matches small businesses with interested investors, helped reinforce the popularity of non-traditional lending techniques today by releasing some notable growth figures. Here is an overview:

    • More than doubled its revenue growth from 2012 to 2013
    • Provided approximately $1.15 billion in business loan matches in 2013 to help SMBs finance their endeavors
    • The number of business owners who created a profile on Lendio’s platform grew by 350,000 in 2013
    • Doubled its staff
    • Received $4.5 million in Series B funding
    • Named one of Utah’s Best Places to Work in 2013 by Utah Business Magazine 
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Additionally, last year it released two SaaS products for lenders, Lendio for the Loan Specialist and Lendio for the Team Lead. Both products are aimed to help lenders more efficiently manage their leads.

Lendio demoed at FinovateSpring 2011. You can check out its demo here.

Kapitall Announces $13 Million in Funding in Round Led by Linden Venture

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In a new round led by Linden Venture Fund LLC and joined by Bendigo Partners, Kapitall has added $13 million to its corporate coffers. Kapitall’s total funding now stands at more than $20 million.

“We are impressed by Kapitall’s track record to date,” said Linden Venture Fund managing partner Oksana Malysheva. “(We) know the leadership team has a winning combination of expertise in investing, gaming and interactive design to spark a true revolution among emerging investors.”

Kapitall relies on its graphical user interface and ramification to make it easier and more engaging for investors to research and analyze investments in stocks, mutual funds, and exchange-traded funds (ETFs). The company plans to use the additional funding to help develop new products and boost the growth of its community of users.

Company CEO Jarrett Lilien said, “We acquire, engage, and profitably interact with emerging investors – individuals that the traditional firms don’t handle well. We want these investors and we have an experience tailor made for them.”
A few interesting metrics for Kapitall:
  • More than 170,000 community members
  • More than 15,000 real and virtual trades executed monthly
  • More than 115,000 portfolios built, tracking real and virtual assets of more than $10 billion
Click here to watch a YouTube introduction to Kapitall.
Kapitall was founded in March 2008 by Gaspard de Dreuzy and Serge Kreiker, and is headquartered in SoHo, New York. Kapitall was recognized as a Webby Honoree in Financial Services in 2013.
See Kapitall’s FinovateFall 2010 demo here.

Wallaby Launches Google Glass Payment App

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While the Finovate research team was busy helping put on the company’s biggest FinovateEurope to date, alums like Wallaby Financial were no less busy taking advantage of the convergence between wearable technology and mobile payments.

The result is Pay With Wallaby for Google Glass, a new app – currently in beta – from Wallaby Financial that is the first app native to Google Glass that provides payment type decision-aing in real time for consumers.

The idea behind leveraging geolocation to make mobile commerce more efficient is a notion that has gained traction among offers and rewards innovators as mobile device use has grown. Wallaby’s focus is different, specializing in helping consumers choose and use the best payment card option for a given transaction at the point of sale. 

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But the strategy of combining Google Glass’s location data and the company’s own database of card offers and rewards could help lead the way for more financial app development that is optimized for wearables – from smart eyeglasses to smart watches and beyond. Recent fintech journalism on wearable technology has focused such innovations, introducing us to pilot programs and initiatives by banks like Westpac in New Zealand and Banco Sabadell in Spain.
Matthew Goldman, CEO and founder of Wallaby Financial said:
“We think that Google Glass will grow substantially in the near future and we want to be among the first to write helpful, user-friendly, native applications that deliver real value via this breakthrough technology.”
Watch a brief video of Pay With Wallaby for Google Glass here
Wallaby Financial was founded in August 2011, and is headquartered in Pasadena, California. Named one of CNN Money’s top 15 financial apps last month, Walllaby demoed its Wallaby Wallet Boost technology as part of FinovateSpring 2013. See the company in action here.
And to learn more about the companies that will be on stage for FinovateSpring this year, check out our FinovateSpring 2014 presenter post.

Finovate Alumni News– February 24, 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.jpgNICE Systems named to Fast Company’s 50 most innovative companies list.
  • American Banker takes a look at BBVA’s acquisition of Simple.
  • MasterCard brings in-app payments to MasterPass; acquires m-wallet startup, C-Sam.
  • CNBC Finance hosts Kasasa CEO Gabe Krajicek to discuss the drive to local banks and credit unions.
  • Arxan Technologies partners with IBM to protect mobile apps against attacks.
  • HelloWallet launches Insights app to help HelloWallet users better understand their financial habits.
  • InterAksyon features TransferWise in column about transferring money overseas.
  • Realty Mogul’s real estate portfolio surpasses $85 million mark.
  • ExactCPA Tax Solutions introduces its app of the week: Kashoo Accounting.
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.

ZenPayroll Brings in $20 Million in Series A Funding from General Catalyst and Kleiner Perkins

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ZenPayroll, a company that makes it easier for small businesses to pay their employees, announced yesterday it has been granted funding.

The San Francisco-based startup brought in $20 million in Series A funding from investors General Catalyst and Kleiner Perkins. The new installment, combined with the more than $6 million it received in December of 2012, brings the company’s total funding to just over $26 million.

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It plans to use the funds to build new features and create add-ons to existing features, such as:

    • Increase payroll automation
    • Help employers build stronger bonds with employees
    • Help employees better understand their finances

This news comes on the heels of yesterday’s announcement of ZenPayroll’s participation in FinovateSpring in April. To see its newest development in action, get your ticket here.