- Mobile is not going away any time soon
- Loyalty/Rewards is making a comeback
- More innovations in the checking/ ACH space
Arroweye Solutions Launches Data-Driven Card Marketing with CustomerConnect
New technology from Arroweye Solutions promises to make it easier to build personalized card marketing campaigns.
CustomerConnect, launched today, allows card issuers to leverage Arroweye’s digital, on-demand technology and the sizable amounts of customer information at their fingertips to put the right, tailored, marketing message in front of the right customer.
Finovate Alumni News– August 21, 2013
What Themes Will Heat Up the FinovateFall Stage?
- Cardlytics announces patent on offer placement and management systems.
- MasterPass gains traction as 16 payment service providers in Australia agree to provide MasterCard’s digital payment option for business customers.
- Arroweye Solutions launches CustomerConnect, a data-driven, card marketing technology solution.
- AppEpic reviews Manilla.
- Jonathan Lee of Phony Invoices talks about invoice fraud at Accounting Today. See them demo at FinovateFall in September.
- SecureKey Technologies wins contract with USPS to develop Federal Cloud Credential Exchange (FCCX).
- Fiserv renews technology relationship with Community First Credit Union in Wisconsin.
FinovateFall 2013 Sneak Peek: Part 3
This week, we’re bringing you part three of our FinovateFall Sneak Peek series. If you missed the first two installments, check them out:
Here are a few more of the 70 companies that will demo their new technology on September 10 and 11 in New York: Guide Financial, Lumesis, mBank & Accenture, SpearFysh, TipRanks, Toopher, and Versafe.
Want to join us in New York in September? Get your ticket to FinovateFall 2013 here. To learn more about FinovateFall, check out the FAQ.
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- Finds users thousands in savings
- Provides step-by-step guides to capture savings
- Simplifies complex choices like refinancing and retirement saving
- Satisfy Time of Trade Regulatory Obligations in Seconds vs. 30 Minutes Per Trade
- Monitor Key Metrics for Client Holdings
- Financial information presented with complexity-on-demand
- PFM scenarios incorporated throughout the platform
- Branch-like experience through video chat

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- 100% recall of sales conversations
- Interaction sharing with all involved in the sales process
- “Voice of customer” mined for sales intelligence

- Bloggers added to TipRanks’ universe
- Email Alerts regarding picks from top performing experts
- Easy to embed data widgets for discovery

- Better security (broader, deeper, taller)
- Productivity
- Business growth

- Transparent protection against malware and online threat types
- All web
and mobile apps supported - 90%+ reduction in malware and phishing attacks
Finovate Alumni News– August 20, 2013
FinovateFall 2013 Sneak Peek Part 3 is up. Get to know more about this year’s innovators.
- Interactions chooses Edward Durkin for Chief Financial Officer. See Interactions demo at FinovateFall in New York.
- Mercury Payment Systems to support PayPal in-store payments thanks to new collaboration.
- IDology partners with AssureSign as primary authentication solution for advanced identity verification.
- Kabbage integrates with Stripe to allow businesses that process online payments to apply for financing.
Persint, StockSmart Begin Incubation Phase of Yodlee’s NEXT
Finovate alumni Persint (Spring 2013) and StockSmart (Fall 2013) are starting off the week with a bang. Both companies have been selected to participate in Yodlee Interactive’s NEXT, a partner lifecycle program for fintech startups and entrepreneurs.
The goal of NEXT is to “promote and accelerate” innovation in the fintech space. The program consists of an initial incubation stage, during which the companies are given free access to Yodlee Interactive’s API for six months. Those companies that show “marked traction” will be invited to the second, acceleration stage and, after that, a final cultivation stage. The two latter stages give the startups opportunities to work with industry veterans and Yodlee partners.

Finovate Alumni News– August 19, 2013
Persint among four new startups entering incubation phase of Yodlee Interactive Partner Lifecycle Program, NEXT.
- Virtual Piggy to provide payment system to video game publisher Marvelous USA.
- TSYS announces integration with FICO fraud management technology.
- Monitise SVP of Strategy Richard Johnson talks about “making money mobile” at the Wired Money conference.
- StockSmart joins Yodlee Interactive’s NEXT program for nurturing fintech startups. See StockSmart demo at FinovateFall in New York.
- Fidor Bank customers to get access to social trading platform ayondo.
Finovate Alumni News– August 16, 2013

- SoftwareAdvice.com’s Plotting Success blog ranks MicroStrategy among top six best designs in iPad business intelligence software.
- Business Bee’s The Daily Buzz takes a look at the LeafPresenter tablet from Leaf.
- The Telegraph features Zopa in a column on P2P lending.
- Ad News Australia reports on the rollout of MasterPass from MasterCard.
- MyFoxChicago interviews Bolstr co-founder Larry Baker on the topic of funding for small business entrepreneurs.
New Banking Business Models
There will likely be a few more post-mortems on Perkstreet’s failure to create a viable business using a debit-card rewards model (note 1). Whether its downfall was due primarily to unfortunate commodity pricing (my theory), lack of demand from the debanked (see Ron Shevlin’s post), or something else entirely, it’s interesting to ponder just what problems are big enough to support VC-backed bank-like entrants (note 2).
I wrote the following piece for our OBR clients a year ago (note 3). It seems even more pertinent today in light of Perkstreet’s failed $15 million bet.
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Embracing New Business Models for a Digital World
For 20 years, online and mobile banking has been bolted on to traditional business models. Exceptions are few: ING Direct, PayPal, Virgin Money and several other smaller players (note 4).
The bolt-on strategy worked amazingly well. Major U.S. banks have lost virtually no deposit, loan or fee-income market share to upstarts in the Internet era. Robust profits allowed incumbents to build online and mobile capabilities without sacrificing their brick-and-mortar channel.
But the banking world changed in 2008. Worldwide recession, regulatory price controls, an uncertain lending environment, low rates and increased competition from VC-backed startups have all combined to make holding on to market share less certain.
We see three areas where financial services startups could gain ground:
- Digital financial advocate
Positioning: Consumer advocate in the cloud always watching over your transactions and financial well-being; and can tap investors (crowdfunding) to get you some needed cash
How: P2P lend + aggregation/PFM + P2P pay + insurance + service + safety
Who: Mashup of BillGuard + Mint + Lending Club - Virtual CFO/CPA
Positioning: Digital business partner supporting financial activity, accounting and capital needs
How: Payments + P2B lending + aggregation + bookkeeping/accounting + fraud protection
Who: Cross between Funding Circle and Xero - Personalized mutual fund
Positioning: Personalized and highly automated mutual fund/ETF
How: Simple UI + limited options highlighting appropriate choices (think Hipmunk) + systematic savings + automated rebalancing
Who: Betterment on steroids
These businesses require sophisticated software, such as PFM modules, fraud protection, and business management functions. It will be fascinating to watch it unfold.
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Photo credit: ThePeacefulMom
Notes:
1. My apologies to Dan, Jason and the rest of the team. I imagine it’s frustrating to see your valiant efforts reduced to fodder for blog posts. We’d be happy to host if you want to publish a guest post with your observations.
2. If IBM really paid nearly $1 billion for Trusteer, I guess you can add “fighting financial malware” in the category of big problems.
3. See Online Banking Report #208/209 (subscription)
4. Certain other countries have experienced more disruption. But in most developed countries the incumbents as a whole have held on to most of their market share.
FinovateFall 2013 Sneak Peek: Part 2
This is part two of our FinovateFall Sneak Peek series. If you missed the first installment, you can catch it here:
Here are eight more of the 70 companies that will demo their new technology on September 10 and 11 in New York: authenticID, Fiserv, Float Money, Ignite Sales, Jumio, SavedPlus, Yseop, and Zenmonics.
Want to join us in New York in September? Get your FinovateFall 2013 ticket here. To learn more about FinovateFall, check out the FAQ.
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- 100% Accurate
- Can’t be fooled by fraudsters
- Transactions cost less than existing solutions
- Instant Payments delivers payments for a real-time world
- Delivered through Mobiliti, Popmoney offers an unmatched transformational mobile experience
- Interest-free line of credit
- Planned Spending Program for budgeting
- Financial Health Partners for financial literacy, payments and savings

- Determine profitable branches/products per branch
- Quickly spot branch trends, customer insights, fee-generating opportunities
- Understand gap analysis

Mitchell Orlowsky, CEO
LinkedIn
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- Increase conversion rates and revenue
- Reduce risk & chargebacks
- Create a ‘cool’ factor user experience


- Easy to set up, bank agnostic financial tool.
- It sets aside money as a percentage of every purchase.
- Change the destination account with one click.

- Generate highly qualified leads
- Boost sales performance
- Write financial reports automatically

- Ability to deploy in front of existing systems
- Reduce branch transaction costs
- Increase Sales with live collateral, account opening, servicing
Finovate Alumni News– August 15, 2013
ANZ Group goes live with Fiserv’s Mobiliti Reach.
- The Currency Cloud CEO, Mike Laven, explains the issues behind the recent remittance crisis.
- IND Group & PayPal team up to offer P2P Payment via email in Europe.
- SunTrust introduces BCSG’s Business Hub and CreditHQ tools; an online package of small business solutions.
- Bolstr on FOX News Chicago: Local Business Raises $12,000 in under 48hrs on Bolstr.
- Mint, Manilla featured in Digital Trends list of 12 useful online services and apps for students.
- Quantopian’s John Fawcett writes about the intersection of social media, algorithms, and the browser when it comes to investing.
- American Banker takes a look at Credit Agricole’s CAStore.
- Mobile Payments Today highlights PayConnect from PreCash in a column on mobile wallets and the payment industry.
Thoughts on Perkstreet’s Demise
If you follow U.S. virtual banking (see note 1), you have likely heard that one of the biggest, at least in terms of venture funding ($15 mil), is closing its doors. Boston-based Perkstreet Financial is shutting down Sep 26 and will not be able to pay out the accumulated rewards balances held by its customers (rumored to be about $1 million, see note 2).
While I thought the startup had a great team (ex Capital One), I did not follow it as closely as Simple/Moven because it was not really a technology innovator. It was all about the rewards, which seemed like a good plan, especially since the money was paid out on merchant gift cards, presumably acquired below face (see our post on its launch). I never saw their business plan or heard their investor pitch, so this is all speculation.
I tweeted that they were done in by low interest rates, which made all those high balances (it took $5,000 on deposit to earn the top rewards tier) practically worthless. But they were founded in 2008 with $5 mil of VC funding in 2009 and $9 million in 2011. That was all done in the midst of the ultra low-rate environment, so clearly the low-rate deposit environment was no surprise to the bank and it’s investors. They were banking on rates going up, but like traders who place big bets on corn, oil or currency futures, commodity trading is a high-risk business.
Falling debit interchange rates didn’t help, but they were Durbin exempt, so that wasn’t as dramatic of a revenue hit as it was at the big banks. In fact, CEO Dan O’Malley told the NY Times last year that their interchange had remained unchanged.
My guess is they were done in by the problem that every financial startup faces: It’s really, really, really hard to get customers to send money to a web-based startup, especially when there is no immediate short-term gain. Their acquisition costs, especially in a low-rate environment, must have been unsustainable. ING Direct (which wasn’t really a startup) was able to attract billions of deposits, but that was because customers were transferring in $30,000+ balances in order to immediately gain $500+ in annual interest (back in the 5% APY days 10 years ago).
Also, while Perkstreet had a great consumer-advocacy positioning, “use debit, avoid credit,” that was a bit of a mis-match for the customers they were targeting, big-spending rewards junkies which could afford to park $5,000 at the startup. Most existing big spenders are fond of using credit card programs with similar rewards, so changing their behavior was a continual challenge.
Winners:
- Traditional banks: They have one less aggressive online competitor to worry about. It also could put a damper on VCs future bets in this area.
- Perkstreet customers who cashed out their VC-subsidized rewards prior to the Aug 12 shutdown.
- NY Times personal finance columnist Ron Lieber who was was skeptical in mid-2010 about the long-term viability of Perkstreet’s then-2% rewards rate.
Losers:
- Perkstreet customers who had yet to cash out a significant chunk of their rewards balances.
- Other virtual (aka neo) banks (Moven, Simple) may face increased skepticism from investors and prospective customers. However, their business plans are much different (no rewards for one thing), so this is probably a temporary setback.
- The personal finance gurus who recommended Perkstreet (see Dave Ramsey ironic “companies we trust” screenshot below), especially those that pulled in affiliate dollars from the startup.
Bottom line: Perkstreet was a $15 million interest-rate bet that didn’t pan out (note 3). While I feel for their team, they are sharp and connected and knew they were in a high-risk business. For the most part, they will move on to next challenge with new-found insights. Had rates gone back to 3% or higher, Perkstreet would have likely been in good shape, enjoying its position of being highly recommended by Dave Ramsey and the other personal finance sites.
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DaveRamsey.com homepage (29 July 2013)
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Notes:
1. Our term for third-parties that function similarly to banks, but don’t hold the deposits, instead passing them through to FDIC-insured banks. We covered Perkstreet’s launch in 2009 here. We took an in-depth look at truly virtual banks (Personal Capital, Bank Simple, and PerkStreet) in our Oct 2011 Online Banking Report.
2. The $1 mil number was mentioned on Twitter from an unconfirmed source, so no claim to its accuracy. The company said previously it had paid out $4 mil in rewards. All deposits are held in FDIC-insured banks, Bancorp Bank or Provident Bank, and are safe and available to all Perkstreet customers. In better times, someone might have stepped in to honor the rewards and buy the company at a fire-sale. But paying $1 mil+ for a group low-margin customers was obviously a tough sell.
3. I’m sure the failure was a combination of hundreds of things and is way more complicated than I’ll ever know. I’m just addressing the big headwinds facing financial institutions, especially startups.