Alumni News– August 28, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgPymnts features PayPal’s OneTouch mobile payments app.
  • American Banker considers how banks are looking closely at how BillGuard uses geolocation to prevent fraud.
  • Taulia launches SupplierPay.org to help corporations support the White House’s SupplierPay initiative.
  • IBM and Monitise expand partnership to combine IBM’s sales and specialist resources with Monitise’s Mobile Money services.
  • Pymnts.com feature on lending shares observations on consumer credit from Lending Club.
  • Forbes column on natural language processing features Narrative Science and Yseop.
  • Wired.co.uk profiles BehavioSec in its Stockholm category of “Europe’s hottest startups” in 2014. See BehavioSec at FinDEVr this fall.
  • CopSonic joins the FIDO Alliance.
  • Markets Media features interview with Avoka CEO Phil Copeland.
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– August 27, 2014

  • Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Finovate-F-Logo.jpgMonitise announces digital commerce and resourcing alliance with IBM.
  • ThinkAdvisor takes a look at the deal between the San Francisco 49ers football team and Wealthfront.
  • The Globe and Mail profiles David Lloyd and IntelliResponse as part of its Innovators at Work contest.
  • Fortune magazine column discusses Ripple and the “Internet of value exchange.”
  • ValueWalk: FutureAdvisor can be used as a free tool to rate your own investment decisions or a low-cost asset management service.
  • Chicago Tribune’s Blue Sky Innovation visits Bolstr for video interview.
  • Bill.com CEO and co-founder Rene Lacerte writes about the “new sharing economy” for Inc.com.
  • CashStar announces spot in Inc 500|5000 for a second year in a row.
  • EyeVerify opens new offices to accommodate recent growth.
  • Locaid partners with Danal to leverage location services in fight against financial fraud.
  • Wallaby Financial named finalist in Samsung Gear App Challenge 2014.
  • ZDNet: Xero continues march into U.S., launches partner marketplace.
  • The Independent looks at how BehavioSec uses behavioral biometrics.
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– July 25, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgFox Business News features Kabbage’s small business lending process.
  • Huffington Post describes how DemystData’s big data analytics help evaluate creditworthiness.
  • Cartera Commerce’s CFO Karen Cambray named a finalist in Boston Business Journal’s 2014 CFO of the Year Awards.
  • Bloomberg: BillGuard programmers code in bomb shelters.
  • Coinbase launches Coinbase Vault to Better Secure Your Bitcoins.
  • MoneyDesktop appoints Brandon Dewitt as its first ever CTO.
  • SecondMarket CEO Barry Silbert stepping down in order to refocus his attention solely on bitcoin.
  • InvestmentNews features roboadvisors Jemstep, FutureAdvisor, Wealthfront, and Personal Capital.
  • The Irish Times looks at Holvi’s move into Ireland.
  • CMS Wire: Actiance wants to help companies curb social media mistakes.
  • Karen Webster of Market Platform Dynamics interviews Zooz CEO Oren Levy.
  • eToro announces new version of OpenBook for iOS.
  • Mobile Entertainment talks with Adam Levene, SVP of Strategy at Monitise Create.
  • LendingTree launches personalization platform.
  • Pymnts takes a look at the partnership between Malauzai Software and Trusteer. See Malauzai at FinovateFall in September.
  • Fortune.com interviews Bill Siegel, interim CEO of SecondMarket.
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.

Finovate Alums Win Honors at Inaugural Mobile Innovations Awards Event

Finovate Alums Win Honors at Inaugural Mobile Innovations Awards Event

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Congratulations to four Finovate alums that took home top honors at the Mobile Innovations Awards.

    • Arxan Technologies – Best Management of Mobile Security Issues
    • Jumio (Netswipe) – Most Innovative App for Payments
    • PayPal – Best Mobile Wallet
    • Top Image Systems (MobiFLOW) – Best Use of an App to Collect Data and Information
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The Mobile Innovations Awards “pay tribute to those pushing the boundaries of what is possible using a mobile device.” Focused on innovation in the EMEA (Europe, Middle East, and Africa) region, the awards are designed to help companies raise their profile in the area, as well as network with peers and potential partners.

A total of 21 awards were given: 18 mobile categories and three “special recognition awards”. More about the award categories here.
The Mobile Innovations Awards is organized by the founders of The Card & Payment Awards and The Loyalty Awards. Finovate alum TSYS was a prime sponsor, and Monitise Create, another alum, was a category sponsor.
The Mobile Innovations Awards of 2015 will make its Call for Entries on November 1, with an entry deadline of February 28, 2015. EMEA-area businesses with live products or services in 2013 are eligible to apply.
See the most recent demo videos from our award-winning alums below:
Arxan Technologies (FinovateEurope 2014)
Top Image Systems (FinovateEurope 2014)

Alumni News– July 21, 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.jpgACI Worldwide announces plans to acquire fraud prevention specialist, Retail Decisions (ReD).
  • Monitise and IBM formalize multi-year partnership to enable broader mobile banking and e-commerce technology adoption.
  • Standard Bank to be first southern African FI to offer MasterPass from MasterCard.
  • American Banker covers how Dwolla payment network enables Google Glass payment technology.
  • PBS Newshour considers how HelloWallet helps users meet their financial goals.
  • InfoWorld: Ping Identity wants to replace sign-ons with smartphones.
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 30, 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.jpgBBVA announces partnership with Visa to bring host card emulation (HCE) functionality for contactless payments for its Wallet app.
  • Teachers Federal Credit Union ($4.9 billion in assets) to deploy Fiserv DNA platform.
  • Monitise on the Move: Helping Banks Enable Commerce.
  • Lending Club moves closer toward an initial public offering.
  • ID.me’s partnership with Overstock.com to add first responders.
  • Millionaire Corner features Nutmeg and FutureAdvisor as examples of “productive and easy” online investing.
  • Free Enterprise interviews Betterment CEO Jon Stein.
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.

Monitise on the Move: Helping Banks Enable Commerce

Monitise on the Move: Helping Banks Enable Commerce

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How does a technology company like Monitise help banks and financial institutions provide more value for their customers?

I spoke with Marc Winitz, SVP for marketing at Monitise, during a break at the Digital Banking Summit in Los Angeles earlier this month. And the answers he provided told me a great deal about where banks – and banking technology – are likely headed in the years to come.

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Much of the current focus, he said, is on payments. The problem is that the payments business is pretty well-established. What banks and FIs should consider instead is how to add value at the “discovery” part of the transaction rather than at the “settlement” part of the transaction. In other words, being a significant factor at the beginning of the process rather than at the end.

The Peri mobile shopping app that Monitise developed and is being piloted by U.S. Bancorp is an excellent example of bringing banking and e-commerce closer together. Peri works by accessing the digital signatures embedded inside a growing amount of media – from television advertisements to print copy. With the Peri app, consumers can essentially recreate the online shopping experience while watching a TV commercial or reading an ad in a magazine. 
Peri_Monitise_app

When the app reads the digital signature of the item of interest, the item appears in the app. The actual purchase is quick and efficient since the consumer’s purchasing information (name, address, credit card number, etc.) is already on file at the bank.

The technology is likely to be white-labeled and made available to companies and brands. Importantly, however, it is an example of the kind of technology that helps put banks at the forefront of an area – ecommerce – that has more or less left traditional banking behind.
What’s interesting about this approach is how it serves both the retailer’s interest in minimizing the “discovery” period (i.e., less “shopping” and more “buying”), as well as the bank or financial institution’s interest in being a bigger part of the e-commerce experience.
And as far as Marc is concerned, banking apps like these are an important way to go. “They feature a front-screen engagement opportunity,” he explained. “They yield personal insights (into consumer behavior), and have a funding source/transaction/wallet component.”
Monitse Metrics
  • Founded in 2003
  • Provides services to more than 350 financial institutions and brands worldwide
  • Has 28 million users and strategic partnerships
  • Processes 3.4 billion mobile transactions a year valued at $71 billion
  • Operates in the UK, the United States, India, Hong Kong, and Indonesia
  • Trades on the London Stock Exchange (LSE: MONI)
  • Led by co-CEOs Alastair Lukies (Monitise plc) and Elizabeth Buse (Monitise Group)
But there is a big question as to whether banks are situated in the right position to do what needs to be done to reinvigorate the industry. On the one hand, banks continue to earn a great deal of trust from their customers. This gives banks both the credibility and the “room to fail” that is critical when embarking upon new initiatives and ventures.
Monitise_homepage_mobileapp
On the other hand, the challenge is that banks are no longer simply measured by their own performance vis-a-vis other banks. It’s not just the rise of non-bank actors, significant as that is. The move toward an omni-channel experience provides a whole new way for consumer experience to be judged (and for those judgements to be shared via social media). So now a consumer’s “banking experience” ends up being compared to a consumer’s “Amazon shopping experience” or a consumer’s “Apple Store shopping experience.” And if that doesn’t seem like a tall order for the average bank, then you are fortunate to be a customer of a far more, forward-looking bank than the rest of us.
According to Marc, banks need to first re-imagine how they do business, then see what technology is necessary in order to provide that business via a compelling user interface and experience. And the fact of the matter is that for many banks, choosing a technology partner is the most efficient way to make that happen. 
Marc pointed out that mobile banking started with many banks, probably too many, thinking they could do it all by themselves. “Banks should do what they do best,” he said. “Don’t try and pick a gift card company. Let us do it.” 
Monitise Milestones (2014)
  • Acquired Markco Media for up to £55 million ($93.5 million)
  • Launched mobile app design arm, Monitise Create, in North America
  • Added former Visa executive Elizabeth Buse as co-CEO
  • Announced mobile banking platform deployment by Desert Schools FCU
  • Offered mobile alerting software as standalone product
  • Acquired Pozitron in all-share deal worth $100 million
Who gets it? The largest banks, the top 20 Marc said, are making the right moves. “They’ve got all the money in the world to spend.” It’s the next tier of banks and FIs that have the greater challenge. This includes institutions like Desert Schools Federal Credit Union, the largest credit union in Arizona ($3 billion in assets; 320,000 members), that recently adopted Monitise’s Vantage 5.1 platform this spring
The ability to conduct modular upgrades on the platform, Marc said, prevents a strain on budgets and IT resources. And this is a good thing not just for the bottom line of these mid-tier banks, but for the teamwork necessary to make mobile transitions work. “The whole team must be involved when it comes to something like mobile,” Marc said.

Alumni News– June 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.jpgNutmeg raises $32 million from new investors.
  • Bank of Southside Virginia (BSV) to provide Banno mobile app courtesy of Jack Henry & Associates.
  • Chicago Tribune’s Blue Sky Innovation takes a look at the Technori Pitch event that featured Rippleshot.
  • DNAinfo Chicago looks at how Bolstr can now hit up investors for larger loans.
  • Monitise acquires Markco Media for up to £55M ($93.5 mil).
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.

Digital Banking Summit: Building a Better Banking Experience – Or Else

Digital Banking Summit: Building a Better Banking Experience – Or Else
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After three days at SourceMedia’s Digital Banking Summit, one thing is clear: mobile technology ensures that consumers will compare the “banking experience” to every other experience available via the mobile channel. 

That includes everything from retail shopping to interactive game-playing and messaging to watching streaming entertainment.

And that’s just how it begins, to borrow the metaphor from the conference’s Digital Banker of the Year, Niti Badarinath of U.S. Bancorp. In fact, the experience of interacting with your bank increasingly will be compared to the experience of interacting via the best of social media, the best of online shopping, the best brick and mortar retail, and so on. This is coming whether or not banks are ready for it or not.

In other words, buying products and services from a bank will need to be as easy as catching a ride from Uber. Payments as efficient as PayPal. Customer service like Amazon.com’s Mayday. Branches like Apple Stores …
Much of what I heard that seemed most worth hearing echoed these ideas. I heard it in a poolside briefing with Marc Winitz of Monitise, who talked about the expanding opportunities for banks in e-commerce (stay tuned for more on that conversation). I heard it from Niti, who spoke from the stage about how non-banks like Apple and Google are driving consumer expectations higher.
Seen this way, the “channel” debate takes on an even bigger, meta-context. In the same way that consumers choose and switch between mobile, desktop, and tablet channels (and typically in that order over the course of the day, I learned at the conference), so to are banks likely to become just another channel for payments, e-commerce, authentication, and more. And therein lies the challenge and opportunity.
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Will financial institutions leverage the fact that they remain, years after the financial crisis, highly trusted? And, at least from a financial data perspective, nobody knows us better. After all, who is more capable of providing a personalized purchasing, saving, shopping, budgeting, investing, insuring experience than your bank?
It’s clear that fintech innovators are on the case. One presentation, “My Digital Banking Nirvana” by Jim Marous, listed some 30 different ways that companies getting it right when it comes to providing a “simpler, engaging, and contextual” experience.
And we’re not just talking about payments – which one speaker called the “lowest value-add” in a digital wallet . Will banks begin to see at least a part of what they could do best as a form of “digital marketing”? One speaker used the phrase “a buyer’s club” on the consumer’s behalf when thinking about a potential direction for banks. A role that put banks at the center of a whole life of financial activity from retail shopping and family budgeting to saving for college and preparing for retirement.
About Those Banks
U.S. Bancorp was among the better represented financial institutions at the conference. And that was not just because one of the company’s executives walked away with the Digital Banker of the Year award (though it helps). From their work with the e-commerce Peri app to their innovations in “photobanking,” U.S. Bancorp is providing both a strategic template (“place small bets / fail fast / learn quickly”) as well as a suite of products and services geared toward consumers emerging mobile preferences.
Wells Fargo provided interesting contributions in a number of different areas, ranging from a conversation on omni-channel integration to a panel discussion on the relationship between fintech and wearable technology. Wells Fargo’s Brett Pitts highlighted the importance of combining channel use with transaction type in order to better understand what he called “customer intensity.” This concept, he said, was the “lever for growth” for banks. But it means that banks must commit to the providing as wide a range of channel options as possible. Brett noted that customers that took advantage of three channels, for example, the branch, the phone and digital, were almost twice as likely as digital only customers to make a purchase decision, and almost 50% more likely than branch only customers.
Also noteworthy was the panel discussion on “Fueling the Financial Revolution” by representatives of BBVA Ventures, Q2, Lending Club, and GreenDot. Here the focus was on cost containment, a willingness to start “from scratch”, and a focus on doing what banks were not or could not do (the “$14,000 unsecured consumer loan” in the words of Lending Club’s Jeff Bogan.)
That’s not to say the world of alternative lending is all nimbleness and brand new technology – two factors cited by Q2’s Matt Flake as helping provide an edge for new upstarts. The challenge of finding top notch talent outside of a few regional hotbeds like the Bay Area can be especially acute for startups. And there is the ever-present issue of incumbent players, incumbent technology, and incumbent ways of thinking. Said Jeff, “The value of banks in a community is about more than just lending. But can banks partner with technology providers who can give (them) what (they) need? Will banks take the risk?”
Finovate Alums in Attendance
In addition to some of those mentioned above, there were more than a handful of Finovate alums exihibiting at the conference, holding court at busy booths in the networking area. Present and accounted for were:
  • FIS
  • Fiserv
  • GMC Software Technology
  • Kofax
  • MicroStrategy
  • LeadFusion
  • Monitise
  • Waspit

Alumni News– June 12, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgAmerican Banker: Monitise launches Monitise Create, its mobile app design arm, in North America.
  • Zopa has now funded over 100k loans for UK borrowers. Its 52k active lenders have made 27.9 million loans since 2005.
  • ID Analytics to enhance products by incorporating Mattersight’s speech and behavioral analytics technology.
  • First Financial Bank to use Q2’s digital banking platform to connect local businesses to bank clients.
  • peerTransfer now supports currencies from over 95 countries at more than 475 institutions across the US, Europe, Canada, and Australia.
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 11, 2014

  • Finovate-F-Logo.jpgAmerican Banker looks at how BizEquity helps banks lend to small businesses.
  • Coinbase and Expedia.com partner to accept bitcoin for hotel payments.
  • Bank Innovation features TipRanks as 1 of 4 Israeli fintech companies tackling security and data issues.
  • The Currency Cloud Passes $5 Billion in International Payments Enabled in Two Years.
  • Market IQ wins spot in Barclays Escalator, a new, 15-week accelerator programme.
  • Monitise announces North American debut of Monitise Create, a mobile suite of innovation, design, and development services.
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.

Former Visa Executive Elizabeth Buse Joins Monitise as Co-CEO

Former Visa Executive Elizabeth Buse Joins Monitise as Co-CEO

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Mobile money innovator Monitise (Finovate 2007) has announced that Elizabeth Buse will join the company as co-CEO.

Elizabeth Buse will bring more than 15 years of payments experience from her time at Visa, where she was last Executive Vice President of Solutions. Elizabeth is no stranger to Monitise, having served on the company’s board of directors from July 2010 to October 2012.

Elizabeth Buse - World Economic Forum on Afric...

Elizabeth Buse – World Economic Forum on Africa 2012 (Photo credit: World Economic Forum)

Elizabeth’s primary responsibilities at Monitise will involve day-to-day operations of the company, particularly marketing, product, sales, and technology. Working alongside Elizabeth, company founder Alastair Lukies will serve as co-CEO, with an emphasis on industry partnership building and corporate development.

Monitise specializes in technology that helps financial institutions deploy mobile banking, mobile payments, and other services. Founded in 2003 and headquartered in London, Monitise currently serves more than 350 financial institutions and brands around the world. The company processes more than 3.4 billion mobile transactions a year, valued at more than $70 billion.
Named one of the top three most innovative companies in the world by Forbes, Monitise has operations in the United Kingdom, the United States, India, Hong Kong, and Indonesia.