Showing posts with label fintech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fintech. Show all posts

Sunday, October 27, 2013

An Interview With Chris Skinner on Building a Digital Bank


It is becoming more and more difficult for traditional banks to compete in an increasingly digital marketplace. With most bank systems stuck in the last century, the conversion of legacy technologies to new platforms with total reliability, security and resilience is a massive challenge.


How can today's banks evolve to a new model of servicing and processing, where the mobile internet allows consumers to bank wherever and whenever they want using an increasing array of devices? How can banks leverage their existing foundation to compete with new and nimble mobile-first competitors?


I had a chance to speak to Chris Skinner recently about his perspective on the evolution of banking, the emergence of new competition, winning the mindshare of an increasingly connected consumer and on the release of his newest book, Digital Bank: Strategies to Succeed as a Digital Bank (available on Amazon for $9.99 for the Kindle version or $17.99 in paperback).

Best known as an independent commentator on banking and the financial markets through the Financial Services Club blog and Chair of the networking forum The Financial Services Club, Chis is the author of several previous books covering everything from emerging regulations to innovation and new currencies. He is also Chief Executive of Balatro Ltd, a research company and a regular commentator on BBC News, Sky News and Bloomberg on banking issues.

In reading an advance copy of Digital Bank, I found that Chris provides a great overview of the digital revolution in banking from channels to systems to emerging currencies. He also provides in-depth analysis of the how incumbent banks such as Barclays to new start-ups such as Metro Bank in the UK, Alior Bank in Poland and FIDOR Bank in Germany are building for a digital future.

As several noted fintech followers mention in online reviews of this book, Digital Bank is the most recent must-have for anyone wanting to help their organization stay relevent in banking or for businesses wanting to better understand the impact of digitalization on the marketplace. 

What inspired you to write this newest book?


I've been blogging daily since the start of 2007 at the finanser.com. With the blog, I would write a series of four or five posts on a particular subject, like why branches were the wrong focus, how data is becoming the new banking battleground, why existing banks have challenges, what organizations are innovating in unique ways, etc. These posts were never edited or placed in any sequence, but provided a great foundation for potential chapters in a book. So, I finally got around to taking all of that experience and all those thoughts and personally editing them into a readable, digestible, logical book. 

What do you hope readers take away from your writing?


The overarching theme of Digital Bank is that banks are being fundamentally restructured and challenged by the Digital Age. From physical services through physical branches, we have rapidly become a business that provides digital products through digital relationships. That leap is not happening fast enough, however, as most banks are tied to their traditional operational, technological and physical structures. This book provides a roadmap to take that old bank into the new world, how it can be achieved, proof points as to why it is needed and lessons of what to do and not do. Anyone dealing with digital bank distribution through the mobile, social internet will find it useful.

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What is the biggest challenge traditional banks face in their move to become a 'digital bank'?


We talk about a Digital Divide between the Haves and the Have-nots, and the same divide exists within banks between the Believers and the Non-Believers. Some bankers believe the future is all digital, some believe it is just another channel added to the existing branch-based network. It is the Non-Believers who are the challenge, as many of them will dismiss and hold back change. 

By way of example, those that built the bank do not want to destroy the bank they built, so they will do all they can to defend it. If they built a branch-based bank, building a digital bank that destroys much of the reason for the branch-based bank's existence is unnerving. So, they will block all efforts to digitise the relationship. That is the core challenge . . . how to convert the traditionalist decision makers to really commit to digital. Once you have that commitment, it's still not easy, but no bank will succeed if the management team is not truly committed to the program.

What institution(s) globally have made the greatest strides to embrace the future? Why?


There are quite a few stand-outs for me, from some of the major banks who are investing heavily in innovation projects, such as Citi, to regional banks who have reinvented their technologies, such as Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), to smaller banks who are changing the rulebook, such as BRE Bank in Poland. The common theme in all of these banks is that they are truly commited to change. 

Citi has invested millions in innovation centers and proejcts across the world, as well as ripping open much of their processing to offer transaction banking as an API, for example. CBA has placed most of their core processing infrastructure in the cloud. Even though the internal management was pretty reticent about this change initially, once the CIO got the regulators endorsement and they moved forward, it made them far more agile as well as saving 35% of their cost base year-on-year for systems support. 

Finally, BRE Bank was being massively challenged by a new entrant called Alior Bank in Poland, a fully mobile-social networked bank. In response, BRE decided to reinvent the bank. They invested in a new core system, installed it over 14 months and, once completed, threw away the old bank and now call themselves mBank. You heard me . . . they shut down the old bank and replaced it with one fit for the Digital Age. I'm not saying everyone has to be so bold or brash, but when faced with bank competition fit for the Digital Age, you've got to do something fundamental to compete or your organization will no longer be relevant.


Are newer organizations (as opposed to traditional banks) better positioned for the future?


Yes and no. From a technology standpoint, newer organizations are obviously better fit for the future as they start from a clean operation. There's no legacy systems and there's no previous installs of branch networks, contact centers or online banking. So, they can really push the boat out for creating the right infrastructure and process for customer engagement at the outset. That's what Moven and Simple are doing in the USA, and we see other examples like FIDOR in Germany and Alior in Poland that are doing the same. 

However, new banks do not have the same bank relationships, branding, governance or knowledge of risk, compliance and audit that traditional banks have in their blood. That's why it took Metro Bank twice as long to launch in the UK as they wanted. They had to get the right management team, endorsed by the regulators, to open their doors. Then they had to get the capital to cover the guarantees of funds that the regulators demand for those customers they onboarded.

None of that is easy, and it takes deep pockets to get a bank licence and the guarantees that go with this. But, here's what stands out for Metro Bank . . . the fact that they were fit for the future with technology meant that they reinvented their digital bank services within three years of launch. They are on their second generation internet banking platform already. That's down to having the right technology operations from the get-go, to be able to be that nimble and quick. So, I would say that new players are fit for the future from a technology standpoint, but they need to be fit for the rules from a bank standpoint before they can really play.


If a bank wants to be positioned for the future, where should they start?


That is the question all banks are asking. Where to begin. I would rather start with 'where do you want to end up'?  Then build the transition path between here and there. Where's your vision for the future of your bank?  How radical is that as a departure from the bank you have today? What will be involved to get from here to there? Who is going to make it happen and by when?

That's all simple management change program thinking, but the hardest part is to build the vision because often we will be hampered by the thinking of where we are today. We have branches, we have contact centers, we have an online bank. You have to just dump that thinking from the start, when building your vision, or you will fail. That means bringing in fresh thinking, which will not be dogmaed by internal constraints or history.

Ideally, create a new team with a leader from outside the bank who can look over everything with a fresh pair of eyes and create the future without constraint. The hard part is then taking that team's thinking back into the bank, as it usually means cannibalising or destroying parts of the old bank to build the new bank. But it can be done. Again, it all goes back to how committed the CEO is to the process. If the CEO is committed, then anything can be achieved.

What is the biggest change we are going to see in banking in the next 5 years?


The biggest change is from a number of perspectives. From a regulatory point of view, there's the dull stuff about banks withholding more capital for a rainy day, better management of risk (especially liquidity risk), increasing competition and transparency, and financial inclusion (open banking for all). 

From a customer point of view, the beat towards mobility will continue. All banks are focused upon delivering killer financial apps for corporate and consumers today, and that will pan out into a digital wallet fight. Then it gets interesting, as banks will soon drop the focus upon the device - the cellphone - and move on to focus upon the customer experience. This is because the world is rapidly moving into digitizing everything. Putting chips inside a pair of glasses or a watch so that Google Glass or Samsung Galaxy Gear Watch can replace the laptop or the phone. Then we will start to put chips into walls, floors, ceilings, gutters, handbags, clothes, jewellery and lightbulbs (We already are doing this, in case you hadn't noticed). 

Eventually, everything everywhere will be communicating. From you to intelligent systems and services all around you, in the air, all day long. Like the Minority Report, everything will be intellisensing everything, and service will be augmented to be relevant at the point of your customer's context. This means that banks will move from device to wallet to understanding how to be a proactive, predictive enabler of commerce at the point of relevance to the customer. That battle is going to be a tough one for banks stuck with branches, as that's a digital data war. And that's what the book is all about, how to win customer mindshare as your audience interacts digitally with everything.


About Chris Skinner


Chris Skinner is best known as an independent commentator on the financial markets through the Finanser (www.thefinanser.com) and Chair of the European networking forum the Financial Services Club, which he founded in 2004. The Financial Services Club is a network for financial professionals, and focuses on the future of financial services through the delivery of research, analysis, commentary and debate and has regular meetings in London, Edinburgh, Dublin and Vienna. 

He is the author of nine books covering everything from European regulations in banking through the credit crisis to the future of banking and is a regular commentator on BBC NewsSky News and Bloomberg about banking issues.

More can be discovered about Chris here: http://thefinanser.co.uk/fsclub/chris-skinner/

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Monday, October 14, 2013

The Rise of PayPal as a Major Payments Player

No place in financial services is transformation and innovation more apparent than in the world of payments, where the convergence of mobile and new data-driven business models have the potential to completely disrupt both the consumer and merchant experience.


The recently concluded Money2020 illustrated that there is no shortage of payments players vying for attention,  but no firm seems to be as aggressive as the new PayPal, which continues to roll out new innovations impacting the payments ecosystem.


While some of the 'innovation' at PayPal may not seem new or disruptive (such as the use of QR codes), the ability to quickly build scale by using the existing payments infrastructure may be the key to PayPal's success. The company hopes to transform its reputation as a means of exchanging cash over the Internet into the default payment system for many everyday transactions.

At stake for PayPal is control of a mobile-payment market that is expected to grow more than three-fold from this year’s $235 billion over the next four years, according to researcher Gartner. PayPal faces a host of competitors, including Google Wallet, Square, Lemon and Stripe (and potentially Amazon and Apple).

Brian Roemmele, researcher and business advisor says of a recent PayPal announcement, "The true innovation that PayPal has achieved is really quite invisible and perhaps even boring to technologists. No iOS devices or android devices deployed at the merchant locations. No new add-ons needed, just the a boring laser bar code scanner that every single major retail store already has."

It is clear that PayPal is moving fast to become a ubiquitous option at retail merchants, introducing products for both the consumer and the retailer. In fact, there have been so many changes recently, it may be difficult to keep up.

To that end, I am providing a brief overview of what has occurred over only the past couple months and what the future may hold.


New PayPal Mobile App


In early September, Paypal introduced an updated version of the PayPal mobile app for both iOS and Android, turning it into much more of a mobile wallet. Maintaining all of the old features, the new app added tools to facilitate shopping and paying for goods online at the physical POS.



The app features five clearly labeled sections on the home page, with the major sources of innovation residing within the new Shop tab and Bill Me Later integration. Within the Shop screen, you can find nearby merchants that accept PayPal. Once you check in at a merchant (using your PIN), you can download any special offers from the store and can complete the transaction simply by saying "I'm paying with PayPal". Since the merchant will have your PayPal photo on their POS device or phone, funds can be transferred without needing to pull out your phone a second time.

Leveraging the app's location-based capabilities, there is the ability to push coupons based on a consumers specific location and even allow for ordering and paying for a meal within the app.

As for payments, PayPal is providing the option to pay directly from a bank account, from a PayPal balance or to use a credit card on file within the app. It's also expanded the 'Bill Me Later' function, providing credit for large purchases within the app. 


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PayPal Beacon: No Tap, Swipe or Signature


One of the biggest challenges for PayPal over the years is expanding their online merchant capabilities to the physical point of sale, making it easier to use PayPal than swiping a credit card. As any payments player knows, simplifying the payments process is made even more difficult with today's merchant technology and the entrenched consumer payment behaviors.

PayPal hopes the introduction of Beacon may be the answer to this challenge. Beacon uses Bluetooth Low Energy, otherwise known as BLE to enable phones and merchant POS systems to communicate with each other seamlessly, without opening an app, without GPS turned on and even without a clear phone signal. In other words, hands-free payments.

All a merchant needs to do is plug a PayPal Beacon device into a power outlet in their store. Once the Beacon is plugged in, they will be ready to offer a highly personalized shopping experience (including personalized coupons or even offers based on the consumer's location within the store).

Consumers control the stores they will want to check in to, those they want to get prompted to confirm payment for, and stores they will want to enable a complete hands-free experience for. In the latter case, simply walking in a store will trigger a vibration or sound to confirm a successful check in. After checking in, a photo will appear on the screen of the Point-of-Sale system so the shopper can be greeted by name. Paying only requires a verbal confirmation.

In addition, PayPal is giving developers access to the PayPal mobile in-store API to create experiences such as being able to self-checkout on a mobile phone or automatically placing a customer’s usual order as soon as they walk through the door.
David Marcus, president of PayPal says that PayPal has been showing the device to retailers, large and small, and they “love it.” Part of the reason, he says, is that not only does it help them connect and potentially bring in customers, but it also integrates seamlessly with their existing point of sale systems. “I want to create an operating system for the retail environment,” he said.
It’s interesting to note that in iOS 7, Apple is debuting iBeacon, which could provide similar services for apps. But VP of PayPal global product, Hill Ferguson, maintains that the Apple version does not extend to Android, and that Beacon will work for any smartphone.
Piloting of Beacon is slated for Q4 2013, with rollout planned next year.


PayPal Working Capital


To help drive sales volume from the merchant perspective, PayPal introduced PayPal Working Capital in late September as a way to offer a simplified financing alternative to their customers. Initially offered to about 90,000 of it's business partners, potential loans from $1,000 to $20,000 will be underwritten based on PayPal sales history, with no credit check needed.

One unique aspect of the program is that PayPal said merchants could receive funds in a matter of minutes and that repayment would be based on a fixed percentage of sales generated with no minimum payments (if no sales are made on a particular day, no payment is required). In addition, rather than charging interest for the loan, PayPal will charge a fixed fee. The faster the payback period, the smaller the upfront fee. It is felt that this transparent fee structure will be welcome to retailers. 



"In talking to merchants, a lot of them are very capital constrained," says Brian Grech, who is in charge of risk management for small-business products at PayPal. "In a lot of cases, their next best option would be a personal credit card or a very high-priced merchant cash advance and we expect to displace those overwhelmingly with our new loan product."

Since PayPal cannot legally make loans directly to merchants, it is collaborating with the Salt Lake City, Utah-based lender WebBank.

PayPal Acquires Baintree


On the heels of announcing PayPal Working Capital, PayPal finalized the acquisition of Baintree, moving even more aggressively into mobile payments. In a very short time, Braintree leveraged a mobile-first mentality to build impressive mobile payment solutions that handle transactions in 130 currencies in more than 40 countries.

In addition to gaining an impressive list of clients such as Airbnb, OpenTable, Uber, and TaskRabbit, PayPal also acquires the very popular Venmo app, which lets users pay for free using their mobile device.

While Baintree will operate as an independent unit within PayPal, it is believed the superior application programming interfaces of Baintree will help PayPal work better with developers going forward. 

PayPal Payment Code


As part of the global Money2020 event in Las Vegas last week, PayPal continued their string of major announcements by introducing Payment Code, which will use QR codes and a PINs to verify in-store smartphone transactions over merchants' existing POS equipment. While initially seeming 'old school', this introduction leverages existing equipment and employee training while improving the experience for both the consumer and merchant.

Initially, PayPal is partnering with Discover and their 7 million retail locations to introduce this technology. To make an in-store payment, customers would first check in using the PayPal app. Once the app knows the customer’s location, it determines what kind of equipment the store has. 

If the merchant has a barcode scanner, a QR code will pop up on the phone screen. The customer then simply runs that code under the scanner finalizing the transaction. If the merchant only has a PIN pad, the app will supply a randomly generated four digit PIN, which the customer types into the terminal to verify the payment. (Note: This process is virtually the same as being used by Starbucks)

While the Payment Code does make the checkout process smoother, with easy access to all funding sources in one simple place (the customer's phone), the real benefit is that it will allow consumers to automatically redeem any special offers, gift cards, merchant rewards programs or other forms of payment that might be saved in their PayPal wallet in one quick transaction.

As with many of the innovations PayPal has introduced over the past several weeks, Payment Code is expected to roll out in Q1 of next year.


Amazon Challenges PayPal



Not to be left behind, Amazon responded to the recent wave of PayPal introductions and innovations by announcing a new service that will let customers of other online merchants pay for purchases using their Amazon credentials.

Login and Pay with Amazon takes advantage of Amazon's 215 million active customers and helps participating merchants make sales easier by allowing customers to access their account information safely and securely with a single login.

The new offering expands on the existing Amazon Payments program that lets customers pay with Amazon at check-out. The new log-in system ties merchants even further into Amazon's platform, including fraud protection from Amazon at no extra fee. Merchants get more information on customers, while the customers can buy without entering their address and card information on multiple sites over and over again.

Some merchants may be reluctant to work with Amazon because the company is a major retail industry rival, however.

Amazon will collect $2.9 percent plus $0.30 per transaction for transactions of $10 or more, and all fees are assessed on a per-transaction basis - always based on a percentage of the total amount. Login and Pay with Amazon will work on tablet, mobile, and desktop devices, the company said. Gogo, which provides in-flight wifi, already uses Amazon's basic payments service, but is planning to add the new service.


PayPal Penetration Challenges


Despite all of the innovation described above, PayPal is still an emerging mobile payment service provider, without the market size of penetration of the more popular credit card companies.

To alleviate this challenge, PayPal has worked hard to sign partnership agreements with consumer credit (Discover), money transfer (MoneyGram) and POS hardware and software providers (NCR, MICROS, etc.). By leveraging these partnerships, PayPal has expanded merchant coverage from just 18,000 in 2012 to close to 10 million locations expected by 2015.

"In 2013, Discover helped PayPal grow from the 250,000 retailers who accepted PayPal in store earlier this year to more than 2 million by the end of 2013," said Don Kingsborough, vice president of retail services at PayPal.


PayPal + Apple?


On October 11th, 2013, former Apple CEO John Scully mentions in passing during a BBC interview some ideas he suggests for Apple.  John referred to the logic of Apple acquiring larger companies with the huge amounts of cash they hold in reserves. In particular, John mentioned the idea that Apple acquire eBay for the single purpose if integrating PayPal into the iPhone.
"Apple's never been an acquirer of big companies before, and when you look at Passbook, the iPhone5S and fingerprint recognition - What would it mean if Apple went out and bought eBay? And they had PayPal, and integrated that?"
If you buy into the logic that Apple wants to be a facilitator for payments and not a merchant account supplier nor a payment card issuer, this idea may make sense. Combined, Apple and eBay would have over 760 million active payment cards on file, with some overlap.

So, maybe we will see a day when PayPal is part of Apple . . . or Discover.

I've definitely seen crazier ideas become reality over the years.

Additional Resources


 The Future of POS: Point of Sale Evolution and Its Impacts - PayPal White Paper (September 2013)

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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Tuesday Afternoon Tweets at Money2020 Combine Insightful & Snarky

After a very exciting morning of Money2020 new product announcements and visions for the future, it would be difficult to maintain the same energy level on Tuesday afternoon. 


As can be seen from the hashtag tracker below, #Money2020 tweets reached a crescendo during the opening keynotes, with more than 300 tweets during the 9:00(PT) hour.


Unfortunately, the other spike in tweets represented primarily snarky comments, as attendees became restless in expectation of a major announcement from the MCX panel than never occurred. This not uncommon at events like this, where a tone is set for the day and patience grows thin when all presentations don't deliver equally.



Even without the two major tweet spikes for the hashtag #Money2020, the discussion on twitter was robust throughout the day on Tuesday as it was on Monday. The combination of comments around megatrends as well as product insights made for interesting reading at the event as well as from afar. 












While there were over a hundred tweets during the MCX presentation, there was minimal 'love' since the presentation was long on self promotion and short on facts or a new product announcement. The audience was obviously still stoked from the morning sequence of new product announcements from payments leaders like Amazon, PayPal, Citi, MasterCard, American Express and Discover.






























Thanks to all of the tweeters both at Money2020 in person as well as those who are living vicariously through others (@leimer). Your coverage and commentary on the event are invaluable.

Here are the top 10 tweeters who have used the #Money2020 hashtag to date.


Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Tuesday Morning at Money2020 Filled With New Product Announcements

After an evening of fun at the Haze Nightclub, Money2020 kicked it into high gear on Tuesday with a series of industry updates and major product announcements from PayPalCitiMasterCardSquareAmerican ExpressEricssonDiscover and Amazon.


While not being at Money2020 in person, I have compiled the highlights of the day from tweets posted during the day from my fintech friends as I did at the end of Day One.


Note: Each of these tweets are 'live' allowing you to access, re-tweet, favorite, etc. Thanks to everyone for the great digital conversation that makes the event a worldwide gathering.
















































Monday, October 7, 2013

Monday at Money2020 in Tweets

Billed as the largest event focused on emerging payments and financial services, Money2020 has easily eclipsed its inaugural event in 2012, bringing together more than 4,000 fintech followers, including 300+ CEOs and more than 1,250 companies from 50 countries.


While not being able to attend this year, I was able to live vicariously through the tweets of others who captured the highlights (and some humor) from the first full day of the event. Below is a recap of today's sessions.