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  • user 3:35 am on November 13, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , robo, ,   

    New Report: Robo-Advisory Model At a Tipping Point 

    The -advisory is at a with all current players needing further development if the robo concept is to prove long-lasting.

    Without further refinement on the part of the individual robo-advisors themselves, a substantial portion of current providers will have difficulties succeeding in the long-term. This is one of the main findings of the Leading Robo-Advisors 2016 &8211; Benchmarking the current automated investment landscape and mapping the road ahead&; for which the Swiss research company MyPrivateBanking Research analyzed and ranked 30 leading robo-advisors worldwide.

    In their global benchmarking of robo-advisor platforms, the MyPrivateBanking report identifies plenty of examples of good practice at the level of individual functions. However, in the researchers’ view, no providers are yet coming close to offering an end-to-end consistent level of excellence. “We see that most robo-advisors are good at some features, but at the same time missing out completely on other important ones”, say Francis Groves, senior analyst of MyPrivateBanking Research.

    “While this was tolerated by clients at the start of the robo-advisor breakthrough, they now demand a top-performance throughout the full process, from comprehensively explaining the services to superior portfolio reporting.”

    Schwab intelligent Portfolios, Indexa Capital and Nutmeg top ranked robo-advisors

    MyPrivateBanking’s ranking of 30 robo-advisors from 15 countries awarded the highest scores to the these three platforms:

    &; Schwab Intelligent Portfolios (USA) – exhibiting great strengths in the key areas of product and process information and client assessment plus user experience (43 points out of 60).

    &8211; Indexa Capital (Spain) – a good ‘all-rounder’ with a solid performance in all areas (42 points).

    &8211; Nutmeg (UK) – Another example of excellent product and process information coupled with being one of the top three providers of investment knowledge and education (42 points).

     

    myprivatebank report

     

    Most robo-advisors fail to offer a user friendly performance across the full process and all channels

    However, with more than a third of the evaluated firms achieving less than half of the possible points, and the highest scoring robo-advisor scoring slightly less than 75% of the maximum available points, MyPrivateBanking sees considerable room for improvement. In particular the survey identified that there are too many gaps in most robo-advisors’ onboarding processes to guarantee a steady stream of new clients.

     

    myprivatebank report 2

     

    MyPrivateBanking’s evaluation covered 43 different criteria and assessed the performance overall including for the robo-advisors’ websites, mobile apps and social media channels. Some of the more troubling key research findings are:

    (1) None of the platforms evaluated have yet developed the robo-advisory model of client recruitment to its full potential, with even the best current players leaving out at least one essential component. For example, analysts found that advisors provided either good information about the product and process OR good knowledge content but rarely both.

    (2) Client assessment, the highest profile component of robo-advisor onboarding, is generally falling well below a sufficiently rigorous standard. Less than 50% of the evaluated advisors failed to explain the purpose of their questions and only 53% included a comprehensive check on a prospective investor’s attitude toward risk.

    (3) A high proportion of the robo-advisors, 23%, are abdicating from the any responsibility for sustaining their own clients’ ongoing investing ‘career’ by the provision of relevant, easily digestible education and knowledge or even, in some cases, providing dedicated social media.

     

    In respect to robo-advisors offered by well-established institutions the MyPrivateBanking analysts identified a tendency of such actors to enter the robo-advisor space for the first time by creating robo mini-sites. These are characterized as one or two page websites, which may or may not be embedded in the institution’s overall web presence, that are clearly not designed to be revisited by signed-up clients.

    In MyPrivateBanking ‘s view this is a kind of robo-advisory sub-species that may assist with rapid client onboarding but which does not, on its own, do a lot to foster enduring client-advisor relationships. “We foresee the need for leading institutions to be more radical and wholehearted in their automated investment initiatives in the next few years, even if this means starting over again with a second robo-advisor to replace their first.”

    Only robo-advisors constantly pushing ahead for superior client experience will survive

    “The pioneer years of robo-advisors have come to the end and the market will separate the wheat from the chaff“, stresses Francis Groves. „Too many automated investment services target the same, growing &8211; but still not sufficient &8211; client segment to nurture all or most of them. Too few of the automated investment services see their platform through the eyes of a first time user, while many are losing sight of the need for sustaining a customer experience that will – ideally – last for years.”

    Robo-advisor evaluation structure

    In this report, MyPrivateBanking makes a series of recommendations on the basis of our benchmarking evaluation, among them:

    (1) Aiming for transparency is the best policy, especially when presenting the robo-advisor’s pricing and product and process information.

    (2) Automated investment platforms need to be subjected to rigorous user experience testing. Looking good is not enough – equally, content must be in-depth.

    (3) Robo-advisors risk side-lining themselves if they don’t recognize that clients need financial plans as well as investment portfolios. At least a basic financial planning offer should be considered for inclusion as part of the robo value proposition.

    The post New Report: Robo-Advisory Model At a Tipping Point appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 9:17 am on November 10, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , robo, , WealthTech   

    WealthTech Open APIs: Shapes, Colors and Focus 

    In May I wrote about The API movement in the -advisory space, and found that those with API offerings were companies in the brokerage business (which is severely disrupted as we speak) and not that much in businesses with robo-advisory offerings (without brokerage and custody). At the time (6months ago), IRead More
    Bank Innovation

     
  • user 6:00 am on October 28, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , robo,   

    The Bankers’ Plumber on FinTech: The Swiss and UBS have good chances to win the battle of digital wealth management. 

     

    The Swiss are world leaders in many things: watches, chocolate, Swiss Army knives and wealth management. Although the world of Swiss private banking has had more downs than up lately, wealth management is in the national DNA. There is good reason to see the Swiss coming out on top as private banking reinvents itself as a more digital product. Amongst the Swiss , UBS is well set up to lead the pack; its recent announcement of its intentions in the UK: “UBS to launch digital wealth management platform in Britain” offers much promise, as does history, or rather deja vue.

    In the world, several different terms are used to describe expected changes or influences on the same thing: Digital Wealth Management. -Advisors. Machine Learning are all being applied in relation to what commentators see will be the future in the world of asset or wealth management.

    In essence, this is about applying more advanced processes to the matter of looking after people’s money; making the interaction between bank and clients function faster, better and cheaper via mobile and internet channels, using rules to drive investment decisions and using AI, artificial intelligence, or Machine Learning to learn lessons and fine tune those decisions. For all the new terms and new , the underlying core banking discipline is not changing;

    1. Asset allocation according to investment goals, which are based on risk appetite and risk experience, or awareness.
    2. The two basic approaches to investing: as an investor either I am “self directed”, making my own decisions, with varying degrees of input from my banks or advisor, or I am a passive investor giving a “mandate” to my advisor.

    Swiss banks have been managing money on this basis for a very long time. There is an ingrained culture of formally setting investment strategies based on investing goals; growth, balanced, capital preservation and of dealing with the multi-currency needs of an international clientele.

    The theory is underpinned by solid back-office processes, for example in investment controlling, making sure that the investment guidelines are followed. Having been the product manager for a Shariah complaint cash management fund, I have seen this working first hand at Credit Suisse. Asset servicing is another discipline where the Swiss excel; the international client base means the banks have a very diverse set of asset information and detail to keep on top of. Prices, corporate actions and dividend information are all effectively gathered and processed.

    Historically, the Swiss have not been that efficient; fat, super-normal, profits bloated by lots of offshore, black money have masked high costs and poor processes. The game plan worked as long as the vast majority of those assets were processed on the big, old-iron, mainframes in Switzerland. Neither UBS nor Credit Suisse managed too build really great platforms for offshore processing that would replicate the efficiency of the HQ machinery. In the US, firms such as Vanguard have led the way in offering low cost investment vehicles.

    So, the core already exists as the industry transitions to another generation, both of clients, technical capabilities and regulatory requirements. The challenge is to adapt. According to head of digital at one of the major banks, the key challenges are:

    1. Moving from a push business model to a pull model, including the move from a predominantly offline experience to an online first experience.
    2. Transformation of legacy technology stack into a modular, open-API platform which is more horizontally integrated
    3. Biggest obstacle is culture change, i.e. to find the talented people required to create new world and change existing mindset to a digital one

    In thinking about where the industry is headed, I had a sense of deja vue. In the early nineties, securities lending, or Stock Borrow & Loan as our American cousins like to call it, became possible in Switzerland. The challenge was to to open up all the “internal drawers” where the security positions were filed away and channel the aggregated holdings to the market. The assets were there, they just needed to be connected up and channeled to the borrowers. UBS, or rather the then SBG, led they way. Led by the charismatic Felix Oegerli, a very capable team added a great deal to the industry. Credit Suisse had the same starting position, but could not get out of the starting blocks. From days at Goldman Sachs, where we were active borrowers, I recall a time lag of about two years between the first deals with the leaders at UBS and the laggards at Credit Suisse.

    Another recent announcement UBS’s private banking arm suggests the bank is taking the steps to simplify their infrastructure: “UBS’ European Bank Finds a Home”

    Lessons Learned: Digital private banking is really the world of what the academics call the “adjacent possibles“. What is close to what we are already doing?

    Apple did not invent MP3 music storage, they innovated around it, creating the iPod and the iTunes music store. Apple was not a start up when it made that move. In the mid aughties, Credit Suisse, then under the leadership of the ex McKinsey duo of Lukas Muehlemann and Thomas Wellauer pursued a “mass affluent” strategy. This was based on “bricks” rather than “clicks”. That was an idea ahead of its time. The “mass affluent” will not pay 100 basis points or more for advice. What they will pay will support a “clicks” based approach, but not a “bricks”based one.

    There is wonderful advert for Ricola, a Swiss company which makes lozenges. The main character pops up to challenge others around the world making claims to have invented the sweet, challenging them: “Who invented it? The Swiss!”

    My money, well at least the deeply out of the money options my wife has as a UBS employee, is on the Swiss mastering this evolution and UBS leading the pack.

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    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/bankersplumber” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”Olaf Ransome”] is Bankers`Plumber | Intraday Liquidity | Cash Management | BCBS 248 | CLS Programme Manager

     
  • user 3:36 pm on October 26, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , robo,   

    Swisscom Fintech Report: Banks Are Gearing Up For Digital Disruption 

    Attracting US$ 19.1 billion in investment in 2015, firms are growing fast. As customers are increasingly relying on financial services provided by non-traditional providers, are up for of the industry, according to a new report by &;s e-foresight and Sourcing Competence Center of the University of Saint-Gall and Leipzig.

    Fintech in Retail Banking Swisscom reportPeer-to-peer payment has been a hot topic in Switzerland, notably since the launch of Twint and Paymit. But despite the buzz, volumes of mobile payments remain small, growing at a slow pace.

    Nevertheless, over 50% of banks believe that mobile contactless payment methods will become popular in the near future. Peer-to-peer services and contactless payments methods will continue to evolve, grow and remain an opportunity for financial services firms, the says.

    92% of respondents said that online onboarding will be crucial for banks in the near future. In March, the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA) passed new rulings aimed at reducing obstacles to fintech, among which a circular on video and online customer identification to allow financial intermediaries to onboard clients by means of online and video transmission.

    A report by Signicat released in April argued that customers are feeling increasingly unsatisfied with banking onboarding processes which are often considered frustrating and time-consuming. Customers are demanding 100% online processes, the study found.

    According to the Swisscom survey results, banks are confident that digital assistance, -advisory, payments and financing are the areas that will be the most impacted by fintech solutions.

    Retail Banking Innovation Fintech Swisscom report

    Qualifying robo-advisors as one of the key innovations in the sector, the report advises banks to identity their target groups for such services and start elaborating a strategy.

    Despite Switzerland&8217;s relatively small crowdfunding sector when compared with the likes of the US and the UK, the industry has been growing steadily since 2014. The report cites the launch of crowdfunding platforms by a number of banks as well as the increasing number of collaborations between startups and financial institutions in the areas. It further notes the emergence of innovative solutions such as real estate crowdfunding and predicts notable growth for SME lending and financing.

    Banks named the most disruptive technologies in the industry as being mobile terminals, biometric authentication, cloud computing and Big Data.

    Most disruptive technologies Swisscom report

    Earlier this week, the Swiss government announced plans of policy changes to boost competitiveness of the country&8217;s financial industry. Notably, the Swiss Federal Council released a report on a &;future-oriented financial market policy&; that would allow foreign banks to open in the country. The legal framework is expected to encourage the fintech sector and sustainable investment.

    &8220;A stable and competitive financial sector that functions well is a mainstay of the Swiss economy. The Swiss financial centre should continue to assert itself as one of the world&8217;s leading locations for financial business and even be able to strengthen this role,&8221; the Council said as quoted by Out-Law.

    The move came a month after Switzerland&8217;s financial regulator FINMA has signed a fintech cooperation agreement with the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS).

    The agreement aims at providing a framework for fintech companies in Singapore and Switzerland to expedite discussions on introducing new products into each other&8217;s market and understand regulatory requirements.

    MAS has signed similar fintech agreements with the Korean Financial Services Commission, the UK financial authority and the government of Andhra Pradesh.

     

    Featured image: Wireless technologies by ESB Professional, via Shutterstock.com.

    The post Swisscom Fintech Report: Banks Are Gearing Up For Digital Disruption appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

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  • user 8:55 am on October 22, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Automatisiert, , Finanzdienstleistung, , Mobil, robo,   

    Die Zukunft der Finanzdienstleistung ist Digital, Mobil und Automatisiert 

    Egal, ob beim Shopping, bei der Informationssuche oder bei der Kontaktpflege: Wohl kaum etwas hat unser Leben und unser Arbeiten so stark verändert, wie das Internet.

    Auch Banken und Finanzgeschäfte hat es längst erfasst. Internet Banking für die täglichen Bankgeschäfte gibt es schon lange und eine Vielzahl von Bankkunden nutzt inzwischen regelmässig die Möglichkeiten des Online Banking. Und dennoch: Erst seit relativ kurzer Zeit sprechen wir von der „Digitalisierung der “.

    als neuer Trend
    Grund hierfür ist u.a. ein neuer Trend im Finanzsektor, der seit rund drei bis fünf Jahren zu beobachten ist: Neue innovative Unternehmen &; sogenannte FinTech Start-ups &8211; versuchen, Produkte und Leistungen im Finanzdienstleistungsbereich über den Vertriebskanal Internet neu oder besser anzubieten als die etablierten Institute.

    Der Begriff „FinTech“ ist dabei ein Kunstwort, das sich aus den Begriffen „Finanzdienstleistung“ und „Technologie“ zusammensetzt. Die neuen Angebote sind meist einfacher, bequemer, schneller und stärker am Kunden orientiert als bei den traditionellen Banken. Zudem bieten sie in er Regel Preisvorteile aufgrund günstigerer Produktionskosten.

    Drei Trends für das Bankgeschäft der
    Werden also Finanzgeschäfte in der Zukunft nicht mehr über klassische Kreditinstitute sondern über Technologie-Unternehmen abgewickelt?

    Daran ist zu zweifeln, denn für richtige Bankgeschäfte ist aus gutem Grund eine spezielle Lizenz erforderlich, die nur „echte“ Banken mit entsprechender Kapitalstärke erhalten können. Zudem vertrauen Kunden – wenn es ums eigene Geld geht – den etablierten Kreditinstituten meist mehr als den neuen Internet-Anbietern.

    Allerdings erwarten sie, von ihren Geldinstituten zunehmend dieselben Möglichkeiten und Funktionalitäten, die sie anderswo im Internet bereits kennen und schätzen gelernt haben. Daher haben vor allem diejenigen FinTech-Unternehmen gute Zukunftschancen, die mit Banken zusammenarbeiten.

    office-620823_1920

    From Pixabay

    Vor diesem Hintergrund lassen sich drei grundlegende Trends für das Bankgeschäft der Zukunft ableiten:

    1. Bankgeschäfte werden
    Heute ist das Bestellen von Möbeln oder Büchern im Web selbstverständlicher Bestandteil des Alltags. In Zukunft wird dies auch auf Finanzgeschäft zutreffen.

    Kunden werden immer mehr und zunehmend auch komplexere Bankgeschäfte über das Internet abschließen. Leicht zu bedienende digitale Tools werden dabei helfen, den Überblick zu Angeboten und Preisen zu bekommen und unterstützen bei der Auswahl der richtigen Produkte.

    Filialen und der direkte persönliche Kontakt zu Beratern werden an Bedeutung verlieren. Stattdessen werden virtuelle Räume entstehen, in denen – sofern gewünscht &8211; eine Beratung stattfinden kann, egal, ob per Video-, Text- oder Sprach-Chat.

    2. Bankgeschäfte werden
    Egal ob Shopping, Gaming oder der Besuch auf sozialen Netzwerken, immer mehr Menschen nutzen dazu ein Smartphone oder Tablet. Kein Wunder, dass Mobile Banking ein massives Wachstum erfährt. Nach einer vom Bank Blog durchgeführten Untersuchung greifen bereits über 34% der deutschen Online-Banking-Kunden von mobilen Endgeräten auf den geschützten Bereich des Internet Bankings zu, 2012 waren es gerade mal 10%. In Kürze dürfte dieser Wert auf über 40% ansteigen.

    Die Nutzung von Mobile Banking durch die Kunden weist ein unverändert hohes Wachstum auf.

    Die Nutzung von Mobile Banking durch die Kunden weist ein unverändert hohes Wachstum auf.

    Zukünftig wird man bei jedem Institut ein Bankkonto oder Depot auf dem Smartphone oder Tablet schnell und ortsunabhängig eröffnen und verwalten können, egal ob man gerade im Zug, im Bus, in der Bahn oder im heimischen Wohnzimmer sitzt.

    3. Bankgeschäfte werden
    Digitale Entwicklungen wie Künstliche Intelligenz und Big Data ermöglichen die Individualisierung und Automatisierung der Finanzdienstleistung. Intelligente Apps werden diese Technologien nutzen und ein selbstlernendes Regelwerk aufbauen um unter Beachtung des individuellen Kundenbedarfs die persönlichen Finanzen weitgehend autonom zu steuern und zu verwalten.

    So wie die meisten Menschen bereits heute autonomes Fahren als Trend antizipieren, wird auch autonomes Banking zur Realität werden. Mit Advice, Digitalem Finanzmanagement und Chatbots für den Kundenservice sind die ersten Schritte schon getan.

     

    Featured Image: From Pixabay

    The post Die Zukunft der Finanzdienstleistung ist Digital, Mobil und Automatisiert appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:35 pm on October 18, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: Diese, erleichtern, , , Leben, robo,   

    Diese 4 Fintechs erleichtern Schweizer KMU das Leben 

    Junge Finanztechnologie-Unternehmen, kurz genannt, gehören zu den Hoffnungsträgern der Finanzwirtschaft. Sie alle wollen ein Marktbedürfnis einfacher, effizienter und günstiger als bisher möglich bedienen.

    Manche richten sich an private Personen (z.B. Vermögensverwaltung mit -Advisory), andere an Unternehmen. In diesem Artikel werden 4 Fintechs vorgestellt, die Unternehmen das .

    Nun hat die Swisscom zusammen mit dem Thinktank e-Foresight die aktuelle Schweizer -Landkarte vorgelegt.

    10-relevante-FINTECH

    Grafik: Die zehn Hoffnungsträger der Schweizer FinTech-Szene, Quelle: Swisscom, 2016

    Das gesamte Universum der Schweizer Fintechs ist allerdings wesentlich umfangreicher. Die Digitalisierung ermöglicht in der Finanzindustrie viele neue Geschäftsmodelle.

    Für KMU sind vor allem einige FinTechs interessant, die in ganz spezifischen Bereichen Unterstützung anbieten. Sie adressieren folgende unternehmerische Bedürfnisse:

    &; Erhöhung der Effizienz im Management der Finanzen
    &8211; Senkung der Kosten für das Finanzmanagement, insbesondere bei Buchhaltung/Controlling und Finanzierung
    &8211; Erschliessung neuer und bisher nicht erreichbarer Investorenkreise

    Im Folgenden werden nun die Unternehmen vorgestellt, deren Angebote mir für kleine und mittlere Unternehmen besonders relevant erscheinen. FinTechs unterstützen KMU auf mehreren wichtigen Gebieten. Auf die jeweiligen Herausforderungen für das KMU und das Lösungsangebot des FinTech wird dabei hier eingegangen.

     

    Fremdkapital für Investitionen und Wachstumsfinanzierung

    Das Fintech: http://www.swisspeers.ch

    swisspeers.ch

    Die Herausforderung: Sie suchen als KMU Mittel zur Finanzierung von Wachstum und Innovation oder für Ersatzinvestition von bis zu 500‘000 Franken. Sie verfügen über keine bankfähigen Sicherheiten. Banken bieten die gewünschte Kredithöhe gar nicht an oder nur als teuren Kontokorrentkredit. Allerdings hat ihr Unternehmen die Substanz, einen Kredit zu tragen.

    Die Lösung: Fremdkapitalbeschaffung ohne Bank direkt bei Investoren. Das Crowdlending über unabhängige Online-Plattformen bietet eine neue Finanzierungsquelle für KMU an.

     

    Debitorenfinanzierung zur Lösung kurzfristiger Liquiditätsengpässe

    Das Fintech: http://www.advanon.com

    Die Herausforderung: Liquidität ist das zentrale Schmiermittel für ein Unternehmen. Aus verschieden Gründen kann diese knapp werden. Wächst das Unternehmen stark, können Leistungserbringung und Zahlungseingänge zunehmend asynchron verlaufen. Eine andere Herausforderungen sind an Kunden gewährte lange Zahlungsfristen.

    Die Lösung: Rechnungen (Debitoren) werden durch Dritte sofort vorfinanziert. Dieses so genannte Factoring war bisher vergleichsweise teuer und kompliziert. Mittlerweile sind FinTech-Unternehmen auf dem Markt, die dank einfacher Prozesse günstig arbeiten. KMU können ihre Rechnungen auf eine Online-Plattform hochladen, wo sie dann Investoren zur (Teil-)Finanzierung angeboten werden.

     

    Eigenkapitalfinanzierung für grosse Expansionsprojekte oder Übernahmen

    Das Fintech: investiere.ch

    investiere

    Die Herausforderung: Ihrem Unternehmen bietet sich die Möglichkeit, ein anderes Unternehmen zu übernehmen oder das Geschäft stark zu erweitern. Dazu möchten Sie finanzielle Mittel über eine Aktienkapitalerhöhung beschaffen. Die nötigen Eigenkapitalgeber finden Sie nicht einfach in der Familie oder bei Freunden. Gerade bei kleineren Summen (aus unserer Erfahrung unter 1 Mio. Franken) ist die Beschaffung von Drittpersonen schwierig.

    Die Lösung: Neue Geschäftsmodelle bringen so genannte „Business Angel“ und Eigenkapital suchende Unternehmen einfach zusammen. Auf einer Internetplattform beschreibt das Unternehmen sein Projekt ausführlich und zeigt den Finanzbedarf wie die dafür angebotenen Aktienanteile auf. Investoren können dann einsteigen.

     

    KMU-Buchhaltung online jederzeit im Griff

    Das Fintech: runmyaccounts.ch

    Die Herausforderung: Sie verbringen zu viel Zeit mit dem Abtippen von Zahlen, der Suche von Belegen und der Kontenabstimmung. Trotz Treuhänder ist die Buchhaltung ein manuell geführter Prozess. Dieser kann rasch aus dem Ruder laufen.

    Die Lösung: Die Buchhaltung findet online in der Cloud statt. Belege werden hochgeladen und sofort automatisch verbucht. Sie konzentrieren sich, eventuell zusammen mit dem Treuhänder, nur noch auf die wertstiftende Zahlenanalyse.

     

    Dieser Artikel erschien in ähnlicher Form zuerst auf dem Swisspeers Blog.

     

     

    The post Diese 4 Fintechs erleichtern Schweizer KMU das Leben appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 3:35 am on October 18, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , Geschäftsmodelle, , , robo,   

    Innovative Geschäftsmodelle im Digital Wealth Management 

    Schon längst hat die Digitalisierung im Banking Einzug in die Vermögensberatung gehalten. Der Kunden- bzw. Wertpapierberater hat durch die Advisors Konkurrenz bekommen. Letztere bieten zwar, so die Autoren des o.g. Factbooks, keine ganzheitliche Beratung, wohl aber die Möglichkeit, einen Mehrwert zu erzielen, u.a. durch Rückgriff auf bewährte Anlagestrategien, die den Kunden über Programme/Algorithmen zur Verfügung gestellt werden.

     

    Innovative Geschäftsmodelle im Digital Wealth ManagementDas TME-Institut stellt in Innovative Geschäftsmodelle im Digital Wealth Management. Factbook 70 Anbieter vor, die in die Kategorien Research Tools, Social Trading, Robo Advisory und Crowdinvesting unterteilt werden.

    Der Leser erhält Informationen zum Anbieter (Gründungsjahr, Länder, Eigentümer, Strategische Partner), Geschäftsmodell, zu den Gebühren und zum Mehrwert für die Kunden. Die optische Gestaltung bzw. die Legende (Kategorie, Typ, Anbieter) ermöglichen eine rasche Einordnung.

     

    Hervorzuheben sind auch die begleitenden Texte. Das beginnt mit dem Vorwort und endet mit dem Beitrag Robo Advisory: Vermögensverwaltung 2.0. Die Autoren zeichnen ein differenziertes Bild, d.h. die Vorteile der neuen Formen der Anlagenberatung werden benannt, ohne die Defizite und Risiken unter den Tisch fallen zu lassen. Die neuen Anbieter müssten erst noch den Beweis erbringen, dass die Kunden mit ihrem Rat besser fahren als mit dem der klassischen Banken.

    Der Stresstest steht noch aus. Entscheidend wird sein, ob es den Anbietern, vor allem aus den Reihen der Robo Advisors, gelingt, die nötige Reichweite bzw. Marktdurchdringung zu erreichen, noch bevor die klassischen Vermögensverwalter und Internetkonzerne auf den Zug aufspringen.

    Es zeichnet sich auch in diesem Segment ein Trend zu Kooperation statt zur Konfrontation ab. Statt B2C dürfte die Mehrzahl der Herausforderer den B2B-Ansatz wählen.

    Dieser Artikel erschien zuerst im BankStil Blog. Featured Image: Pixabay

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  • user 3:35 pm on October 13, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , robo, , swzh16, , , ,   

    Create Your Own FinTech Startup in 1 Weekend… What Does It Take To Turn The Dream Into Reality? 

    As the 2016 edition of the Weekend Zurich draws nearer, this seems the perfect time to reflect on my own experience with CrowdCrawler. CrowdCrawler was born during last year edition and has gone through the various ups and downs of most start-up projects.

    Indeed, it has been a bumpy ride since last October, but a very enriching and enlightening one, where I have accumulated a wealth of experience and knowledge. This post summarizes my main findings and aims to support any wannabee-entrepreneur in accelerating their learning and focusing on what really matters to perhaps, one day, feature on the global FinTech map! I hope you will find these helpful.

     

    How to make the best of your FinTech Startup Weekend?

    workplace-1245776_960_720

    From Pixabay

    1) Whether you have your own idea, or are just looking to listen to others, picking the right idea does matter. Avoid crowded areas… we don’t need another all singing and dancing -adviser or payment solution, unless you bring real potential for innovation and disruption in this space&; Any “Business” participant will be able to tell whether the field is already crowded, so pay attention to their comments after the initial pitch (CrowdCrawler focused on the real-estate crowdfunding area in the European market which was a sufficiently niche but growing area to ensure that we could get sales traction, ahead of potential competitors).

    2) After the idea, it will be time to pick the right team. Again avoid crowded areas, both literally as large teams are difficult to manage and it will be challenging to produce something meaningful in 54 hours if 10+ persons want it their own way (Team CrowdCrawler was a team of 3 which allowed us to decide fast, while at the same time remain efficient in splitting work and parallelising tasks), and figuratively as a team composed of similar profiles will not go very far as it will think and act the same (while going through the hoops of the Startup Weekend was possible with a team of business experts only, CrowdCrawler definitely struggled to launch as there was no real technical expert among the founder members). So you try to assemble a small and varied team that can cover the main angles: business and technical expertise, sales & marketing and finance.

    3) Throughout the week-end, you will get access to coaching sessions, make sure you use the FinTech/Startup expert coaches available to test your ideas, your business model, your technical solution. They will bring some helpful challenge and will put the finger on what does not work (CrowdCrawler was able to palliate to the lack of technical knowledge by quizzing and grilling the technical internet platform experts at each opportunity during the weekend and relied on their feed-back to develop a credible technical story, despite having no real technical expert).

    4) While it&;s clear that the 54 hours will go very quickly and you want to focus 100% on your idea, don’t forget to network with the other teams, this is also the essence of the exercise and whilst it may not be seen relevant at first glance, understanding what other teams are doing and how they go about addressing their issues will be very beneficial to your team (given our stretched resources, CrowdCrawler was not able to mingle so much with others and wasted some critical time on Saturday before pivoting our business model, with a bit more of talks with the other teams, we could have decided to pivot earlier).

    5) Start establish your brand early and use the social networks from get-go to seek feed-back and customer validation (CrowdCrawler started to engage experts on LinkedIn and Twitter late on Saturday, feed-back was slow to come and meaningful contributions only came late evening and during Sunday, which was very late to improve our idea, but still we did manage to incorporate some feed-back and it was the right thing to do, but we should have done more and earlier to increase credibility).

    6) Have fun! We all agree 54 hours is too short and if this startup idea is really taking off, then soon enough it will get serious, but for now, just enjoy the moment and get creative (the best moment for CrowdCrawler was when we established our strategy to rule over the world… and then we pivoted the business model to deliver something more realistic… we all have big dreams, don’t we?).

     

    How to get to the podium?

    Obviously there are lots of factors that will go towards determining the winner, but remember that it is primarily a competition between 10 to 12 ideas, so winning it is more about being the best among those 10 or 12, than having the most elaborated idea in the world… the real test will be on Monday when you decide whether to launch…

    These are the four key points that deserve all your attention:

    From Pixabay

    From Pixabay

    1) The problem you are solving: is it a small, niche problem? If yes, then it means no market, no revenue, no future, so, forget it. Is it a big problem? Then how big is this market? What is the revenue potential? Is your problem well understood and simple to explain? Will the clients, will the jury identify themselves with this issue you intend to solve for them? Your pitch will need to show that you have validated this problem and that your solution is appropriate and appealing (CrowdCrawler picked a personal challenge faced by real crowded-funding investors and developed a straight-forward solution for it).

    2) What is your business model: how do you make money with your solution? Relying on advertisement flows from a large audience will probably not be enough to convince any investor or the jury… remember you are not Facebook, at least not just yet&8230; So you will need to be realistic in your assumptions and inventive to find a model to spit cash! (CrowdCrawler started as a freemium model, but we pivoted to a subscription based model to guarantee the cash flow and reinforce our independence from the crowdfunding platforms we planned to assess and rate).

    3) A good pitch is simply not enough: you need a perfect pitch, so practice, practice, practice! The pitch is the conclusion of your weekend work, you want it to be flawless, well oiled and like a fairytale story. It requires hardwork: nice slides (as little text as possible) and timed and controlled delivery flow. Practice as many times as necessary, learn by heart, and time yourself: you don’t want to be told halfway through that you have 1 minute left&8230; Best if only delivered by one person! (CrowdCrawler had 11 slides which were covered in 6 minutes at reasonable talking speed, our “CEO” practiced the speech countless times to make sure it would flow impeccably, and it did).

    4) Handle questions efficiently: go to the point and avoid going long winded answers! In fact, this is the chance for the rest of the team to shine and show they too are on the ball. Try to be as calm as possible as the questions will test difficult points for which you may not have an answer yet, and never become aggressive if you get challenged&8230; yeah, sounds obvious, but believe me I have seen people get mad at simple questions. (CrowdCrawler was able to navigate through this tricky phase and leveraged the questions to showcase the benefits of the solution and the economics of the business model that were not covered during the presentation, so it was all added bonus).

    Last piece of advice: in my view, try to limit the time you spend explaining the technical solution and focus on selling a story instead. I have seen too many presentations fail because the teams wasted their first 5 minutes going through how the solution would work, to the nth level of detail, and either ran out of time for the rest (business model, market, competitors, etc) or simply did not have it in their presentation&8230; Don’t do this mistake!

     

    How to accelerate your idea and launch for real?

    write-593333_960_720

    From Pixabay

    Good, you have made it to the podium, congrats, now you can claim your spot in the FinTech Hall of Fame, but can you really? In fact, time is of the essence now, because your idea is in the open, and if it is really good, then competition is going to come after you&8230; but relax, and remember: competition is good. It means two things: first, your idea is certainly good, as other people think like you that there is a market for it, and second, it also means that you won’t be alone to educate the market and try to convince potential clients. Your only constraint is that you need to deliver and execute faster and better than your competitors!

    So, these should be the first steps you after a good night sleep:

    From

    From Pixabay

    1) Get your team in order: complete any missing skill or knowledge. That’s where it pays to have spent a little bit of time networking with the other teams over the weekend, as there are probably some good people who picked the wrong idea or the wrong team, or both, and did not make it to the podium, but have the energy, the drive, the motivation, the will to succeed and happen to have what your team is missing (CrowdCrawler was not able to recruit a full stack web developer in its starting trio and should have looked for one on Sunday afternoon through contacts made over the weekend, it would have given us the kick we needed to launch immediately).

    2) Develop a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) as soon as possible and engage with your potential market. Where possible try to get cash for the service you sell, as this is the acid test and you want to face this as soon as possible (CrowdCrawler took over 8 months to be in a position to launch its platform with a minimum service that could have been charged, even for a symbolic subscription fee. This was too long as in the meantime two other competitors were already up and running on the same market).

    3) Start marketing and developing your brand so you can leverage your fantastic win of the FinTech Startup Weekend Zurich 2016 edition. This requires a minimal investment of time and effort to roll out a robust and attractive landing page and some communication skills to develop a witty identity on the social networks. Make sure your dreamed twitter handle is not already taken when you choose your company name! (CrowdCrawler was active on Twitter and LinkedIn very early, attracting some followers, but the landing page was poor and hardly got any traffic, leading to disappointment and lack of motivation to really put in the effort).

    4) Look for additional training and support to help you through. Venturelab have a good Startup Accelerator Programme and Venture offers coaching with top notch startup and industry experts through their annual Venture competition. You can also follow specific startup training with the CTI &8211; Commission for Technology and Innovation (I was lucky enough to be able to follow these three programs as we were going through the first steps of launching CrowdCrawler. I have learned a lot through the trainings but also from discussing with the speakers and startup experts, but bear in mind that you will still be responsible for bringing the industry expertise and the technical know-how, i.e. if like CrowdCrawler you plan to develop an internet platform and your team can’t code, these programs wont teach you that!).

    5) Don’t waste your time in doing all the other FinTech contests you can register for. Your FinTech Startup Weekend win is enough to demonstrate that there is potential. Now, you really need to focus on your MVP and on get it to market as fast as possible, and where you can, in generating your first revenues. Next time you will consider another contest is when you have earned some revenues and reached the next stage of development – no point wasting time and energy on these contests before that (Team CrowdCrawler was unsure about the sales traction we could achieve and instead of focusing on developing a pilot and trialling our service, we decided to do other FinTech contests against projects/startups that were already generating revenues&8230; bottom line we never won again, we lost energy and motivation and most importantly we wasted time, that other used to develop their solution and roll it out to market before us!).

    6) Once you have some revenues, look for accelerators and angel investors to help you through the next step. Incubators and startup accelerators will run regular pitch competition to select their next recruits, it helps if you have already developed your MVP and are able to show revenues. F10 (www.f10.ch) and Swiss Startup Factory will be the obvious initial choices (they were the sponsor of the last two FinTech Startup Weekends for a good reason), but plenty other options exist. Angel investor networks will also be able to provide both financial support and mentoring to help you scale up. Go Beyond Investing, Investiere, Business Angel Switzerland or Swiss Startup Invest are possible sources for you.

    The last word

    The FinTech Startup Weekend Zurich 2016 Edition could be the initial kick to start your next FinTech startup project. Once you are there on Friday, talk about your project a lot, to many people so you can collect multiple feed-backs and improve your idea and your pitch. Then pitch and get the right team around you and start working. Find the right business model and start building your MVP. Deliver the perfect pitch on Sunday! Good luck, i will be there watching! And remember: have fun and network, network, network!

    This article first appeared on LinkedIn Pulse

    The post Create Your Own FinTech Startup in 1 Weekend… What Does It Take To Turn The Dream Into Reality? appeared first on Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH.

    Fintech Schweiz Digital Finance News – FintechNewsCH

     
  • user 7:35 am on October 4, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , robo, robo advisor, ,   

    Launch Your Own Robo Advisor 

     

    Over the years, there have been many quants and poets who tried to define the term ‘ advice’, and so why not add our small version too to the list. Our version goes like this…..Any automated investing or financial planning solution that takes into account client’s personal circumstances and delivers suitable and appropriate guidance to help them achieve their life’s financial goals….we would happily call them all roboadvisors. And we are not afraid to use the word “” on our website, although we would prefer ‘Automated Investing and Planning’.

    We believe delivering automated digital client centric solutions and not being too product focussed is the way to move forward, and we think this strategy will become the norm for all retail focussed financial services firms in the future. Assuming you are with us on that belief, let us try and give you our version of how to launch your own client centric robo-advisor. Firms can move forward in any of the following ways:

    1. Building Solutions In-house

      Firms such as BMO, Charles Schwab and Vanguard launched their own robo advisor platforms by building the solution in-house. However, most firms usually take longer time to competitive digital products primarily due to the arduous internal processes. Efficient companies build solutions in-house preserving IP but companies are vulnerable to operational risks of failure and taking long time to get to market.

      In our view, all Tier 1 firms start with this thought process, and quickly realise the various bottlenecks associated with such deliverables. Moreover, it is often found that company’s culture stifles innovation making it difficult to stay competitive and to stay in tune with customer trends. To keep up with the changing customer trends, companies should launch digital propositions at a faster pace. Firms usually have limited know-how to move forward at that pace and hence require the talent, , and capabilities of the firms, which they have recognised now.

    2. Buying Innovative Start-ups

      Larger Institutions have numerous products and offerings across digital channels. Acquiring another FinTech firm allows firms to innovate their digital journeys and definitely give a quick leg up against the competition. In the last few months, we have seen numerous acquisitions in the robo advisory space – Invesco acquired Jemstep, Blackrock acquired FutureAdvisor, Envestnet acquired Upside, enabling these institutions to deliver client centric advice in an innovative way. All these startups that were acquired had completely different business models to each other but the suitors found value in how to use them for their needs.

      Acquisitions help large institutions enter new markets with new technologies but M&A deals are very capital intensive, and post-acquisition, it is challenging to maintain the innovative culture of the acquired firm within a large organisation. Disparate company cultures are a common cause for the acquisition to not realise its full value. Having said that, some companies have started to take a partnership approach in acquisition providing necessary independence. Such partnerships help companies align their goals and work collaboratively, keeping the innovative culture intact.

    3. Collaborating with B2B Fintech Startups

      We believe incumbents partnering with B2B FinTech startups who have an open, agile and innovative culture without any conflict of business interest, enables them to go to market faster and at a fraction of the cost without losing out to their competition in this digital race. Another level of competition, often ignored by the incumbents is coming from small and innovative B2C robo advisory firms who are slowly starting to gain the trust of the customers, and it is only a matter of time for these small ones to become part of the trusted establishment. Once these small start-ups reach that stage, it would be hard to stop them, and the ones who refuse to transform their strategy in this digital age would be on a downhill path.

      Institutions large and small can and should leverage the capabilities and technologies of Fintech firms to gain competitive advantage, stay relevant, and to reaccelerate growth across segments. These days the API driven seamlessly integrating propositions enable institutions to quickly bring a superior proposition, and one that helps to serve and retain clients providing them with the best of the digital experience.

    At WealthObjects, we think its best to collaborate with B2B Fintech firms, understand each ones role in the relationship, and respect each other’s strengths. Only partnerships where both firms create addition value and share together in the growth story are the ones that will be truly successful in the long term. What we are suggesting is not new; in fact all along firms have been collaborating in various forms such as a supplier, investor, or joint venture relationships.

    So why stop now, especially when the need for collaboration is greater than ever, when the entire financial services sector’s unbundling and disintermediation process has started, and when all existing business models are on the verge of or are already being disrupted.

    Let’s start to collaborate and create more value together!


    WealthObjects is named among the top 100 European FinTech companies 2016!

    WealthObjects offers B2B2C digital robo advisory, and engagement platform for Wealth Managers, Retail , Private Banks, and Investment firms. We help firms launch a bespoke next generation digital or hybrid digital wealth or investment manager or enhance their current offering quickly and at a fraction of the cost using our customisable modular platform.

    Our aim is to be ‘the Custom Cloud-based Open Architecture for Wealth and Investing Technologies’. Our purpose is ‘Taking Wealth Digital’.

    Source: http://wealthobjects.com/blog/launch-your-own-robo-advisor/

     
  • user 11:35 am on September 29, 2016 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , robo, value proposition   

    Forget Robo & Blockchain – Here’s the Next Big Thing. 

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    A few months ago I had an ugly call with a big startup VC.

    We discussed what the future would look like in banking. I pushed the ideas and concepts which I fully believed would push the wealth management space to it’s full potential but weirdly, and I wasn’t getting through to him. It’s like my points weren’t being listened to unless I mentioned “-advisor” or ““.

    That’s when I realised, there is massive over-indexing towards these few trends.

    Did everyone forget to create truly new value propositions?

    I’m pretty sure we as the wealth management industry have lost four years to chasing the latest headlines.

    X-Vestor is the first fully automated portfolio advisor that re-balances ETFs based on the latest superheroes movies!”

    “X-Bank is the first bank to create an automated parking place Blockchain exchange in Slovenia!”

    Instead of discussing the merits of 100 different flavours of robo and blockchain, shouldn’t and ‘s be focused on creating truly new value propositions where customers need them most?

    Today, in our BEST MakerZone yet we talk hardcore strategy, architecture and the BIG missed opportunity we see in wealth management and private wealth management.

    (Note: 2,000+ of you listened on your commutes so you can download the official podcast here on iTunes and Podbean)

    Q&A Transcript

    Veronica asks, “After the un-bundling of financial services when does the re-bundling start and how will it happen?” (1:15)

    Everyone in the industry is talking Customer-centric experience design thinking UX journey….but where’s the new digital stuff? We should all be worried. Since 2012, Payments have left the banking ecosystem, and Transfers are on their way out too. Those were two lucrative traditional businesses in the cash cow retail spaces of universal or regional banks that provided the cash flow to the rest of the business to serve higher-end wealthy customers.

    Open Finance is our belief that customers need access to several providers to manage their wealth efficiently and effectively.

    Digital creates totally new space for things that did not exist before – to shift existing business lines over to other faster, simpler ecosystems. Yet here we are at the end of 2016 – and after 10,000 FinTech conferences, newsletters and consultant briefings. We are something like 1-10% done in the wealth industry in terms of un-bundling and inventing truly new digital value propositions for customers:

    I don’t see any Bank (or FinTech) who has an Amazon, AirBnB, ProductHunt, NetFlix or Glassdoor in their skunkworks.

    People of Banking and FinTech! There is a huge greenfield out there to create new ways to locate and compare your private banking services. Comparison platforms that operate outside one captive banking structure and work across many providers – is a huge opportunity. YNOME is one strategic piece we are creating in the greenfield to see if it can prove the marketplace is needed – and so far all evidence points to we are right.

    So much of the value chain in wealth management is baked into the actual human advisory process – and we think new services will look completely different than today’s mess of apps and services. We need something new – many new things. Replicating an asset allocation and simple execution? That’s not a full digital value prop and should be pivoting by now and filling in those missing pieces served today during the actual advisory process.

    The internet for banking and un-bundling has just gotten started.

    Arthur asks, “What are the Best Online Financial Services Platforms and how do they perform versus each other and Advisors?” (7:18)

    The “platforms” out there are captive in bank’s ecosystem today but those are not truly platforms for banking. We think Google is a platform, Apple is a platform. We talk about Ynome (www.ynome.com) which is one of our attempts to build an actual extra-bank platform that will help customers assemble their own private banking services. We believe platforms are new systems that are not captive within single banks and part of their plumbing – but are truly user-centric as Uber, which as we all know was not invented by a taxi company, it was a new digital proposition fixing old problems and has only really just begin. I fully expect I will Uber all my transport needs in ten years and I won’t own a car. That’s what “platforms” really do to disrupt existing industries.

    We also talk about the First 20 Days of the journey to find yourself better private banking services, which starts in the internet and returns largely paid advertising. We liken the future experience of banking to be more like Google Flights and Trip Advisor, where I don’t even know what the airline names are anymore (I usually just look as we are going to the airport). Travel or entertainment can be booked so simply, so should wealth management services.

    So our challenge to you today is – go invent more platforms outside the captive banking system. Don’t just keep replicating single pieces of the value chain like strategic asset allocation, but try to create truly new digital user-centric (not bank-centric!) value propositions that make the job of managing your wealth much simpler and faster.


    [linkedinbadge URL=”https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-bruno” connections=”off” mode=”icon” liname=”David Bruno”] is Co-Founder YNOME, Head UBS WM Innovation, Advisory Board Member BONSEYES and this article was originally published on linkedin.

     

     
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