by James Cross, CFA, Franklin Templeton Investments
Lindsay Holden:Â There is a lot of mistrust among younger people right now. Big-brand financial services companies have almost no brand equity among Millennials and their Generation Z successors, who are really looking for something new.
Itâs fun to be able to take a real shot at creating a new consumer brand in financial services because itâs something that I think hasnât been done well in the past. And especially since weâre very targeted towards a specific demographic, weâre able to have a lot of fun with the Long Game brand. Millennials feel: âI know who I am. You should know who you are.â And so we have a very strong point of view with our branding.
Millennials are the first generation born with a smartphone in their hand. The mobile internet gives much easier access to information and services around the world.
And in that regard, we see the different Millennial attitudes more as evidence of evolution than revolution.
New disruptive technology has been put in front of them and itâs changed the way they want to interact with the world in everything from hard assets to their financial life to their personal life.
Previous generations might have considered riding a horse to be an essential life skill. Then driving a car became a fundamental life skill. Someday, self-driving cars will be ubiquitous and people will ask, âWhy would I bother learning to drive a car?â
So, life skills are changing and so are the fixed life decisions, such as buying a house or a car, that previous generations had to make.
The âAmerican Dreamâ used to be owning a house and having a family. For various reasonsâincluding financial insecurityâhomeownership among Millennials has been lower than prior generations. Many actually see greater benefits in renting. As such, engaging with them requires a new approach.
Walter Cruttenden:Â Behavioural psychologists such as Shlomo Benartzi and Richard Thaler have taught us that weâre not going to change peopleâs behaviour. People are going to do what they want to do. So if you want to reach them, you need to attach a good outcome to something that theyâre already doing.
For example, there are hundreds of millions of gamers out there and if we can incorporate investing into gaming, that could have an impact and lead to a positive outcome.
Lindsay Holden:Â Our customers are between the ages of 18 and 30. They engage quite differently with their mobile devices. Millennials and Gen Zers are always on their phones. And what they expect from their interactions on their phones is quite different than I think a lot of other generations. They expect things to be beautiful; they expect them to be rewarding; they expect things to be immediate, and also personalised.
Understanding that informs our brand strategies. It used to be that you could reach everyone through just 50 channels on television. Everyone was consuming very similar media. Now thatâs not the case.
We focus on essentially putting the user at the center of the experience. We believe that if weâre creating value in their lives, we are creating a valuable company. The high production values of our platform itself I think have really created a lot of trust with our customers. Thatâs something that has evolved over time and weâve seen better retention, better engagement over time with our evolution.
Incorporating gaming dynamics into financial services has the potential to change how, what and when consumers spend, save, invest, repay and insure.
We believe that gamified finance will become an important new category that helps motivate people to change financial behaviours and should result in a more engaged, sticky customer base. This could be disruptive to existing banks as users link their existing bank account with gamified finance apps and are incentivised to switch their direct deposit from their existing provider.
These apps are adding social games that are helping them go viral. For example, once a company owns the primary checking account relationship, it can cross-sell other products such as investments, insurance and debt refinancing.
Walter Cruttenden:Â With hundreds of millions of people playing games, itâs not surprising that gamification is entering all sorts of industries, including health care and education. We believe savings and investing are ripe for gamification.
In the past, thereâs been a kind of wall up around financial services because itâs such a traditional industry and youâre not supposed to play around with any money. What weâre seeing with the development of gamification in many instances is ânot playing around with money.â Rather, itâs a way to get people started and encourage them to continue.
Thereâs something called Mooreâs Law, which says the number of transistors on a microchip doubles every two years. So, as the cost of computers has fallen, itâs much cheaper to make little transfers online to carry accounts. We realised that the dawning of micro investing was here when the smartphone came out, which was the distribution platform for it.
With Acorns, we came up with a solution that makes people want to start investing. My son suggested that getting your first investment account is like getting your driverâs licence. Itâs a coming-of-age symbol. For young people, itâs an aspiration and weâre trying to fill that aspiration.
Customers connect their payment cards to the Acorns app and anytime they use those cards, the app rounds up to the nearest dollar and [invests the difference].
Weâve been able to bring in about 300 brand partners, including Nike, Airbnb, Walmart and Amazon.
When customers use their card to buy in those stores, the retailer will put little dividends in their account. That might double or triple the amount of dividends that the average account gets. And itâs a good way to help these small accounts get started.
It might not make much difference to the average large account here, but for little guys, it really helps them feel good performance when theyâre getting going.
I thought weâd take it to the next step through gaming. And thatâs why we started Blast. We work with 20 of the top gaming companies in the world.
We think thereâs a terrific overlap among Millennials and Gen Zers of people who are trying to get investment accounts going and people who enjoy gaming. With around 200 million gamers in the United States, and 2.5 billion worldwide, thatâs a substantial opportunity set and a wonderful way to engage people.
Lindsay Holden: At Long Game, we use a lot of gaming characteristics, including the chance to win money, in the form of cryptocurrency or cash.
This is not a new idea. Prize-linked savings is something that has been around since the 1600s. One of the most famous implementations is the United Kingdomâs Premium Bonds, a government bond whose holders are entered into a monthly draw to win prizes up to ÂŁ1 million. A lot of people have recommended a similar system should be introduced in the United States.
In 2015, the US government passed legislation called the American Savings and Promotion Act, which allowed banks to offer prize-linked savings accounts. That was very impactful for us.
But although our app includes gaming characteristics, itâs not a game. In the traditional game world, developers are optimizing around having people spend time in-app or spend revenue in the app. Theyâre shooting, for example, for two-hour session times.
At Long Game, we are optimising around financial outcomes for our customers. We use gaming and we want engagement, but weâre not looking for long engagement as the outcome.
Our customers are engaging daily, but theyâre engaging for three minutes and weâre then optimising around that. Our belief is: if youâre going to be succeeding in your financial life, you love the game. Thatâs a different thing from what you see in the gaming world.
Why Are Legacy Banks Investing in Fintech Start-Ups?
- Big Finance has not traditionally been an innovator
- Traditional financial services are often encumbered by legacy systems
- Big institutions need visibility of upcoming developments
Thereâs a perceptionârightly in many casesâthat traditional financial services firms, including banks and insurance companies and the businesses that support them, are encumbered by legacy systems and processes.
US banks, for example, havenât traditionally been innovators. Many have technology that is still in the mainframe era, not in the cloud era.
Fintech start-ups are generally free of those restrictions and so are often able to move faster and develop solutions that compete directly with traditional methods of delivering financial services.
So, many fintech companies have an advantage in that they can be in real-timeâtheir systems can immediately talk to each other. Traditional banks are spending an enormous amount on technology as this area is both a challenge and tremendous opportunity.
Walter Cruttenden: In our experience, many of the big institutions are investing in fintech for the experience. They want to know whatâs going on at this end of the market. We generally give our major investors board attendance rights and itâs a good relationship.
Henry Yoshida: The CEO of one financial behemoth has said theyâre trying to increase wallet share. But he also admitted that the overall wallet might be shrinking. So, I think for some of the big financial services firms, an investment in companies like ours simply gives them the ability to invest in a project that they otherwise wouldnât be able to justify internally. Not to preserve relevance to young savers.
The Use of Customer Data
- Many existing firms are failing to make the most of the data available
- Rich customer data can help firms make personalisation improvements
- Fintech can learn from retail giantsâ use of data
Our research tells us that with deeper, data-driven insights, financial institutions should be able to better identify what customers need and want in their financial engagements, prioritise investments into customer experience enhancements, redesign outdated processes and create innovative, intuitive digital experiences.
The ability to deduce actionable insights from data is driving the financial industry to an inflection point in terms of its ability to create frictionless and personalised consumer experiences that are predictive, personally relevant and useful. Taking a page from the playbooks of Amazon and Netflix, incumbent financial firms are seeking to move from a âsearch-and-browseâ to âcurate-and-deliverâ model, where they anticipate client needs utilising data and machine learning.
Lindsay Holden: Itâs absolutely incredible to me how little banks have used financial data to drive the customer experience. You might get an offer from your bank for a credit card thatâs worse than the one you have with them. We really do think that thereâs a huge opportunity on the data side in this industry and itâs something that weâre really excited about as a company.
We donât monetise customer data directly. Obviously using customer data in the app experience is very valuable monetarily speaking. We learn about what is driving customer behavior and then do more of that.
We also have savings goals in our app today and we can use that data to better understand our customers and offer them affiliate discounts on things they already plan to purchase.
Walter Cruttenden: We never ever sell customer data to outside parties, but we do use the data to deliver better products. We learn what type of game and the customer likes, then serve them those type of games. At Acorns, we have 300 brand partners. Weâre just backing a new company called ATM.com, which helps people self-monetise their data, which might answer some of these concerns and then people can toggle their data on and off too.
Henry Yoshida: The CEO of one financial behemoth has said theyâre trying to increase wallet share. But he also admitted that the overall wallet might be shrinking. So, I think for some of the big financial services firms, an investment in companies like ours simply gives them the ability to invest in a project that they otherwise wouldnât be able to justify internally. Not to preserve relevance to young savers.
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What Are the Risks?
All investments involve risks, including possible loss of principal. The value of investments can go down as well as up, and investors may not get back the full amount invested. The technology industry can be significantly affected by obsolescence of existing technology, short product cycles, falling prices and profits, competition from new market entrants as well as general economic conditions.
This post was first published at the official blog of Franklin Templeton Investments.