FinTechs offering financial health-oriented solutions are making inroads into consumers' trust and showing the industry
that companies can do well by doing good
REDWOOD CITY, Calif., Oct. 23, 2018 /PRNewswire/ --
Omidyar Network, the impact
investing firm established by Pierre Omidyar, the founder of eBay, and Oliver Wyman, the global management consultancy, today released
"Breaking New Ground in FinTech: A Primer on
Revenue Models that Create Value and Build Trust." The research report maps out a new set of practices by
consumer FinTech firms, who are aligning their revenue strategies with real value creation for consumers as a competitive
advantage to increase customer traction and future-proof their business.
Today, nearly 140
million adult Americans struggle with some aspect of their financial lives, such as paying bills on time or saving for
emergencies. At the same time, these same households pay roughly $175 billion annually in fees and
interest for financial products and services, which too often fail to improve their situations. The study has found, however,
that using the right combination of financial health-focused FinTech products can yield the average household with a median of
$45,000 in post-tax income at least $2,000 in savings annually. In
order to provide this benefit at scale, mass-market FinTechs must design revenue models that are both economically sustainable
and that reinforce consumers' trust rather than threaten it, a tricky task in an industry that is ranked by consumers as the
least trusted.
"Being the newcomer in an industry that is often plagued by 'gotcha' fees and with the lowest levels of trust among consumers
is not an easy task for FinTechs, and is a reason why aligning incentives with consumers' real needs is crucial for success,"
said Tilman
Ehrbeck, partner at Omidyar Network. "Embedding this principle early in the business culture is key to building and
retaining consumer trust over time, a lesson that, if put in practice from the get-go, will avoid fixing fundamentals later."
"Breaking New
Ground in FinTech" offers a simple framework for thinking of revenue models, defined by what value is created,
who will pay for it, and how they will do so. It outlines the three basic payer options—consumers themselves,
third-party sellers who want access to consumers, or third-party beneficiaries who derive value from better-served consumers (for
example, employers who see productivity gains from financial wellness programs). It also evaluates eight payment models that have
reached traction, identifying keys to success relevant across all of them.
"Many current financial-health tools offer products for one specific need. So building strong linkages to other companies that
provide broader solutions is a win-win," said Aaron
Fine, partner at Oliver Wyman. "Trusted referrals provide great additional value to the consumers as well as a
source of revenue that the firm can feel good about—avoiding conflicts of interest."
The report highlights trends from data compiled from 350 leading FinTechs, 11 case studies from frontier firms,
advice from founders and investors collected during interviews and workshops with more than 50 entrepreneurs and sector leaders,
and focus groups and digital diaries with dozens of consumers across income ranges and geographies. The research distills
approaches on how to embed commitment to financial health into the company's core strategy and how to mitigate the risks of their
revenue models to customers.
The analysis of the market landscape found that:
- Sixty-five percent of FinTechs charge consumers directly for their services.
- Approximately, 3/4 of FinTechs rely on one material source of revenue (such as charging consumers directly). One quarter of
surveyed companies rely on multiple sources of revenue and, interestingly enough, have raised on average twice as much investor
funding.
- FinTechs that have raised the most funding to date build a lower cost (and often better) version of an existing financial
product that consumers already pay for today, not a new solution with an unfamiliar value proposition.
- Mass market-focused providers were more likely than the average FinTech to rely on consumer income.
"One of the important trends we uncovered is that successful FinTech firms are not shying away from charging consumers
directly for their services," explained Sarah Morgenstern,
investments principal at Omidyar Network. "The key difference is that they go above and beyond the established mindset around fee
transparency to hit home to consumers what the real value-add is for them—a bolder way to build consumer trust."
According to the report, common traits of the FinTech firms at the forefront of mass market solutions also include a more
curated approach to selecting third-party seller relationships. They rely more on referral models that shift from advertising to
advising, which helps to resolve potential conflicts between the interests of sellers and the financial health of their
consumers.
In addition, FinTechs that use third-party beneficiary models are changing the conversation from how their solutions benefit
consumers, to how they benefit everyone. For example, by showcasing not only the impact of their solutions on employees, but also
on the financial prospects of their employers, FinTechs are unlocking new revenue pools. The report shows that FinTech firms
serving mass-market consumers are forging the path for others in the space, with 43 percent of them adopting revenue strategies
that charge third-party beneficiaries against 26 percent of broader consumer FinTech companies.
The report also identifies challenges ahead for the industry. While the report anticipates that viability of
specific revenue models will continue to evolve, competition is poised to significantly increase, especially as new players such
as the social media and e-commerce platforms enter the field. New technologies and the shift from "unbundling" to "rebundling" FinTech solutions may also shape the feasibility of different revenue model approaches.
The full report can be downloaded at: www.omidyar.com/insights/breaking-new-ground.
About Omidyar Network
Omidyar Network is a philanthropic investment firm that invests in and helps scale innovative organizations to catalyze economic
and social change. Established in 2004 by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar and his wife Pam, the organization has committed more
than $1.3 billion to for-profit companies and nonprofit organizations across multiple initiatives,
including: Digital Identity, Education, Emerging Tech, Financial Inclusion, Governance & Citizen Engagement, and Property
Rights. To learn more, visit www.omidyar.com, and follow on Twitter @omidyarnetwork #PositiveReturns.
About Oliver Wyman
Oliver Wyman is a global leader in management consulting. With offices in 50+ cities across nearly 30 countries, Oliver Wyman
combines deep industry knowledge with specialized expertise in strategy, operations, risk management, and organization
transformation. The firm has more than 4,700 professionals around the world who help clients optimize their business, improve
their operations and risk profile, and accelerate their organizational performance to seize the most attractive opportunities.
Oliver Wyman is a wholly owned subsidiary of Marsh & McLennan Companies [NYSE: MMC]. For more information, visit www.oliverwyman.com. Follow Oliver Wyman on
Twitter @OliverWyman.
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SOURCE Omidyar Network