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Finovate 2008 FiLife

By Jim Bruene on October 14, 2008 6:58 AM | 0 Comments

image At the halfway point of the morning demo session, we have David Kansas President of FiLife. FiLife makes its first Finovate appearance today.

FiLife is a joint venture between IAC and Dow Jones, now owned by News Corp. The company launched the personal finance website last year with a blog, and added personal financial management features in June 2008.

FiLife is making the first public presentation of its capabilities today at Finovate. The website allows users to find other "smart users" or can read advice and ask questions from "friendly gurus."

What's New
FiLife is introducing a series of product pickers starting with credit cards. They use a unique visual display to show the different product choices. They also have attribute sliders, similar to Kayak, to narrow down the choices.

Kansas also demonstrated the "stacker" approach to helping users figure out how they stack up with their peers.

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Categories: FiLife, Finovate

New Online Banking Report: New Models for Lead Generation

By Jim Bruene on July 9, 2008 5:17 PM | 2 Comments

imageOur parent publication, Online Banking Report, just published a new report: New Models for Lead Generation: How auctions, community recommendations, product placements, and specialized search provide alternatives to Google AdWords.

Not only is this the longest report title in our history, it's the first time we've looked specifically at lead gen sites (click on the Table of Contents right, to download the abstract).

obr_bestofwebThe report was inspired by MoneyAisle, an auction-based retail deposit market, that debuted June 9. Although, it has a few kinks to work out, we are impressed by its work and are awarding it the second OBR Best of the Web this year (see note 1 and Credit Karma below).

But auctions were not the only new lead gen model we looked at. Others included:

The report, which includes a ten-year forecast for auction and personal finance community involvement, is available as part of an annual Online Banking Report subscription or it can be purchased individually for $495 here.

Next month: New security technologies your customers are going to love, or not.

Screenshot: Credit Karma offer page: Countrywide's high-yield savings offer is rated positively by 53% of Credit Karma users and earns a composite score of 63% which also factors in clickthrough rates and exclusivity, see box in upper right (9 July 2008)

image

Note:
1
. The first winner in 2008 was SmartyPig (here). Best of the Web awards are given for new products/features that "raise the bar" for online banking. It is not an endorsement of the company or even the product itself. See previous coverage here.

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FiLife Debuts, Personal Finance Powered by Dow Jones and IAC

By Jim Bruene on June 13, 2008 11:37 AM | 2 Comments

image I've been reading the FiLife blog and monitoring its URL since I heard about the intriguing concept last summer. After a couple false starts, the site went live yesterday.

The unique joint effort between News Corp's Dow Jones and IAC, is a cross between a personal finance tool like those powered by LeadFusion, a finance forum like FatWallet, a voting site such as Digg, and a full-blown magazine such as Money. It's dripping with Web 2.0 touches from the trendy design, blog with an attitude, and harnessing the collective intelligence of the user base.

The core FI Deals area shown below allows user to self-assess their financial situation. In FiLife-speak, it shows how you stack up, in key areas such as income, home value, credit score, debt and even the value of your car. The people pyramid (in the screenshot below) shows an orange stick figure representing where you stand against the rest of the country.

Following a few ideas on how to improve your standing, FiLife presents financial deals in descending order of how valuable the FiLife community deems them. In this case, a mortgage offer from Citibank is listed first due to its top-of-the-line 5-point score. In this case, since it's the first day the site's been live, the score comes from a single review by a FiLife staffer. As the site gains users, this score would reflect the average across all reviewers.

FiLife main page with stackers completed 12 June 2008

The other key area is the FiDeals (screenshot below). Here users can search the top deals across all categories as voted on by the community. Some deals have been placed in the site via sponsorship dollars. Those are indicated by the gold pyramid. Blue pyramid offers have been added by staff members. In either case, the score shown within the colored pyramid reflects the vote of the community, which includes staff member votes.

FiLife FiDeals main page with sponsored vs non-sponsored deals  11 June 2008

First Impressions
The deep-pocketed owners have the resources to build traffic and establishing the FiLife brand, if they find it profitable. Assuming it gets significant visitor traction, this could be the place to find financial and banking deals online, at least in the United States.

The business model is clearly ad-supported. There's nothing on the site so far that would command subscription fees. And so far, the advertising is less intrusive than many other financial portals. And the bright look, good organization, not to mention professional personal finance content make it a potential winner.

But FiLife faces the same problem all ad-supported personal finance sites have: how to walk the fine line between the needs of users who want to find the best price vs. that of the advertisers that do not want to compete solely on price. FiLife sponsors may bolt if the community consistently posts poor reviews on their price-value. On the other hand, Google is dong just fine with AdWords, by ensuring that advertising is relevant. It will be interesting to see how FiLife strikes the proper balance.  

And it's no sure thing that FiLife ends up as the winner in the space. FiLife faces competition not only from startups such as SmartHippo, Wesabe, and Mint, but also from entrenched sites such as BankRate and TheStreet.com. And don't count out the incumbent personal finance magazines, including Dow Jones's own SmartMoney. These properties have enormous brand recognition and have already built substantial websites.

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Events

  • BAI Retail Delivery Conference & Expo: 11/18/2008-11/20/2008 in Orlando, FL. Don't miss the 30th anniversary of this great show!
  • Finovate 2008: On October 14th, Finovate returned to NYC to showcase the newest innovations in financial technology from companies large & small. The event was a huge success!
  • Did you miss FinovateStartup in April? Check out the videos of the demos!

Research

  • NEW! 2009 Planning Guide for Online & Mobile Banking: Packed with more than 1000 brainstorm-inducing ideas, tactics, and tips you can use to improve the effectiveness and profitability of your online initiatives! - Find out more
  • NEW! New Techniques for Secure Online Finance: Sandboxing, keyboard encryption, and real-time mobile integration could lock in more online customers - Find out more
  • NEW! New Models for Lead Generation Auctions, personal finance communities, and tools provide alternatives to Google AdWords- Find out more
  • Online Investing Communities: Will social networking revolutionize saving & investing?- Find out more
  • Searching for Customers 3.0: Search engine marketing for financial institutions- Find out more
  • Person-to-Person Lending 2.0: Disruptive service or market niche? - Find out more

Products & Services

  • Compare CD (certificate of deposit) interest rates and read customer reviews at Bankaholic