The FINTECH Book: The Financial Technology Handbook for Investors, Entrepreneurs and VisionariesA front-line industry insider's look at the financial technology explosion The FINTECH Book is your primary guide to the financial technology revolution, and the disruption, innovation and opportunity therein. Written by prominent thought leaders in the global fintech investment space, this book aggregates diverse industry expertise into a single informative volume to provide entrepreneurs, bankers and investors with the answers they need to capitalize on this lucrative market. Key industry developments are explained in detail, and critical insights from cutting-edge practitioners offer first-hand information and lessons learned. The financial technology sector is booming, and entrepreneurs, bankers, consultants, investors and asset managers are scrambling for more information: Who are the key players? What's driving the explosive growth? What are the risks? This book collates insights, knowledge and guidance from industry experts to provide the answers to these questions and more.
The fintech market captured over US$14 billion in 2014, a three-fold increase from the previous year. New startups are popping up at an increasing pace, and large banks and insurance companies are being pushed toward increasing digital operations in order to survive. The financial technology sector is booming and The FINTECH Book is the first crowd-sourced book on the subject globally, making it an invaluable source of information for anybody working in or interested in this space. |
From inside the book
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Breaking the Banks Note Avoka – An Overnight Success, 13 Years in the Making PIVOT 1 – Customer Experience, not Business Process Management PIVOT 2 – Mobile, the Game-changer PIVOT3 – Cloud Computing Comes of Age PIVOT 4 – Focus. Focus.
For example, Johannesburg has become a centre for bitcoin development, while across Africa entrepreneurs are developing mobile-based banking and payment systems appropriate to the local telecoms and financial services infrastructures.7 ...
These “thriver banks” will migrate the majority of their customers to their own digital banking services. ... So, in the future, once I have logged into my mobile bank (presumably using heart biometrics or face recognition) I will be ...
People's anger at the banking system was the perfect breeding ground for financial innovation. ... customers and their preferences pointed to the mobile services they understood and mastered, instead of bankers they could not relate to.
In 2013, International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, became an equity partner in bKash and ... to keep in mind that in sixteen African markets, there are now more mobile money accounts than bank accounts.