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Building a $100M+ FinTech Venture from Michigan: Ryan Rosett, Founder and Co-CEO of Credibly (Part 1)

Posted on Thursday, May 30th 2024

Ryan has bootstrapped a FinTech small business lending business from Michigan, raised Private Equity funding to scale, and then bought the PE stake back through a Management Buy-out. Excellent case study!

Sramana Mitra: All right, Ryan, let’s start at the very beginning of your journey. Where are you from? Where were you born, raised? What kind of background?

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A Serial Entrepreneur’s Journey into FinTech: Felix Rodriguez, Founder and CEO of finally (Part 1)

Posted on Thursday, May 2nd 2024

Felix has done nine ventures and sold several of them. He is currently building a venture-funded,
AI-enabled FinTech venture. Really intelligent, scrappy maneuvering in various alleys of online entrepreneurship.

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Best of Bootstrapping: Bootstrapped a FinTech Startup by Piggybacking with Services

Posted on Monday, Apr 10th 2023

If you haven’t already, please study our Bootstrapping Course and Investor Introductions page. 

Quavo Co-founder David Chmielewski transitioned from a developer to an entrepreneur by leveraging his solid domain knowledge in a particular area of FinTech: dispute resolution for credit card transactions. He and his co-founders effectively used bootstrapping using services and piggybacked on the Pega Systems platform. Read on to learn more about his journey.

Sramana Mitra: Let’s start at the very beginning of your journey. Where are you from? Where were you born, raised, and in what kind of background?

David Chmielewski: I was born in Michigan in a small tourism-driven town. They have good schools but generally not a tremendous amount of job opportunities if you wanted to do something in technology. I was one of the lucky people who always knew what I wanted to do. I was exposed to computers pretty early.

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Thought Leaders in Financial Technology: Infima Founder and Chief Scientist Kay Giesecke (Part 5)

Posted on Friday, Jan 20th 2023

Kay Giesecke: Then, there are the individual loans and credits. The individual mortgage loans are not traded. It’s the same problem at the individual loan level. What can we say about this borrower? These are different verticals that we can expand into.

One interesting initiative that we’re focusing on is trying to understand the impact of climate on these markets. If you have a flood in Kentucky, then there’s an impact on the homes. That’s very unfortunate.

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Thought Leaders in Financial Technology: Infima Founder and Chief Scientist Kay Giesecke (Part 4)

Posted on Thursday, Jan 19th 2023

Sramana Mitra: Do you price per analyst or some other way?

Kay Giesecke: We have a matrix for the pricing scheme. One layer of this is size of the company. If you have an asset manager like mutual fund, how big is the asset under management? That’s one factor. Another one would be the use case. Are they using it for research purposes? Are they using it for trading purposes? Are they using it for reporting purposes? We have a per use case charge. The more use cases, the higher the annual charge. It’s a subscription model, typically with multi-year contracts.

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Thought Leaders in Financial Technology: Infima Founder and Chief Scientist Kay Giesecke (Part 3)

Posted on Wednesday, Jan 18th 2023

Sramana Mitra: You built this model at Stanford and then you spun out a company on top of that model. What is going on with bringing this to market like commercializing this? What is the business model? What is the go-to-market strategy? Is it selling to banks?

Kay Giesecke: If you take that mortgage slice, you can divide it into different customer segments. If you want to start at the lifecycle of the mortgage, it always is the bank. What happens then is that the banks collect bundles of mortgages, take them over to a government agency, and they turn these bundle of mortgages into securities that are then bought up by investors and banks. That’s the full lifecycle.

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Thought Leaders in Financial Technology: Infima Founder and Chief Scientist Kay Giesecke (Part 2)

Posted on Tuesday, Jan 17th 2023

Sramana Mitra: What are some of the nuggets that you’ve learned?

Kay Giesecke: We learned that the behavioral patterns are very complex. Let’s just focus on homeowners. There are the lenders. They look at applications for mortgage loans. They need to decide if this person is creditworthy enough for a home mortgage that’s backed by a specific home that they’d like to purchase. They have to assess the chance that this person is going to be able to repay the mortgage on time over the term of the mortgage.

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Thought Leaders in Financial Technology: Infima Founder and Chief Scientist Kay Giesecke (Part 1)

Posted on Monday, Jan 16th 2023

Kay is a Stanford professor. He has applied Deep Learning models to various use cases within the Mortgage and Mortgage-backed Securities space to build Decision Support tools for Traders and Portfolio Managers. The general principle applies to other forms of credit as well, besides Mortgage.

Sramana Mitra: Let’s start by introducing our audience to yourself as well as to Infima.

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