79/ The reason this doesn't happen in the status quo is because it requires too much bizdev by too many people but fundamentally the financial industry wants to facilitate this transaction if you can move 100k of anyone or 10k of the right people to use plastic with you on it.
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90/ This will be generally good for customers who want more human touchpoints, and will bring down the OPEX of account opening and servicing substantially. It will, less fortunately, further cause deskilling of the branch-based bank employee, which has been ongoing for decades.
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91/ (The availability of backoffice doesn't by itself make branch bankers less capable; it means a business process which historically trained them to answer the range of everyday to sophisticated financial problems encountered by anyone in their area doesn't need to exist.)
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92/ There are many problems in startup financial services which are technical problems, but there are virtually none which are uniquely solved by adoption of an architecture, language, stack, etc. Most of the technical problems are "How do people/organizations work together?"
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93/ You might sensibly say that "'How people work together' is more a management problem than a technical problem" but in this case the controlling abstraction is sometimes *very literally* where you draw the API boundaries.
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94/ People from finance backgrounds and people from tech backgrounds have extremely different ways of looking at the same artifacts, often coming to the conclusion that "This makes no sense and it is impossible you got this far without having some competent adult supervision."
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95/ Although you would think that both finance and tech would naturally cater to the wealthiest members of society and so they would consistently have access to the best services, a combination of Innovator's Dilemma and Worse-Is-Better means that future is present on fringes.
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96/ Examples of this: M-Pesa was one of the world's most advanced (and best distributed in customer set) payment networks within years, and relatively not-too-rich folks using the US->Mexico remittance corridor have much better FX pricing than rich Americans.
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97/ In my experience, more people in the US (and, broadly, Western) financial industries should be paying attention to customer-facing UXes from Asia. QR code payments are probably underestimated, in the same way that QR codes themselves were underestimated.
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98/ Virtually every conceivable subfield on the intersection of these two industries could justify its own hundred tweets blurbing a shelf of books covering a variety of costly learnings. Fraud. Identity verification and management. FX risk. Behavior during financial crises. etc
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99/ All of the professionals in tech and finance who make decisions which affect the systems that your live depends on work on the same Internet you do. Many would be happy to get coffee. Relatively few feel like enough people care about their line of work.
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100/ It occurs to me that in 99 tweets I haven't even mentioned cryptocurrency, which feels appropriate given its demonstrated level of impact. </rimshot> Alright, that was fun. Don't love this form factor, but let me know if subtopics here are worth an essay sometime.
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