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NetBanker

Tracking Online Finance


Bank of America Launches a Blog...FinallyJanuary 6

image What better way to start the new year than to blog about a blog. And it's big news. Bank of America, through its Center for Future Banking (see note 1), launched a blog called The Future Banking Blog. The blog, quietly began after Thanksgiving (note 2), has averaged about 2 posts per week,  about right for a banking blog (note 3).

The content so far has been wholly unrelated to Bank of America or its products. The blog is part academic, part strategic, bringing insights from the Center's joint team of MIT academics and BofA business execs.

The design however, is pure Bank of America (see below). It uses the BofA color palette and includes a prominent powered by logo in the upper right. It's also housed under a bank URL <futurebanking.bankofamerica.com>.

All in all it's a good effort, positioning BofA as a thought leader in the upside-down world of commercial banking circa 2009.

Chase Bank, Mint Top the Charts with New iPhone AppsDecember 22 2008

imageimage No one knows for sure how Apple compiles the list of its top-selling iPhone apps, but it's related to how many are sold during the past few hours. I've seen speculation that the measurement period is 2 hours (see note 1).

But there is no doubt about the benefits of rising to the top. The winner receives prime exposure in the iTunes Store and on the iPhone itself (see screenshots below).

I've checked the Finance category rankings dozens of times since the store opened in July, and the top app had always been Bloomberg with Bank of America usually the runnerup.

But Friday, a new top seller emerged in the Free list in the Finance category (note 2),

Announcing the Finovate 2009 Conference Series: FinovateStartup and Finovate2009December 18 2008

image

We know 2009 promises to be a challenge, but if history is any judge, more lasting innovations will be put in place next year than any year this century. Necessity truly is the mother of invention, especially for startups. 

Next year, we will again showcase the best and brightest ideas at our Finovate conferences:

imageFinovate Startup:
San Francisco - 28 April 2009
The conference features the launch of new companies in financial tech, as well as young companies launching major new products and features. Last year, we had 40

Giving the Gift of Microfinance: 2008 UpdateDecember 17 2008

image With capitalism bruised and battered in the past year, it's more important than ever to teach our friends and family about the ultimate upside of business and commerce, the potential to lift families out of poverty permanently. And the need is high, as always.

Unless you have your own personal foundation, there is no better way to do that than by spreading a bit of your wealth around the globe through microfinance companies such as Kiva.org, eBay's MicroPlace, and a host of others.

This holiday season the major microfinance companies are making it easy to spread the word, and the money, with gifting options. And with Christmas just a week away, here's a last-minute option that doesn't require a trip to the mall. 

Kiva <kiva.org>
Kiva is using the same approach as last year, but with an updated paper gift certificate (see below) that can be printed and given to the recipient or sent directly through email. It's a simple solution that works fine for its rabid fan base. The homepage (below) features a prominent link to the

Open Letter to SEC: Leave Peer-to-Peer Lending AloneDecember 17 2008

Dear Mr. Cox:

image I don't have to tell you that the Madoff mess has dominated the Wall Street Journal headlines for the past few days. You probably saw Jane Kim's recap today tallying the $25 billion in known losses so far in a wide-reaching, long-running fraud perpetrated by a firm overseen by your agency.

It's not that I blame you for the Madoff fraud. The cops can't catch every crook. But now that you have your hands full with this matter, I have an idea as to how you can free up some staff resources to sort out the mess Mr. Madoff left.

You've probably been too busy to read Netbanker (see note 1), but if you had, you'd know that I haven't been very happy with the way the U.S. peer-to-peer lending industry has been treated by the SEC this year. Thanks to your agency's efforts, the three m