a16z Podcast - The Fintech Opportunity for Students and Gen Z
Episode Date: August 26, 2022This week, student loans are back in the news, with the administration's announcement of a plan to forgive student loan debt for certain kinds of borrowers. Outside of the specific policies, though, s...tudent loans are often the first of many big financial decisions that young people make as they begin to build credit history and join the labor force. So what role can technology play in serving this demographic's particular needs, now and into the future?In this episode from October 2020, Amira Yahyaoui, the founder and CEO of Mos, a platform that helps students with their banking needs, like getting financial aid for college, joins a16z general partner Anish Acharya, partner Seema Amble, and host Lauren Murrow to discuss fintech for Gen Z and millenials. They dig into some of the issues around student loans today, the underserved banking needs of this group, and how fintech can help younger consumers today as well as set them up for a better financial future.
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It's back to school season, and as always, the topic of student loans and education funding
is top of mind. Beyond the policy debates, though, where can technology be specifically useful
to help students and young people navigate some of their first big financial decisions?
In this episode from October 2020, Amira Yayawi, the founder and CEO of Moss, a platform that
helps students with their banking needs, like getting financial aid for college, joins A16Z general
partner Anish Acharya, A6NZ partner Seema Amble, and host Lauren Murrow to discuss fintech for
Gen Z and millennials. They dig into some of the issues around student loans today, the
underserved banking needs of this group, and how fintech can help younger consumers get set up for
a better financial future. Hi, and welcome to the A16C podcast. I'm Lauren Murrow. Millennials
and Gen Z have been hard hit by the one-two punch of the 2008 and 2020 financial crises.
That experience has radically shaped their approach to finances and their mindset around credit and debt.
This episode explores how fintech founders are now designing products tailored to the financial challenges that younger generation,
from managing and avoiding student loans, to building credit, to saving and budgeting apps.
Historically, students have largely been overlooked by traditional banks, for reasons we'll get into.
Due to a combination of economic forces, predatory lending practices, and uninformed decisions,
millennials have more outstanding student loans and owe more money than any prior generation.
According to a poll conducted this month by the Data Intelligence Company Morning Consult,
just 46% of millennials believe their student debt was worth attending college.
My guest, Amira Yawi, wants to change that.
She's the founder and CEO of Moss, a platform that allows students to apply for every government
college financial aid program with a single application.
In this episode, Amira joins A16C Fintech Partners, Anisha Charia, and Sima Ample.
to discuss how fintech can cut through bureaucracy,
downsize student debt,
and optimize and ultimately automate
consumers' financial futures from an early age.
Please note that none of the following should be taken as investment advice.
See a16.z.com slash disclosures for more information.
The first voice you'll hear is Amura, followed by Sima, then a niche.
We decided to tackle the problem of paying for college
and more importantly accessing higher education.
So we think that money should not be the reason you decide to go or not.
We want to make it free and we want to make it accessible.
And we're hacking the system to make it that way.
In that financial aid is such a maze and such an obvious pain point,
why haven't others come in and try to compete on that front?
Helping students go to college without debt is not a new idea.
But honestly, the major reason is no one really wanted to build it.
Most of those who built solutions either went to college with scholarships or were able to pay for it or didn't go.
And when you didn't feel the pain, it's hard to want to solve it.
So a lot of noisy people in Silicon Valley, they would tell you, okay, the college degree is not necessary.
But then you look at their LinkedIn profile and they all went to Stanford.
So I think that you see, especially in Silicon Valley, is that those who are in Thai college,
they think if you can afford it, you go, but the rest of the population doesn't need it.
But that's a big misunderstanding of why people go to college and why people need an education.
The second thing is millennial FinTech was a lot about lending.
And that was at the time how companies like SoFi and others were created, which is loan providers are horrible.
So we are going to be better loan providers. And millennials really loved it. But today, if you talk to Gen Z, it's like, why should I pay that much?
Why should I screw up my future with a 150K loan?
I think what we also see is that students and parents alike don't really know how complicated
the process of finding funding is until they actually get to that point.
Navigating the FAFSA process, as well as the private loan process, people don't know where
to turn what to apply for, even differences between a federal loan and a private loan.
And that process is unnecessarily complicated if we're trying to get people educated.
Absolutely. The number one reason why people don't access their rights.
and the world is bureaucracy.
You have to spend your day on government websites
with 1998 designs and no API and PDFs
and horrible bureaucratic stuff.
We talked about how companies like SOFI targeted students with lending,
but I want to know why traditionally banks haven't courted students in the past.
Why haven't they specifically designed tools for this demographic?
I think that they did for a little while, you know, I signed up for a credit card in university
and I got a T-shirt. And I think there was a lot of that credit card marketing happening
in college campuses. And that, of course, was outlawed under Dodd-Frank because what they realized
was, hey, your quote-unquote free t-shirt actually costs like $500 of credit card interest.
And once that went away, banks really didn't have a way to make money off of students.
and because they've traditionally been so short-term-oriented, they pulled out of the market altogether.
And I think the other point, too, is they're losing that touchpoint on the student feds.
So before the banks were getting subsidized by the government to provide student loans,
and that got removed. In 2010, the federal family educational loan program ended.
And so we've seen the government providing an increasing share of the student loan market.
How big is this market?
Amira, do you have a sense?
of scale. So the US government gives around $1 trillion a year of aid. But in the students, financial aid
part alone, the total amount is $135 billion. And these $135 billion are cut into very small
checks. It's just an infinite number of applications. I feel like the magic of this country is
that it's so loosely coordinated that all of the best ideas just sort of through market forces
percolate to the top. But anytime you have to do something that's highly coordinated,
like let's find one way to access all of these programs. It's enormously challenging.
And look, the same things happen with COVID, right? Like the countries that were able to create
an enormously coordinated response have been really successful. And the countries that are
intentionally very fragmented have been less successful. Absolutely. And if you think about
financial aid is the same thing. Why does a student need to spend every weekend filing forms and
entering their name 15 times, assuming that someone should deserve the right to have a higher
eradication should not depend on how good you are at filling out stupid forms? And that's the
absurdity of it. I think part of it is changing of consumer expectations. This generation has embraced
mobile banking and fintech in a way that previous generations did not. And they grew up in the wake
of the last financial crisis, so perhaps they don't have the same unwavering trust in institutions as their
parents did. They're often more leery of debt and credit, as we see younger consumers preferring
debit to credit cards. And they grew up with the internet. So all this seems to set the stage for
the rise of fintech serving this particular market. How do you expect the most educated
the most intelligent, but also the most cynical generation to just trust without facts.
So there is an incredible, beautiful change in consumer behavior, which is probably the biggest
bullshit detector of all consumers. So if you are trying to trick the user in
some flow or some ad. That just doesn't work anymore. I think you're touching on a really
important point, which is trust and transparency, which we're seeing not only in student
lending startups, but in the new generation of consumer fintech startups overall, which is
millennials gen C, really need to believe that your financial institutions are on your side
and trying to help you navigate this rather than all the gotchas and fees and fines to make
money off of you. I think another interesting point is we live in a generally high trust society.
where people are willing to try new things.
And if you go to many other countries in the world,
you know, India is one that Sima and I have studied.
For example, it's not a high-trust society,
which is why you see these massive conglomerates.
They do like 25 different things.
You know, they make cars and sell cement and they offer financing.
If you look at how trust is changing, though,
trust is actually eroding in institutions
and legacy providers of financial services
and trust in software and technology startups is really increasing.
So I think it's the best time to be building a company like this.
What are the specific consumer expectations that we're seeing out of the younger generation
and how do you see fintech companies addressing that in product?
I think that the old model of, hey, here's a free t-shirt.
If you take my credit card, you know, the banks focus on owning a transaction
is kind of going out the window.
I'm glad that you brought up SO-Fi, because I think that SO-Fi,
you know, while they did a lot of interesting things,
They brought the old mentality of treating every opportunity to interact with students as a
transaction. And there's only so far you can get in arbitraging the loan APRs that are being
given to students that went to Harvard and Stanford. And I think that we've seen the results
of that. They built a big company but have struggled to build additional financial services
because, you know, giving someone a better loan is great, but probably not enough to have a
lifelong relationship with them. So I think that the expectation now is to have a deeper,
more meaningful relationship. And look, I think consumers understand that companies have to make
money, which is why models like subscription or even just charging consumers directly make a ton more
sense because consumers are actually smart, smarter than maybe we've given them credit for in the
past. So I think there's a higher expectation for the longevity of the relationship. There's a higher
expectation of the value that's delivered, but there's also a higher willingness to pay,
all of which are really good news for startups. I also think if you build trust early on with the
student that can go a long way, the process of paying for college, navigating FAFSA and scholarships
and grants was not always seen as a business. The whole student loan process was really seen as
being more in the non-for-profit side rather the profit side. And to a niche's point earlier,
personal loans and credit cards for students were really just thought of as, okay, well, it's
something that a big top 10 bank would end up offering on campus or the local credit union would
offer rather than being an opportunity. And now Fintech has the opportunity to weave something
that was traditionally not for profit and create a real product around it and improve the
student's experience, not just from a financial perspective. And that really presents an
interesting proposition in the sense that if you help students find money to pay for college,
you can probably build a longer relationship with them over time
and offer more financial services,
but you've unlocked something that they would have an incredible amount of pain getting to themselves.
And I think there is also a behavior that is very different,
which is usually companies try to win more than their user, right?
And Moss is the opposite, actually, the user wins more than the company.
And that is a different way of thinking.
And I think that is also what is hard to understand from a bank that just wants to win more than you.
I mean, I've been with bankers in the room when I explain what I do.
And I remember one banker who looked at me and said, economically doesn't make sense.
And I'm like, it actually makes total sense.
The bank of the future will be a bank that is able.
to transform $1,000 into $5,000, because the 1.2%'s gain is not interesting for this generation.
It's also interesting because banks' whole business has always been two things,
taking deposits and making loans.
So even if you assume that they were able to do this,
it would just be very unusual for them to do it because it's not their business.
Because their mindset is how do I create a transactional account or a financial product
and sell it to you rather than how do I actually build a tool or a product or a service
that is actually solving the pain point first rather than being around the dollars and cents.
And now, of course, there's a slew of fintech companies that are specifically targeting students.
They're tackling student debt, how to manage it, and more recently how to avoid it.
We're seeing more around savings, particularly saving for tuition.
There's budgeting apps targeted to students helping them establish credit early,
And then, of course, there's lending apps with terms specifically tailored to students.
So one point I want to go back to is the importance of building that customer relationship early.
I think more fintech companies are recognizing that.
And so we're seeing companies like Greenlight or Go Henry or Step that are encouraging kids and high schoolers to start saving early.
Can we talk a bit about that trend?
I think that navigating the long-term relationship is a
real thing. You don't ever want students or individuals to feel like they're in the kiddie pool
of financial services. And when you graduate from college, a lot of things in your life change,
you want to start being an adult. And I think you have to design the product as well as the brand
to be one that actually can have that longevity. You don't want it to feel like, hey, this is a
constraint my parents put on me versus, hey, this is something that's actually going to enable me for
the future. I actually think that if you are thinking about keeping a long-term relationship
starting too early is not the solution. I think you should start the first year of adulthood.
And I think getting people early means just getting them at the like critical juncture,
which is when people are applying for college, they're taking that critical step of managing
their own financial independence. And so I think this is a really interesting.
time to build trust when they've relied on probably your parents, and they're taking control of
that. And the data backs that up that a little less than half of college students before having any
credit cards. And among those, about 60 percent got their first card when they were around 18 or
younger, which suggests that many of them are starting their credit card experiences around the same time
that they transitioned into higher education. But we're also seeing increased parental dependence
as of July, 52% of 18 to 29-year-olds were living at home with their parents,
according to the Pew Research Center, that's a rate higher than the Great Depression.
In addition, six in ten adults are relying on financial help from their parents.
How does that impact the theory that companies should be trying to reach out to these consumers
and capture them at this transition moment when, in fact, many of them are perhaps not reaching
that transition moment at the same point that past generations did?
I think one thing to point out here is that even if you applied for all the federal loans
and scholarships are available to you, there's a good chance that you won't get the full amount
and there'll still be a gap. And you'll have to fund that gap usually through a private loan,
usually go through a bank, for example, to get it. But that requires a co-signer. Who's the
co-signer going to be on that loan? Probably your parents. And so you end up falling back on your
parents, if you can, in any situations, and the cost of living is going up. And so I think that's
part of the reason that you see them still reliant on their parents. In many other countries,
kids depend on their parents for a longer period of time. So I think that if it leads to a better
long-term financial outlook for the individuals, then it's not necessarily a bad thing.
What I think is going to happen is that they will be more responsible financially, just because
financial decisions are not made alone. Actually, the fact that a lot of those young adults now live
with their parents, I think, will be very interesting in terms of how their financials will go in the
future. I think Gen Z is going to surprise many, many, many people with how little credit they
will be using in the future. I think they've seen their parents crushed by debt. They are
super aware about the consumerism and all of that. While I think that you're right, there may be less of a
functional need to get credit. I do think that it's an important sort of emotional and
psychological milestone to start to establish that credit. So look, while I think they may take
less credit, I still think that they'll probably participate in the system by establishing credit,
at least in a lightweight way. And I think establishing credit isn't just about like, okay,
now I have a credit score that's in the prime segment and now I can take on more debt,
but also preserving optionality, which I think isn't something that you totally understand when
you're 18. So, you know, you need to build a credit score. If you one day want to buy a home
and maybe Gen C doesn't, but you have that optionality to do so or for an auto loan or any of these
big purchases that a lot of times when you're 18, you're not really thinking about. And we're
seeing on the product side, a number of products that are helping students think about how to build
credit because I think that's not something that students think about. Things like the account
I've had opened the longest is actually what's driving my credit score and how do you build a good
credit score. And so these are all things that you have to learn, which is an opportunity for
fintech. I like that you brought up that idea of financial responsibility. There are many
fintech companies that are designing budgeting apps, specifically with this in mind for students,
which are offering things like ways to track their spending or setting goals and challenges
and sometimes peer comparisons on spending habits that are anonymized. So it's interesting to see
For those that perhaps don't have that parental backstop, there are also companies that are seeking to tackle this idea of financial responsibility and saving and credit in a way that appeals to a younger demographic.
It's funny. We've talked a lot about this. I think to some extent, yes, budgeting is important, but it feels like the much bigger lever is ensuring that students are getting access to every single dollar of financial aid that's available to them. I think we should actually focus on bigger ways and bigger moves to actually assist these people.
If the existing budgeting apps are insufficient and you want to think bigger, where are those areas that you see opportunity?
I'll give you one point that's really piqued my interest just as, you know, 20 years ago,
blogger and other technology has sort of made every individual into a publisher.
Perhaps what's happening today is that every individual is becoming an investor.
And look, I think that the next generation is much more savvy and is going to participate
in investing at a higher rate.
And I think instead of talking about controlling costs, let's talk about increasing quote-unquote
revenue.
And there's a lot of ways to do that that I think are interesting.
Yeah, I think there's still a lot more to be done.
on the employment side.
That's a great point, SEMA, in that rising college seniors are now facing the worst job market
in modern history.
Traditionally, that was like, oh, I'm going to go work in the library or the coffee shop.
Now I've seen an explosion of online tutoring, for example, in COVID.
I think we've seen a lot of platforms pop up, but I don't know if they've necessarily connected
with students specifically.
To Nisha's point, it's a lot around, like, how do you increase the amount of revenue for the
student in addition to the loans so that they can sort of become more entrepreneurial.
material. I think you're also seeing a change in how education is being offered, especially in
COVID, where kids aren't able to actually go to school in many cases. But it'll be interesting
to see what traditional education looks like and also the necessity to pay for traditional
education versus am I going to go through a coding boot camp or what we would call vocational
training traditionally, but really skills-based. And I think alongside of that, we're also seeing things
like ISA's pop up.
And ISA is an income sharing agreement.
Essentially, the student borrows money from the institution to fund their education.
In exchange, they pay a percentage of their salary over time after graduation.
And it's up to a certain cap.
So if you end up making a lot of money, it doesn't scale with it.
I think the important point, though, here is it's a false dichotomy to say,
hey, either you deserve to go to college or you don't and you should go to coding boot camp.
I think consumer choice has to be the number one consideration. And I do think there'll be a barbelling that happens, which is there'll be a bunch of students that want the brand or the experience of going to a Stanford, Harvard, and they'll do that. There'll be a bunch of students who want either the life experience of going to a small liberal arts college or perhaps the sort of vocational training of going to something that's much more coding boot camp oriented. And I think the schools in the middle are going to be the ones that struggle because consumer preference is going to,
clarify around choosing those options. I agree. I think we are in the stone age of disrupting
colleges. No student who has a choice between Stanford and another solution will pick the other
solution. We're very, very, very far from that. I think a big part of that we have to acknowledge is
particularly this year, the widening gap between income levels and tuition costs, as many
tuition rates are remaining the same. It's not just a dichotomy of, you know, I want the
experience of college or I don't want to be on Zoom. I think there's also very real financial
considerations that these companies are taking to task. Student debt in the U.S. now totals
more than $1.6 trillion. And seven in 10 college seniors are graduating with debt. So I do think
that Gen Z in particular view their parents and to some extent millennials is what
cautionary tale. Also, in the future, I think they will be pretty critical of companies that
are just selling that all the time to them in a pushy way and making it super easy and making it
super accessible. Yeah, I think there's also an interesting example of a principal agent problem
here, which is the government has income-based repayment plans for student loans, but the channel
for activating them is through servicers of student loans. And, you know, servicers of student loans don't
really have an incentive to move people onto plans like this. So even when the government has
the best of intentions, their channel to their quote-unquote customer, their citizen, is very
inefficiently delivering the information. Yeah, absolutely. I mean, getting student loans through the
government is the least bad solution, right? But the solution is to get an education without
paying out of pocket. And without taking most importantly loans.
for considering any loan, even the best loan possible,
they need to look at all the other solutions they can use to pay for college,
and there is a ton of free money out there.
So if we're building more tools for this increasingly savvy,
increasing a digital generation of consumers,
what should founders consider when they're designing financial products for them?
transparent business model, being clear about how you're making money and making sure that your
incentives are aligned with your customer in the short and long term.
I think one company that's done a good job of connecting with younger generation has been
cash app, not only on transparency around the fees, but on the marketing side, both in terms of
products. So they offer things like fractional stocks, new products that are on the market and not
available necessarily otherwise. But then they do the cash tag and the cash drop on Twitter. And it's
an inherently social experience in a way that other financial products just haven't been able
to reach young consumers.
I would also add, it has to really work, not marginally work.
If you are building a product that is 5% better than what others have felt, you'll get nobody.
There is so many copies of every single app out there,
especially in fintech, just the number of neobanks, like, they all look the same.
You will not make somebody switch for 10% better.
With this generation, you really need to build something that is worth the attention span.
And as I said, the bullshit detector.
We only sell to students and we need to build the product that they want to buy.
As more fintech startups design with this mobile first,
consumer with high expectations in mind. Do you think this will have a long-term impact on
traditional financial services? We're seeing a bit of that already. Not really. Of course we should
have more digitization. Yes, of course we should have more innovation. The challenge for banks is not
that they lack talent. It's the things that would be most, quote unquote, innovative or create
the most utility for their customers, are things that are unfortunately bad for their short-term
revenue. So I think there's a huge structural disincentive for them to compete directly. And I think
what happens as a result is that banks end up being further commoditized, where they are those
just loan providers who are indistinguishable. And companies like Moss end up being the intermediary
and owning all of the economics of helping students navigate, refi, et cetera. And owning the customer
relationship. 100%. So all of this indicates this revived urgency, if we haven't already
seen it for companies that help the younger generation, manage their finances, save earlier,
avoid and pay down debt, build credit, afford real estate, all this. When we're talking about
designing for Gen Z or for students, where do you still see opportunity? What's next? I believe that
the banks of the future would not look at all like the banks of today. Having your money on even
of very well-designed the app and basically earning some perks here and there, it's not worth it.
What is your vision for that bank of the future? What will it look like? The bank of the future
will not only manage your money or help you save, but makes your money multiplied. You come in,
you're a student, and your bank just applies you to everything to fill out your account. So that
you can pay for college. So I really think that those services should be part of whatever
is like your money management solution. And I think that involves also bringing together a lot of
your accounts. We're investors in Talley, which helps you manage your credit card debt,
but like being able to manage all your debt across sources or even your income streams,
Wealthfront just launched a product as well on the investment side. But this concept of automation
of your personal finances is very much still in its decency.
Another one is about accessing the job market.
Today, colleges help you for your first job.
And in the future, every person will have 20 jobs during their lifespan.
How you get trained for all of them is going to be something interesting.
And I think a lot of that starts when people are students or even probably even younger in high school.
But this idea of not just taking one job, but you're glomming together a variety of, you know, a tutoring job, a passion economy project from an early age.
Also, just no longer having just one job for life, that's over, you know, and people are going to have multiple jobs in their career and maybe multiple jobs at the same time.
And they won't necessarily have to congregate in the same city centers.
The way that we work and the way that we make money is going to change dramatically.
I spoke on the employment side, but then also on the education side.
even if four-year education may continue in certain ways, I think people will add on their own
forms of education. And so looking for ways to pay for education is going to have to adapt.
It will generally just be more modular. I agree. The other thing that I think is interesting
is how has leverage changed over human history? You know, the most historical model of exerting
leverage was through labor, like having a lot of people working for you. The second was through
capital, which is the quote unquote rich get richer. And I think the new model for leverage is software.
You know, perhaps in the last generation, you could only own an investment property if you had
achieved a certain degree of wealth. But now with the fractionalization of things like investing in
real estate, almost anyone can participate in the economics of an investment property.
So I'm really bullish on software, making things that were previously only available to people
that had a lot of capital available to all people.
And that's why I think the mentality of hustle culture
and everyone's a founder
and all of that is a hugely positive thing
and very trend aligned with what's happening in technology.
Thank you all for joining us on the A16C podcast.
Thank you, Amira. Thank you, Sima.
It was great to join you guys.
Thank you so much.