a16z Podcast - The Holy Grail of Social + Fintech

Episode Date: December 7, 2020

The intersection of social and finance—as well as shifting attitudes around what we share about money online—have given way to an ambitious new wave of financial products.While revealing one’s f...inancial information was once considered taboo, now people are more apt than ever to openly discuss money online, particularly Gen Z and millennials. That’s evident on both ends of the spectrum, whether people are bemoaning their crushing levels of student debt on Twitter and Instagram or bragging about their latest stock trades on WallStreetBets. The repercussions extend far beyond social media, fueling a wave of new social-fintech products like Public, Commonstock, and Doji, among others.In this conversation between fintech partner Anish Acharya, formerly a product manager at Credit Karma, consumer partner D’Arcy Coolican (who himself is a former founder in this space), and host Lauren Murrow, we discuss why the “holy grail” of social plus finance is both so challenging and, potentially, so rewarding. This episode was originally released last year and has been resurfaced as part of Social Strikes Back, a new series exploring the next generation of social networks and how they’re shaping the future of consumer tech. See more at a16z.com/social-strikes-back.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi and welcome to the A16Z podcast. I'm Lauren Murrow. Today we're talking about the intersection of social and finance and how our shifting attitudes or what we share about money has given way to an ambitious new wave of financial products. While revealing one's financial information was once considered taboo, now people are more apt than ever to openly discuss money online, particularly Gen Z and millennials. That's evident on both ends of the spectrum, whether people are bemoaning their crushing levels of student debt on Twitter and Instagram, or bragging about their latest stock trades on Wall Street bets. The repercussions extend far beyond social media and have fueled a wave of new social fintech products like public, common stock, and doji, to name a few. A reminder that none of the following should be taken as investment advice see a16c.com slash disclosures for more information. In this conversation between FinTech partner Anisha Charya,
Starting point is 00:00:52 formerly a product manager at Credit Karma, and consumer partner Darcy Kuliken, who himself is a former founder in this space, We discuss why the holy grail of social plus finance is both so challenging and potentially so rewarding. This episode was originally recorded earlier this year, where we're surfacing it now as part of Social Strikes Back, our new editorial package exploring the future of social and consumer tech. You can find all that content online at A16Z.com slash social strikes back. So the fact that people are actually talking publicly about their debt is a new behavior. In the past, spending was public, but debt was private.
Starting point is 00:01:28 And for the first time, debt is starting to become a public conversation. What's new is that this generation is living in a completely different socioeconomic context. That's not flighty millennials and zoomers or whatever. That's a completely different financial world that they're growing up in. And that's driving a different set of conversations. You see certain categories that people are now talking about that they didn't talk about before. Salary is something that a certain generation is much more comfortable talking about. student debt is a category that people are much more comfortable talking about. Trading is a
Starting point is 00:01:58 category that people are much more comfortable talking about. Across the spectrum, you see sharing on social of financial stuff going up. You see it on Twitter, you see it on Facebook, you see it in blogs. There's a bunch of pockets. Why do you think this shift is happening? I think it's driven by a few factors. One is generational. Every generation's relationship with sharing and every generation's relationship with money is different. So what boomers did versus what Gen X did versus what Millennials do versus what Gen Z does is different. And I think you see this macro trend around increasing sharing. And that's driven by historical changes. That's driven by the financial crisis. Exactly. They have to take non-traditional paths to achieve financial progress and dreams.
Starting point is 00:02:40 For a long, long time, buying a home was not only the American dream, but something you achieved through the traditional financial system. So everyone had a mortgage. Today, mortgages are less accessible than they've ever been? Will you talk to your peer set about how am I ever going to buy a home? And that's really the catalyst behind many of these things. And I think you see that also with the massive increase in student debt over the last 10, 15 years. It's reaching unsustainable levels and that's forcing a conversation. And then that breaks down the stigma about talking about student debt. And then once you break the stigma, then it's like, hold on. And everything comes flooding to the forefront. We've talked about how money is inherently private. Do you not think that that is
Starting point is 00:03:17 becoming less so. There's a generational piece of it. Then, yes, we're sharing more of our lives in general. And then there's a political angle to it, this idea of radical transparency to affect change. So that's why we're posting more about student debt, about medical debt, about our salaries. Definitely there is a long-term trend line towards sharing more rather than sharing less. But you see it happening at the category level and to a certain extent at the subculture level. So take student debt as one category. When people start talking about it, then everybody feels empowered to talk about it, right? And I think you need catalysts for walls to come down around certain categories like the student debt crisis, a financial crisis. There's a lot of
Starting point is 00:03:58 external events that have led to some of these things come down, but it's happening inch by inch and category by category. The question is what pieces are going mainstream. I think the hacker mindset has pushed outside of software and into finance. There's always a small number of people who are excited about hacking their money. But now that's becoming a more mainstream concept. So the idea of being someone who arbitrages rewards across credit cards used to be a pretty niche edge thing. And now more and more people are doing it to the point where a lot of card companies are having to pull rewards back because there's points guy and a million other sites that tells you how to actually hack the system. And credit scores are very similar. It's not a destiny. It's a game
Starting point is 00:04:38 or it's at least closer to a game than a destiny. And more people are talking about the ways that you play it. When I say it's a game, I say that in a hopeful way and not in a dismissive way in terms of the importance of it. It also goes to what are the things people like to do on social and three of the core functions are bragging, complaining, and rubbernecking. And I just think you've seen where social and finance intersect, kind of coalescing around those three use cases as well. At the end of the day, social and finance, a lot of it is just content and it's content that's anchored around some financial transaction, but it's still just content. And so the usual rules of social apply. Another way to think about it is, when you,
Starting point is 00:05:12 you're building something in social plus finance, you have an interaction layer and you have a transaction layer. And the interaction layer is built around the emotional and cognitive pieces, and that is content creation, that is messaging, that is all these social things that we see pop up that appeal to these like cognitive and emotional levers. And then you have a transactional layer, which is whatever your actual financial transaction is. And that's generally much more of like a functional use case. The magic in social plus finance happens when the transactional piece and the interactive piece are mutually reinforcing. And that's where the flywheel on Social Plus Finance really starts to spin aggressively.
Starting point is 00:05:48 Can you give me some examples of particular products in which you've seen this magic happen? The easiest example is probably Venmo back in the day, where you had messaging apps, money transfer apps like PayPal existed and chat existed. But the idea that you could attach your transaction to an emoji, just made the transaction easier. It made the emoji more fun. It made the whole thing more self-reinforcing. It's a really challenging problem to be able to do that. But when you do do it, it's magic. I actually think that those products are fascinating.
Starting point is 00:06:16 I still like to scroll through the global feed on Venmo, which now is capped, I think, at the last 50 transactions. But it's just so fascinating to see all these people all over the country, sending each other money. Like, there's something that is just vicariously thrilling about it. And because money does touch all of us and it's so private and the products that can start to invert that, I think they just touch a nerve in an interesting way. And by the way, it doesn't have to only be online.
Starting point is 00:06:40 So there's a couple of interesting offline examples, you know, SoFi, which is really in the business of refinancing Miss Price student debt, built this whole community of Henry's high earning not rich yet, did a ton of parties and events, and you know, made it feel special to be a SOFi member. And really, they were a lender. So I think they've actually, at least in the early days, had a lot of success combining the two. I imagine it's less successful as, you know, Capital One is now opening coffee shop. where you can hang out and get coffee and do your banking, I guess. And, you know, it's easy to dismiss that as clumsy, but I do think that they're trying to touch this same nerve. There's also this long legacy of companies starting out at the nexus of social and fintech, and then eventually moving one way or the other, generally towards the fintech transactional layer. So a lot of people who can build either features or community in the early days
Starting point is 00:07:34 and really use it as a way to bootstrap their product. But then over time, it migrates more towards a transactional fintecher. product rather than a truly social product as well. What are some of those examples? SoFi is a great example of that. It's functionally a lender, which is not a multiplayer social game, but they were able to build this early community, which is able to get them a lot of traction. You look at wealth front.
Starting point is 00:07:53 Before it transitioned into wealth front, I think it started as Kiching, which was a social fintech product. If you look at Robin Hood, originally it was a much more social product than became a much more transactional product. Prosper started as a much more social product and then became more of a peer-to-peer lending platform. A lot of these things start social and are able to bootstrap in their early days off of some of those networks. And then you end up at a decision point where you try to thread this needle and continue down the social plus finance angle, or do you move into a more single
Starting point is 00:08:21 player fintech product? And I think a lot of the more successful fintech companies have started social, but then eventually transitioned. Why are they making that transition? It's hard. Well, let's talk about it. What is so hard about social means fintech? The most direct manifestation of social plus fintech is we have messaging. Plus, we have payments or some other, or shared accounts, shared ledgers, some others, join accounts, etc. I think that is very difficult for a number of reasons because money is so private. People are less likely to send invites to each other and bootstrap a social product in the way that you would bootstrap other social products. I think there's a lot of other examples, though, where the experience may not directly represent social plus money, but it very much plays to that.
Starting point is 00:09:06 So I think the example Darcy brought up is great, which is Robin Hood. There's been a ton of talk about how Robin Hood is doomed because others have cut fees and adopted their business model. But in truth, Robin Hood is a game and it's a game that people like to talk about. It works because it feels like adulting when you actually have a stock portfolio, not because active trading is something that's smart for almost anyone to do. So I really see it as addressing a different consumer need than Schwab is addressing and it's really not threatened as much by players like Schwab.
Starting point is 00:09:37 So that's an example where the fintech product is addressing a social consumer need, but at first blush it may not appear to be the combination of social plus money. And some of these products are really tapping into the trend trans gamification. Do you think more products will go that route and design around that impulse that we have? I mean, I think the thing you will likely see is that these social plus fintech products will actually come much more from the consumer side of things that I think there's some things like Robin Hood where you are able to build kind of both fintech and community and it comes from the fintech side of things. Another encouraging angle to it just the things that are coming from the social sides, whether it's a bunch of the chat apps that
Starting point is 00:10:15 now have wallets and payments installed in them or even something as weird as Fortnite, which is technically a game, but they have V-bucks and they have these economies built into them. And it'll be fascinating to see what happens with those types of products, because that could be the actual place where we see social plus money take off. I do think, by the way, there's been a bunch of past attempts, which maybe seemed naive at the time, but now just seemed like bad timing. So Blippy is a famous example of this where it tweeted everything that you bought. He linked your credit card and every time you swiped it, it tweeted. Okay, like, there's obvious reasons why that might not be a good idea. And yet I think the fact that, hey, look, the fact that Dave Ramsey exists and
Starting point is 00:10:52 people are talking about debt and spending. And, you know, there's the nugget of truth in all these things. And as Mark says, it's rarely that the idea is wrong. It's usually that the timing is. One of the interesting things about this category of company is that if you just take a step back and you're looking for broader consumer trends, you can often look little emergent behaviors that are happening somewhere on the internet and try to figure out, is that going to actually go into the mainstream at some point. One of the interesting and challenging things about social plus fintech is that so much of it is driven by norms, so much of it is driven around like what's taboo and what's stigmatized. And that actually exists at the subculture level. You can grow up in the same town at the same age. if you grew up on one side of town, your norms around money and sharing are very different from the person on the other side of town.
Starting point is 00:11:36 And so that leads to a lot of very distinct subcultures within different pockets on the internet. One of the more entertaining one is Wall Street bets on Reddit, where people are posting some mix of fake and real trades and explosions and everything like that. And so then you can look at these things and say, oh, here's this crazy emergent behavior that's happening. I think this is going to go mainstream. And in some cases it will or in some cases it is just part of that subculture because
Starting point is 00:11:57 the norms and taboos will never translate into the mainstream. But when those stigmas fall, then everything happens and everybody runs for the entrance at that point. Yeah, it is interesting. You know, if you think about crypto, so there's crypto as a computing platform, which is how we talk about it a lot internally. But then there's also the sort of sociopolitical, perhaps anarchist thread of crypto. I think the historical example of that was mostly gold. But nobody was like screencapping their Boolean collection and like sharing it on Twitter. Well, depending on what Facebook group you're in.
Starting point is 00:12:30 So I think, again, there is a past precedent, but you're right, there's a functional aspect of hedging against things that may go badly wrong in the future. And then there's a cognitive, emotional, sociopolitical, to your point, Lauren. Crypto's fascinating because it's a subculture that has a totally different relationship with transparency and anonymity and all of these different dimensions. And just changing the form factor of value from a dollar to some sort of token has freed an entire segment of people to talk about it. have a different relationship with it. And it's one of the most entertaining parts of social is what's happening in crypto. And again, the concept of crypto versus the concept of money created a psychological shift in some people that then made the norms around it much different. So you're saying there are these subgroups, little niche categories, but it's difficult to
Starting point is 00:13:14 build a business around them until they reach that tipping point. I actually think you can build great businesses around some of these subcultures. There's a lot of these quote unquote niche, but they can be massive niches, right? Like Wall Street, that says like 800,000 members. people always want to talk about how they're making money. It's having debt that's always been private. So the hardest problem in terms of social and money is having people talk about their debt, which is why people don't want to have a relationship with their lender or talk in too much detail about certainly their credit card debt because they feel bad about it. They feel like it reflects poorly on them. I was just checking Insta right now. And there's 675,000 posts for hashtag debt-free journey. This has become a public conversation and a lot of it is happening on Instagram. Instagram. And I think that's the hardest problem, the hardest segment to actually unlock. So I actually think we're pretty far ahead right now. Well, and to your point, Wall Street Betts is not just about, I made a bunch of money. It's also people posting, shit, I just lost a bunch of money. Though the subtext is, look at all the swagger I've got. I can lose all this money and it's all good, you know?
Starting point is 00:14:15 Not always. Fair. Where this gets a lot more interesting is looking beyond social media and social networks and starting to talk about how this stuff. drives an emergent set of products, how products are designed. Lauren and I both talked about this, which is the concept that as a product, you can create value in a functional way, which is, hey, my credit score was X and now it's X plus Y. You can create value in a cognitive way, which is, hey, I now better understand my credit score, or you can create value in an emotional way, which is I feel better about my credit score and my financial situation. Historically, most products have been designed with a complete
Starting point is 00:14:54 focus on the functional and now we're seeing next generation of not just fintech but consumer products think more about cognitive and emotional. There's also more offline examples than we're all typically aware of. So one I learned about over the last few years is called Raskas, which is rotating savings and credit associations, which are these offline communities that are managed in mostly immigrant communities managed by an individual where everyone contributes, let's say, $1,000 a month. And then each month, if there are 10 members, one member receives $10,000. And typically these are folks in your community. You might meet them at church.
Starting point is 00:15:28 And it's really hard to save $10,000. It's a lot easier to contribute $1,000 a month. And then when you receive the lump sum, there's always some big thing you want to do with the $10,000. There's tons of examples of these micro communities has not yet successfully been brought online. So, you know, not everything is sort of starting from zero when it comes to digital products.
Starting point is 00:15:48 And those ones are interesting because there's a different iteration of those in every single culture and every single thing. country. And it is this robust offline behavior. And the question is, how do you bring it online and how do you bring it online in a way that is culturally specific enough that it reflects the norms of that culture, but also in a way that's scalable? So there's the example of Roskas in a lot of communities all over the world. And then I think if you look at the flip of that, what's the extreme San Francisco version? It's a lot of people here do things like invest in restaurants. Why would you ever invest in a restaurant? You're probably not going to get your money back.
Starting point is 00:16:23 there's no liquidity. At best, it's sort of like cool to tell your friends maybe that you're an investor there. Maybe you skip a sort of reservation. It goes to your emotional versus transactional. It's not a transactional piece. It's the emotion of the finance. Exactly. But the proof point of actually investing in something versus just frequenting something is very different. People want to participate. They want to express these preferences and money is the strongest way to do so. Well, and another example of something that's inherently social. You're investing in something that then has a built-in social network. in the investment. There's also this amazing trend around fractional ownership. So there's a category of
Starting point is 00:16:58 companies that includes Raleigh Road and Otis and Mythic. They will take some asset, be it a classic car, be it some like culturally significant item, be it a magic card, be it a case of wine. There's like a different version of all of this. And they will take that asset and they'll functionally securitize it. And then you as a user can purchase shares of that asset. And then in some cases, depending on the kind of investment that you make, you get certain levels of access or swag or other things that are associated with ownership. So on the one hand, you actually have a piece of equity, a share in something that is theoretically valuable because it's actually a hard asset that has value. On the other side, you have the status of owner within this piece that is of value
Starting point is 00:17:40 in a more emotional sense, which you're investing in cultural pieces, right? Which may or may not be a good financial investment, but from emotional cognitive side can be really, really rewarding. So I think that's another version where this idea of social plus fintech is taking off. I love this example. We've talked about this internally as perhaps the future of museums, and I think that vision is really interesting, and it's much more emotional than rational. What's the potential there? Are there areas where you see opportunity in some of these niche groups? I think social and finance is like the Holy Grail, right?
Starting point is 00:18:12 The social version of most products is the best version of most products. Engagement is higher. Retention is higher. Customer acquisition costs go down. all these things that most consumer fintech companies struggle with are solved by building the social product. To the extent that you can get something that threads that needle between social and fintech, it's amazing.
Starting point is 00:18:30 It's magical. It's this incredible thing that happens when it actually happens. It's really hard to do, but when it does happen, it's phenomenal. I think the biggest opportunity comes from finding the emergent behavior within niche groups at the social level, at the community level, and then figuring out how fintech or transactional layer layers into or on top of that. The saying is every company is eventually going to become a fintech company. And I think that is probably the direction in which it goes in which you have weird social behavior that has some ability to layer transaction inside of it. And then that's how
Starting point is 00:19:02 social plus money takes off. In my mind, the most direct way to start seeing this play out is just having more fintech products address emotional needs as well as functional and cognitive needs. And there are some fintech products like Joy, an app where you sort of rate every transaction on how it made you feel. And the goal of a game, of course, is to only spend money on things that make you feel good, which is kind of interesting. So I think that's a product that's completely designed around a set of emotional needs with perhaps a set of functional outcomes as a happy side effect. I think there's probably a middle ground where a lot of products that are focused on helping you buy your first home or reduce your debt or invest in stocks can actually
Starting point is 00:19:39 start to design for these emotional needs when it comes to money. And that's how we actually start to see this achieve scale. Are there companies right now? that you see making strides in that direction? I think an example of a company that's really gotten this right is credit karma. And granted, I was at credit karma. But if you look at the tone of the emails, if you look at the ads that are on TV, if you look at the way the product is positioned, it plays as much to sort of curiosity and taking some of the heaviness out of credit.
Starting point is 00:20:09 And I think that's been a really successful strategy for them. So I think this is a company that's gotten it right when it comes to how do you talk to your customer about these otherwise really heavy things. And as people share more, it becomes less intimidating. Or if you can see yourself relative to other people. That's the other way that credit karma works. Yeah, it's like, I know where I stand relative to other people. And maybe it makes me stressed or maybe it makes me feel more comfortable, but at least there's some level of transparency. Right. There's some freedom in that transparency that perhaps is driving customer acquisition. That's right. In terms of the products that have not worked, I think the product category that hasn't really
Starting point is 00:20:44 seen successes, personal financial management tools. And there's two reasons. The first is that there's a very small number of people who are super excited about budgeting and trying every budgeting app, which is why when a lot of these products launch, they get great growth in their first 18 to 24 months. You can get a couple of million users who are really engaged. That's not actually representative of the wider market where most people hate budgeting. And it's not just because it's a pain to keep a budget. It's because it's mostly bad news. So I look at a lot of these pfm and budgeting apps like calorie counting apps just mostly makes you feel bad and it's easier to uninstall the app than it is to actually stick with the budget or the diet. So I think that's a
Starting point is 00:21:23 great example of a product category that despite the fact that there's real functional value there, it hasn't taken off because it didn't address the emotional challenge that the consumer's facing. I think another category that has not worked super well is ones that are designed to be social but only transactional. So I think there's been this long history of people trying to get people to be more public about what their portfolio is, and then other people can invest based off of that portfolio, and it benefits the portfolio manager who's sharing it. And that's one where it is almost purely transactional relationship
Starting point is 00:21:58 with purely financial incentives. And I think there's been a lot of attempts at that. And as far as I'm aware, none of them have really taken off. But I think that's another category where when you just stick within one kind of bucket, just within the transactional side, it's really hard to layer social into that. So if we agree that social meets fintech is really hard to do, but I've also heard you both say it is the holy grail. Why is that?
Starting point is 00:22:20 What makes it so powerful if we can get there? I think first of all, if you just look at it, the most narrow lens is just from a core business perspective, stickiness, cross-sell, acquisition, all of these things that are super hard problems for most fintech companies become dramatically easier if there's a strong social layer. So that's the most narrow lens. And then I think the broadest lens is just ending this dynamic where we're alone together. You know, everyone's in a dark room feeling bad about their money with everyone else in that same dark room.
Starting point is 00:22:52 And I think if you can turn the light on, then all of a sudden it is an opportunity to uplift everyone a little bit and normalize the sort of situation that folks are in. Because I think that with especially we talked about both the good side of Insta, but Insta is also a very public place to talk about your spending. and I think that that drives a sort of perverse set of expectations around what's normal, and we should try to change that. Yes, there's multiple levels to why social plus money is this holy grail. Another lens is it broadens the solution space within which as a founder you can operate because now you're not just on the transactional level or you're not just on the emotional and cognitive level.
Starting point is 00:23:32 You're now across all three if you actually have social plus finance or social plus fintech or whatever it is. So you can now design things that have. have some combination of those three levers, which if you're competing against a purely transactional thing or you're competing against a purely emotional thing, you now just have more factors that you can operate across. The flip side to that is it's combinatorily more complicated to do, but if you do do it, you're in a class of your own. Thank you for joining us on the A16B podcast. Thanks, Lauren. Thanks, Tarsi. Thanks, Anish. Cheers.

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