First Look: Startup Offers On-Demand Data Scientist for Small Banks

Students of Singularity University have a tough mission: build a company that helps one billion people within 10 years.

The "University," which is located inside NASA Research Park in Silicon Valley and was co-founded by Google executive and futurist Ray Kurzweil, is not an accredited four-year college but a supplemental learning institution that aims to "educate, inspire and empower leaders to apply exponential technologies to address humanity's grand challenges."

Eli Mohamad, a 2012 class graduate of the program, is working toward that grand ambition by building a program that aims to change the way consumers are evaluated for creditworthiness and get pitched offers. The program analyzes anonymized transaction data from credit unions and community banks to provide feedback on pockets of people. The surprising twist Mohamad is working on at his California startup, Walkmore, is that the program will also seek to crunch physical fitness data so that customers who work out receive better interest rates and/or discounts.

Indeed, Walkmore's models claim to show the more a person moves — tracked through smartphone apps or wearable computing devices — the more likely he is to pay bills on time.

To be sure, the fitness data won't be crunched in a vacuum — it will be analyzed alongside more traditional data sources that relate to environment and finance. (All the data will be anonymous.)

The startup seeks to pilot its software with credit unions and community banks for six months.

Most of those tests will center on Walkmore identifying credit decisioning or cross-selling opportunities within partners' transaction data. (Think of the pilot as an outsourced data scientist for a smaller institution that may lack mathematicians on staff.) Walkmore also wants a couple of its piloting partners to collect fitness data.

For those that do the latter, the experience would work something like this: A consumer would enroll in the white-labeled bank Walkmore program and provide access to the stream of data from his self-tracking devices, like FitBit. To incentivize a person to cough up fitness data, he could be offered cash back, better interest rates and discounts from local businesses, suggests Mohamad.

He stresses that people would never be penalized for being sedentary. "You still have access to the original product even if you sit on the couch or simply cannot for some reason increase your physical activity," says Mohamad.

Then, a person in a wheelchair could use a Runkeeper app, for example, to log his physical activity. The smartphone app uses the phone's GPS to track physical activities. "We transform all activities into 'steps,' which is the in-game currency for redeeming cash rewards or discounts," he says.

To be sure, the ambition is bold. Banks are reticent to change underwriting practices or take on more risk as they struggle to make profits while customers could have privacy reservations. Then, there are regulation question marks, too.

Still, Walkmore's concept offers an example of a growing trend of young companies emerging to build software designed to transform underwriting, or at the very least, improve prospecting.

The startup has already tested some of its models with credit unions. It has analyzed transaction data from five credit unions in the U.S. and Canada — with the credit union think tank Filene Research Institute's backing — to identify groups of people to pitch products to, for example.

In the three-month pilot, Walkmore searched for correlations in gender, credit score, and income. All told, Walkmore applied its models on partners' transactional data on 500,000 people, and reported fewer delinquencies and a slight uptick in loans issued among participants that followed its suggested action items.

The startup aims to give community banks and credit unions insights that show people can be a better risk than their credit score implies. It also intends to clue partners to what customer clusters are likely to need a specific product.

To accomplish this, Walkmore sends a bank a flash drive with Greenbox, Walkmore's analytics software. The bank uploads its transactional data and a Walkmore file and then clicks "run." The anonymized results are sent back to Walkmore to analyze and translate into recommendations for banks.

"It looks like a Windows 95 program," says Mohamad. "We just see the clusters."

Clusters represent groups of people who are more similar to each other than to those in other clusters. Walkmore provides a bank with a report within 30 days that offers recommendations such as this: Cluster Q is incurring fees from Chase by withdrawing money from the ATM at the corner of 1st and 2nd street. By placing an ATM there you could provide a better service to 3,897 members, and save them $14,000 per year. Walkmore's prediction accuracy for such conclusions is 98%.

The time it takes Walkmore to review the data depends on variables such as the amount and quantity of data, the bank's internal procedures, the types of products and the demographics of consumers, Mohamad says.

After completing the upcoming pilot, Mohamad aims to commercialize the technology. The Walkmore vision, according to Mohamad, is nothing less than turning banks into local health promotion centers to decrease occurrence of preventable diseases and enable access to finance to people in need.

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