When it comes to understand where banking is going and what are the transformations happening. I generally recommend the book Bank 4.0 by Brett King.
It's a very interesting read to understand what comes next in finance and this book generally helps engineers and managers to join startups in the fintech industry and show a real comprehension of the sector (digitalisation, mobile, challenger/neo banks, blockchain, regtech, etc...)
I think they were just hoping to gain clarity. To us, defining BaaS providers separate from Banks will help folks that are in the same position.
Every Bank Sponsor seems to have a BaaS in the middle for the relationship.
I’ll try to get this list update with BaaS providers to help clarify for everyone: https://www.notion.so/ad1f0ccd61bb47a78d143f0b1624e752?v=5eb7285b64534fbea59eb314c0a8d49a
hi there
This is pretty much the only resource I have found to be containing consolidated knowledge. I have been working in Fintech for the past 4 years and in payments in general for over the last 7 years. This book sums up the industry quite well.
I've been eyeing this one up for a while, looks interesting hearing about founders' experiences. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Fintech-Founders-Inspiring-Entrepreneurs-Changing/dp/1547417293/ref=sr_1_13?crid=1H256U1UC8M08&keywords=fintech+books&qid=1647168480&sprefix=fintech%2Caps%2C76&sr=8-13
I think if you're looking from an entry-level perspective, one of the hardest things you'll bump into when applying for these jobs is a lack of experience in the field. Banking/Finance/FinTech are complicated fields with a lot of nuances and it helps to have some experience with it when starting a new job.
From a data science perspective, my personal opinion would be that it would probably be easier to get in on a less sexy side of the business- for example on the risk side of the house identifying patterns in fraud or combing through flagged transactions (the work may be more mundane than you're expecting if you're anything like I was as a college senior). I'm thinking something like this from a responsibility perspective (though they are asking for a few years experience): https://stripe.com/jobs/listing/risk-strategist-loss-prevention/2395450)
Best of luck!
>Hi!
>
>I am based out of India, and we have quite a few products which though not exactly are similar.
>
>How is Zelf different from a payment interface like google pay?
Hi! First of all, the main feature of Zelf is banking in messengers – you can transfer/receive money with one voice command. We add G Pay & Apple Pay for your offline shopping :)
Here you can see more information and ask the Founder about Zelf: https://www.producthunt.com/posts/zelf
Unfortunately, iMessage is a closed platform, we can't integrate Zelf there for now, but we will support Discord!
BTW you can answer your question to Elliot – founder & CEO at Zelf today on Product Hunt: https://www.producthunt.com/posts/zelf
Yeah - I think their position is that the interaction with the data should be more accessible than a pro level platform. They do have options though, as well as a more detailed web version: https://robinhood.com/options/ http://blog.robinhood.com/news/2017/10/31/robinhood-now-on-web
I'm currently debating this aswell.
I am going to try N26 first. I choose them because they are free and also you have a 0.10% cashback on all purchases(business creditcard). Because I'm a reseller I buy a lot of stuff so I think this will help me save a decent amount of money.
Firstly, you're absolutely not too old, you just may need to target your searches or target some areas of your background to strengthen.
If you wanted to learn some of technical side then I would suggest codecademy.com - really good for the basics or most of the languages. Then there's udemy.com - there's tons of free content on there to use if you wanted to add the technical portions to your CV.
Can you clarify a couple of things for me?
Good luck in the search!
Thanks. Maybe this book might be useful...not sure how granular you want to go as you mentioned "developer detail". But this is as far as I got
https://www.amazon.com/Anatomy-Swipe-Making-Money-Move-ebook/dp/B086WT7CSL
I used this app: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=app.greyshirts.sslcapture
Security restrictions in either Android or the Navy Federal app might have changed since then, but if you have an iOS device I highly recommend using Charles mobile. It's a couple bucks but works really reliably and supports decrypting TLS connections.
Hi!
You can try my book "The world of digital payments". There a lot of practical cases how FinTech's works.
https://www.amazon.com/World-Digital-Payments-Practical-FinTech-ebook/dp/B07CRWTYX7
Have a good reading!
Regards,
Pavlo