Showing posts with label wesabe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wesabe. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Just in Time for FINOVATE: Many Companies Launching New Features

Just in time for FINOVATE many new features are being launched by participant companies, some of which we've profiled here before.

I'm following the conference online today via webcast, though wishing I could be in beautiful San Fransisco, which is lovely this time of year.

I'm starting this list with items I've already made notes of, but may update later during the day as I follow along the FINOVATE presentations today.

  • Mint (see previous my review) has added CD and Brokerage shopping options. I wish they had this when I choose my brokerage two months ago, but I'm glad they have it now, and I'm glad to see I chose well. They've also added the ability to change dates on transactions which is great for those checks that clear late and things like that, so you can keep your budget on track.
  • Lending Club is offering new lender features which Tom posted about earlier today.
  • Wesabe has a tagging system now, which will be a great asset to users.
  • UPDATE: It's 3:00 and I just got an email from GreenSherpa that their beta system is now available.
  • UPDATE: it's 4:30 and Rudder just launched an iPhone app. You can get it in the app store. Now word about what's out there for blackberry users.
  • SmartyPig continues to respond to customers in real-time, and has added a "lower this" to reduce your monthly savings if friends and family members' contributions to your savings goal has enabled you to choose between meeting your goal sooner, or reducing your monthly contribution. It suggests the difference for you too, so you don't have to do the math.

Jessica Ward is a professional writer and blogger based in Seattle, WA. She also blogs at www.pennywisefamily.blogspot.com, to learn more about her visit www.jessicaward.me

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

At Finovate 2009 Budget Solutions Abound


Holy budgets Batman! Finovate 2009 is showcasing no less than ten (count them 10!) budget solutions for personal finances. I explored some of these on my blog this past week as I wrote all about budgeting for a week, but there’s a lot out there and I couldn't do them justice there.

For the sake of the reader, I’m going to make some categories here to differentiate what might be right for your style as a prospective user or curious reader. Some of these will overlap due to the nature of the features. All are free to use unless otherwise noted. The denotation ($) means fee-based and (*$) means free during Beta trials, or some features are subscriber-based.

I included a “social media” category here—because two of these are very similar to common social applications. Wesabe is a lot like Facebook in that people can recommend or comment and share information. Geezeo has a lot of Twitter-like features and their “confession booth” even integrates with Twitter (not to mention, it's outrageously addictive).

Rudder is in a bit of a class of its own. It appears to include bill-pay features (note to self to play with this one a bit more).

There are essentially two "classes" of personal finance application in my view. Those that require data-entry of transactions, and those that don't. Otherwise, the items below appear in no particular order and none of these are paid placements.

Data-Entry

Social Media Features

Monday, August 6, 2007

How to use the 'wisdom of the crowds' on Prosper

In The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations, James Surowiecki argues that groups make decisions that are often better than could have been made by any single member of the group.

I've been wanting to write a post about this for awhile and an article in the Boston Globe yesterday further encouraged me. In Sharing the Wealth, the Boston Globe discusses how financial social networks may help people make better financial decisions. Here's an excerpt:

Social-investment sites take the sheen off "expert," allowing people to compare their investments or trade advice and opinions. Social-lending companies let people appeal to other people, rather than their banks, when they need a loan. And financial-advice sites that employ social-networking tools act like Weight Watchers for money: People choose goals, such as buying an iPhone or paying off a credit card, then move toward them while others with the same goals trade encouragement and strategies.

"I know a lot about the mistakes people make at a young age, and I think it's a great concept," said Cary Carbonaro, president of Family Financial, a traditional financial planning firm based in New York and Florida. "If I'm in debt, I can go talk to other people in debt or ask someone who is my peer and not embarrass myself."

But there are obvious questions, ranging from privacy and security risks to the dubious benefits of leveraging the financial "expertise" of the masses. The wisdom of the crowd may be a fine way to discover the most amusing YouTube video, but Wikipedia has been vilified for inaccuracies, and the online world hardly has a reputation as a trustworthy source. Start-ups need to gain the trust of users, assuring them that the software is hacker-proof and that their detailed financial information won't end up in the hands of marketers.

...Social finance should have 2 million users by the end of next year, and 16 million within 10 years, according to Online Banking Report, an industry newsletter.

In addition to Prosper, Zopa and Lending Club, some of the social finance sites that the Boston Glove features include:
  • Geezeo/Wesabe - similar to an online version of Quicken where expense information and advice is shared among users
  • Covestor - launched this summer, tracks its members' investment records, allowing people to judge their portfolio's performance against the crowd
  • Zecco - web brokerage with blog and social-sharing features that allow people to share tips and trades
  • Wikinvest - bills itself as a Wikipedia for investments, promising to be a constantly updated resource that reflects more than just a single expert's opinion of a certain company

Is the wisdom of the crowds really wise? Sometimes crowds can make very poor decisions because people tend to emulate others and conform. I've seen posts on the Prosper forums where people said they bid on loans simply because they were mostly funded using this reasoning, "how can 30-40 other investors be wrong?" Of course, maybe they just followed the same reasoning you did. Surowiecki argues the best groups have the following attributes:

  • Diversity of opinion - Each person should have private information even if it's just an eccentric interpretation of the known facts.
  • Independence - People's opinions aren't determined by the opinions of those around them.
  • Decentralization - People are able to specialize and draw on local knowledge.
  • Aggregation - Some mechanism exists for turning private judgments into a collective decision.

While group behavior may cause some poor decisions to be made on Prosper, I think there are plenty of examples in the forums where the collective intelligence of the group contributes to better decision making. What do you think? Would any changes in the website structure or technology help facilitate better decision making?

A Great New Idea in Online Investing