Artificial intelligence-enabled bill payment platform Gobbill is partnering up with two other fintechs to realise its international goals, but co-founder Shendon Ewans tells StartupSmart there are more important things than figures to consider in this particular type of business.
Gobbill was founded three years ago as a bill-paying tool for family and friends. But it was in 2017, when Ewansโ father fell victim to an email billing scam and had his bank account emptied that Ewans and his co-founder Quentin Marsh started to develop their AI-enabled fraud scanning system in a bid to protect vulnerable, often older, Australians.
Since then, Ewans says, Gobbillโs user-base has grown โsteadilyโ, but remains fairly small. He adds, however, that once users try it out, they tend to stay.
โPayment volumes have increased faster than our user volumes,โ he says.
โItโs a really sticky product.โ
Now, the startup is set to head overseas, expanding its reach through two partnerships: one with financial advice fintech myprosperity, and one with card authentication, identity and payment solution iSignthis.
For Gobbell, Ewans says, the number one aim is โgetting the product to more peopleโ, and myprosperity can provide the global reach the startup is looking for.
Regtech iSignthis offers Gobbill know-your-customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) capabilities, and opens up the Gobbill platform to users in the UK, Europe and the US, in line with local regulations.
โOn one hand, the partnership enables us to distribute quickly,” Ewans says. But iSignthis is also an โenabler in the area of payments,โ allowing Gobbill to process different types of payments from various international credit cards.
However, Ewans maintains that the partnerships arenโt all about the numbers. Theyโre also about finding businesses that complement each other.
With that in mind, Ewans has sharedย his top tips on securing successful partnerships.
Make sure your values are aligned
Ewans advises startups to look for complementary partnerships with business that have similar values and will work well with existing teams.
โThat may not be a brand name, or the biggest [business], but the party thatโs able to work with you,โ he says.ย
Not only will that make working together a little easier, Ewans says, itโs a โsustained approachโ.
โIf youโve got that alignment it really will survive for longer,โ he adds.ย
Ewans says Gobbill, myprosperity and iSignthis share their core values. Gobbillโs are centred around empowering consumers, finding them good deals, and protecting their data.
โItโs time to step up in terms of the ability for technology to support families โฆ helping people to be in control of finances,โ says Ewans.ย
As any company grows, Ewans accepts it can be hard to hold onto those core values, but through partnering with the right people, he says, โwe will tryโ.
Be persistent
โWith any partnerships, in order to grow we look at give and take, forgiveness, and the ability to work through any problems we encounter together,โ says Ewans.ย
โItโs not all sweet smelling roses.โ
Itโs down to the founders, chief executives and other key people to persist and work through those problems, in order to make mutually-beneficial relationships work, he says.ย
But be prepared to be wrong
โIโve made this mistake so many times,โ Ewans says, โgoing down a path that is incompatibleโ.ย
If two partners are not aligned with the same vision, he advises startups to identify the issues as quickly as possible, work to โascertain whether theyโre the right partnership for youโ, and then backtrack sooner rather than later, if needed.ย
Gobbill has been in partnerships that ultimately didnโt work out, he says. โWe were quick to identify that, and tried not to waste our time and spend too much time in qualifying that,โ he says.ย
It can be a difficult decision, but on the other hand itโs โsometimes quite clear cutโ.
Without naming and names, he says: โThere are some big household brand names out there that would seem like a great partner, but actually, theyโre not aligned.โ
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