A New Zealand-based startup using technology to teach financial literacy to young students has taken out an innovation award in Sydney and will soon be launching in Australia.
Banqer offfers financial education software aimed at schools. The product includes an online banking system for classrooms, where students can learn about finance by earning money and spending it on fun classroom-based activities.
Co-founder Kendall Flutey presented at the Affiliation Fintech Showcase in Sydney last week, and took out the Best Innovation in Show award.
Banqer was up against 30 Australian and New Zealand financial technology startups, and presented to a room filled with potential investors and clients.
Flutey tells StartupSmart this was Banqerโs first real attempt to break into the Australian market.
โThis was our first foray into Australia,โ she says.
โWe have some Australian sign-ups but theyโve all been completely organic, we hadnโt been over there.
โWe got amazingly positive feedback and some really obvious paths into Australian schools that could happen quite fast. Weโre looking at term one of 2016.โ
Evolving from paper-based education
The idea for Banqer came from Fluteyโs experience watching her younger brotherโs enthusiasm for a paper-based version of the concept, and how this hadnโt yet been adapted to new technologies and ideas of banking.
โHe was juggling spreadsheets and handing out physical money,โ she says.
โKids donโt really have cash these days. My little brother has an allowance that goes to an online bank account, they never see it.
โThereโs something about bringing a somewhat tangible asset to it, where they can log onto a bank account.โ
So Flutey made an app for her brotherโs class, and then took the idea to a startup weekend in Wellington, where she formed a founding team and began developing the product.
Each student can be given a bank account using Banqer, and teachers can give out โmoneyโ to reward good behaviour. It can be structured in learning modules to focus on a specific aspect of personal finance, such as interest or taxation.
โItโs bringing kids into this world through an online monetary system,โ Flutey says.
โFinancial education isnโt on the radar for schools at the moment. But everyone I talk to outside of the classroom say that financial education makes sense and we should be teaching it in schools.
โIt doesnโt mean you have to kick out science or English or maths, you can weave it into your daily classroom. Itโs really powerful and itโs a lot more relevant.โ
Co-founder Kendall Flutey presented at the Affiliation Fintech Showcase in Sydney last week
Banqer won $NZ20,000 as part of a competition run by WebStock, but itโs all been bootstrapped apart from that.
โThat was enough to keep us going until we had the revenue coming in,โ Flutey says.
Taking on the world
Banqer is now used in nearly 200 classrooms across New Zealand, and besides launching in Australia is looking at the US.
โWeโre going over there in November and we have schools piloting it there,โ Flutey says.
โWeโre trying to get into those international markets in Australia and the US, but on a state-by-state basis.
โWeโre expanding to international markets but also we havenโt completely saturated New Zealand by any account.โ
Flutey has a background in both finance and software development, and took the big leap this year to jump into the startup world full time.
โI was an accountant, but it didnโt work out,โ she says. โThen I jumped into software development and that was the last job I left before this.โ
The Banqer team is also looking at expanding the software and technology to other aspects of education, and Flutey says the customer base will play a big part in deciding what path the startup goes down.
โOur users have essentially built our app since we launched in term one,โ she says.
โThe team expands beyond the co-founders, it includes all the users.โ
StartupSmart attended Lean15 as a guest of Positively Wellington Tourism.
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