We handle everything (all support and onboarding) until the funds are disbursed by a 3rd party lender/funder. This is to keep the experience consistent across all of our financial institutions.
Our platform partners makes money by earning a % of the loan value from each business that is funded.
If our platform partner decides to fund businesses themselves, then yes they'd need to collect from the small businesses and earn the full margin on each loan they issue.
1. We do vet lenders. We focus on bringing on the lenders with the best service, tech and reputation. We don't bring bad actors in the space, and if they don't service the borrowers well they are removed from the platform.
2. There are both recourse and non-recourse options.
3. Stripe released a product with some similarities recently. On the marketplace side we compete with companies like Lendio and Fundera.
Definitely understand where you’re coming from, I think you're looking this through the lens of the way these types of programs have worked in the past.
With us, these are always your customers, we're just allowing you to launch your own capital program for them. We aren't having you "send us prospects." Instead, we're providing you the infrastructure so you can get them funded them on your platform. We keep them in your product and ecosystem, and your users never need to know who Lendflow is (if you wouldn't like them to).
We provide a lot as part of the program, including the technology, customer support and onboarding, dedicated phone lines and email integration, and the go to market sales and marketing collateral.We also provide the data and analytics for your program, so you can better run your service with us over time.
There are a lot of costs associated with these services, so the subscription keeps our incentives aligned with our platform partners and the small businesses we’re serving together.
Those are companies providing consumer loans placed in a ecommerce checkout workflow.
We're focused on business funding options placed in a broader set of workflows. Think lending services in workflows based around payments, procurement, invoicing, ect.
You can do that, we have several customers launching a product for this purpose.
You can also build services for a broader set other use cases. Including financing purchases like inventory, equipment, supplies, inventory, real estate, ect. Or just more general purpose funding, it just depends on the user base and their needs.
We have an endpoint where we can generate prequal offers for a business based on the transactional data. We can also incorporate into the package we send to lenders to get business improved loan pricing.
1. I think the main draw depends on the objectives of the customer. For many the priority is going to be improving retention, but for others it may be increasing revenue per user or driving adoption of another product or feature. Ultimately it all leads to higher retention, that just may not be the main draw starting out.
2. We compile data on the business as if we're underwriting them for a loan, although we never actually lend or take balance sheet risk. We use the data to place them with a batch of lenders (typically about 3) that's going to be the best fit for their risk profile and use of funds. We take the best pricing from the batch to present to the borrower. The goal is to send them to as few lenders as possible while acquiring the best pricing available on the market.
Our platform partners makes money by earning a % of the loan value from each business that is funded.
If our platform partner decides to fund businesses themselves, then yes they'd need to collect from the small businesses and earn the full margin on each loan they issue.