Fintech Scotland noted that five fintech firms have each been awarded £50,000 to propel developments that support financial inclusion, accelerate financial resilience and deepen consumer engagement in financial services.
FinTech Scotland, in partnership with the University of Strathclyde and University of Glasgow, announced the outcome of the Consumer Duty Innovation Call from its Financial Regulation Innovation Lab (FRIL), an Innovation Accelerator project that is reportedly backed by Innovate UK.
Backed by 14 financial institutions, the initiative has reportedly connected 20 fintech businesses with industry professionals to “develop data-driven solutions that enhance consumer outcomes in financial services.”
Participating fintechs worked with representatives “from PwC, NatWest, Lloyds Banking Group, Equifax, Barclays, Tesco Bank, TSB, Advance Credit Union, Secure Trust Bank, and Dudley Building Society.”
The fintech entrepreneurs showcased their solutions in “a pitching event at PwC’s Glasgow offices in January.”
The results saw five fintech firms awarded “£50,000 each to develop solutions further” and drive real-world impact:
- Docstribute – Deepening consumer engagement and improving customer understanding of complex documents.
- Ask Silver – Building consumer confidence through an easy to access tool that identifies and reports scams for vulnerable consumers.
- NestEgg AI – Driving financial inclusion by enabling easier access to affordable credit and responsible lenders.
- MyArk – Deepening financial resilience through enhanced data insights to identify indicators of future financial distress, enabling quicker appropriate interventions.
- Profylr – AI-driven risk and compliance insights for financial institutions enabling improved decision making and outcome tracking.
These fintech businesses will continue the collaboration with the industry leaders in the FRIL program, “refining the solutions to ensure real consumer impact while driving the evolution of financial services.”
This Innovation Call expanded its reach through a collaboration with SuperTech West Midlands, which “enabled credit unions, building societies and Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) like Moneyline to engage in the program.”
Each of the FinTechs participating in the process offers a solution which enables financial services “to be more inclusive, accessible and consumer focused.”
Utilizing emerging technologies and data insights “continues to drive meaningful impact, shaping a fairer and more transparent financial future.”
Nicola Anderson, CEO of FinTech Scotland, commented:
“This latest Customer focused Innovation Call highlights the power of collaboration in driving better outcomes for individuals. By bringing together ambitious fintech firms and leading financial institutions, not only enhances good consumer outcomes—it accelerates development of inclusive digital financial services and supports the evolution of the future digital economy.”
Hillary Allen Smyth, Exec Director Supertech, said:
“We’re so proud to have been the first region to collaborate with the FRIL program and the team at FinTech Scotland. All of our West Midlands partners have gained enormously throughout the innovation call and these grant awards will undoubtedly help to better serve consumers.”
Fraser Wilson, Financial Services Regional Leader, PwC, said:
“Each of these companies are tackling real challenges with fresh thinking and practical solutions and it’s clear that their work has the potential to improve how the financial services sector delivers for consumers.”
Robert McKechnie, Director, Consumer and ID Fraud Products said:
“Equifax is proud to support the Financial Regulation Innovation Lab and its grant award winners of its most recent Consumer Duty Innovation Call in which we sponsored a Use Case. Innovation in financial regulation is key to a more secure and inclusive ecosystem, and we look forward to seeing the potential impact these innovators solutions may have on the industry.”
Helen Toft, Non-Executive Director Advance Credit Union said:
“Innovation is the key to building a fairer, more inclusive financial sector. FRIL’s Consumer Duty innovation call has been a great opportunity to get an insight into a diverse range of innovative solutions.”
Led by Innovate UK on behalf of UK Research and Innovation, the pilot Innovation Accelerators program invested “£100m in 26 transformative R&D projects, including the Financial Regulation Innovation Lab, to accelerate the growth of three high-potential innovation clusters – Glasgow City Region, Greater Manchester and West Midlands.”
This is a new model of R&D decision making that “empowers local leaders to harness innovation to drive regional economic growth, help attract private investment and develop future technologies.”