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A rigorous job-training program run by the nonprofit Year Up is helping the likes of Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase fill important technical positions. It's also helping lift young adults out of poverty and into meaningful careers.
April 9 -
Fintech startups, like many young software companies, are using fun recruiting strategies to attract most-coveted technical talent to their teams and to engage people with their brands.
August 21 -
Banks like BBVA Compass, USAA and ING are turning to a flurry of new social recruiting services to help them lure the best and brightest.
September 6 -
The dress was casual. The presentations were edgy. But representatives of Capital One's innovation lab made it clear to the South by Southwest crowd that it's not exactly like the startups it wants to hire away from.
March 16 -
To court young talent, banks are reimagining their ads for positions like call center agents and video tellers as YouTube clips. They are also finding ways to make applications easier to fill out on mobile devices.
March 2 -
A look at three former bankers trying their hands at fintech startups at a time when investment in the sector is flush and banks are desperate for new ideas for digital transformation.
March 17 -
With competitive pressure mounting from trendy software companies, banks are trying out new ways to attract the most-sought-after technical talent and modernizing their career websites' interfaces to better showcase their cultures.
July 31
Banks are struggling to recruit top software developers, app designers and engineers in a market where techies can pick and choose among employers perceived as cool and unburdened by aging technologies and rules.
A startup called
"Engineers know there are interesting problems being solved at Google and Facebook," said Ed Donner, a co-founder and chief executive of untapt. "There is not a great understanding of the problems in fintech."
The startup, which was founded in October 2013, claims 40 clients two of which are global banks. It has 6,500 engineers using its service, and the company recently completed a $3 million funding round.
The firm is scaling up at a time when financial institutions and more traditional bank vendors are stepping up their branding games and making un-bank-like overtures to developers. FIS, the largest financial services vendor that serves U.S. banks, recently
And institutions are increasingly enhancing the ways they expose their brands to entrepreneurs through methods they are borrowing from tech companies, said Bhushan Sethi, who leads the financial services people and change practice at PricewaterhouseCoopers. For instance, they're using social media to illustrate interesting problems they are working on, sponsoring tech conferences and creating incubators within their companies.
Untapt is entering a field with established competitors like LinkedIn and Dice. And there are other digital engineer communities such as HackerRank. But untapt sees itself as different in that it's focusing on fintech opportunities exclusively.
The company was conceived by two ex-bankers who dealt with the hiring challenges firsthand.
"The last few years of my career, I was incredibly frustrated with trying to hire good engineers," said Donner, a former managing director in technology at JPMorgan Chase. "I was having an impossible time."
Every year, Donner said, there are more than 400,000 tech jobs created in global financial services.
"Everyone needs engineers," he said.
Donner is trying to help fill those vacancies through untapt along with his co-founders, Geoff Massam, a former chief information officer at Deutsche Bank, and Max Kantelia, an entrepreneur in fintech and recruitment.
The automated recruiting platform's business model hinges on a contingency success fee. The initial price is $10,000 per hire, which can drop to $5,000 depending on volume.
Untapt's platform draws out relevant specifics about a job seeker's skills and experience and uses that information, along with a proprietary algorithm, to match candidates to employers, and then connects them directly. For instance, developers will share their level of expertise in programming environments, such as Ruby, MatLab, and iOS programming, and knowledge of business areas (e.g. derivatives). Employers will similarly indicate the skills and expertise they are looking for.
But since this is a job seeker's market, untapt's customers are also required to make videos that show would-be employees what their new work life would be like. The best videos, according to the untapt executives, are unpolished and explain the kinds of problems engineers would work on in a down-to-earth manner.
Using video to illustrate roles is a growing trend for even blue collar positions like
One of untapt's clients is Risk Focus, a software and consulting firm with offices in New York and London. "We would be bigger today if hiring wasn't so difficult," said Brian Lynch, chief executive of Risk Focus, which has been using untapt to supplement its recruiting practices and plans to source more talent from the platform as it expands into new markets.