posts tagged financial services
People are living longer but retiring sooner. Martin Gronemann offers some solutions to avoid confusion and anxiety as people nervously eyeball their 401(k)s and dwindling retirement savings.
When it comes to payments, the world of social science has much more to offer than nudges and dopamine-rushes. There are profound and durable human mechanisms to tap into – revealing opportunities for loyalty, relationships, and growth every provider aspires to capture.
77 percent report that business adoption of big data and AI is a major challenge. What prevents financial institutions from creating real impact with data and analytics? To answer this question, we must start with the customer.
To design an all-one-one “super app”, financial institutions need to understand how different consumers relate to different kinds of money. Drawing from original ReD research, Millie Parekh Arora Arora and Tamara Moellenberg outline some dos and don’ts in American Banker.
ReD’s Millie Arora talks to Cheddar producers live from the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange, about Generation Z’s pragmatic approach to money and personal finance.
Partner, Martin Gronemann, talks to The Times about the importance of making your kids financially literate in an increasingly cash-free world.
Learning models from video games offer three key lessons for building more effective digital tools for improving financial literacy.
Partners at ReD Associates talk about how anthropology can heal the anxiety of our broken relationship with money
When our shared understanding of worth undergoes a fundamental structural shift, only the humanities can help us gain perspective around our changing norms, networks and social institutions.
Banks frequently lament their inability to deepen connections with their consumer, but in order to do that they will have to transform their relationship with the world as a whole.
The editor of Real Deals Magazine, spoke to Mikkel Rasmussen about ReD Associates, the dangers of over-reliance on big data, and why social science just might be one of private equity’s greatest tools.
Ethnographic studies have revealed that customers feel that their banks lack interest in their wellbeing, because they are being treated as numbers in a database rather than as actual people.