Loading...
Answers
MenuWhich is better - Yodlee or Plaid?
For those that are fintech experts, would you recommend Yodlee or Plaid for financial applications with account aggregation and personal finance recommendations? Does one make more sense in certain situations and if so, why?
Answers
PayTrust or PayPal provide payment systems + enough documentation to use for taxes + reporting.
Also, they both just work... all the time...
I say use plaid. They work well with banks and seem to be a standard for this type of thing.
Considering the number of financial APIs present in the market today, it is especially important to recognize what we are exactly looking for. The important factors to consider while choosing an API include functionalities, services, and pricing. Developers around the world integrate these API’s to their financial applications to make their work easy and efficient by extracting high-quality data. Developers look for certain functionalities while choosing an API. These API’s also target some selected markets based on the functionalities they provide. Three of the most talked financial API companies present in the market today are compared in this article. They include Bay area start-ups gaining momentum based on the demand these financial applications generate nowadays. Plaid offers two API products for the current market. Plaid AUTH and Plaid CONNECT are the current Plaid offerings. Xignite, founded in 2006 is another fast-growing company that provides financial market data and financial web services. Yodlee is the most matured company out of the three. Yodlee was established in 1999 and powers financial applications for 99% banks in the US.
Yodlee enjoys direct access to banking data, whereas other APIs rely on extracting data from banking websites. Yodlee also offers two APIs for the finance market. Xignite has captured the hot and trending cloud technology sector that can help them grow in the coming years. Plaid is still in private beta phase and email requesting access needs to be sent to gain access. Yodlee is the leading API provider for financial institutions but it needs to innovate and adapt to ongoing changes in the digital finance industry to avoid stagnation.
Besides if you do have any questions give me a call: https://clarity.fm/joy-brotonath
Both Yodlee and Plaid are solid choices for financial applications, each with its own strengths depending on your use case. Plaid is generally praised for its developer-friendly API, ease of integration, and broad bank coverage, which makes it a popular choice for fintech startups focusing on account aggregation and personal finance. Yodlee, on the other hand, is known for its deep data insights, and it's often favored for more established financial services needing a robust, data-rich platform.
The decision between the two often comes down to your specific requirements. Plaid might be better for quick, streamlined integrations, while Yodlee could offer more in-depth data analytics for larger-scale applications.
For a deeper dive into building financial apps and choosing the right technologies, check out this blog: https://www.cleveroad.com/blog/how-to-create-a-financial-app/.
Hope this helps clarify your decision!
Related Questions
-
If I am planning to launch a mobile app, do I need to register as a company before the launch?
I developed and published mobile apps as an individual for several years, and only formed a corporation later as things grew and it made sense. As far as Apple's App Store and Google Play are concerned, you can register as an individual developer without having a corporation. I'd be happy to help further over a call if you have any additional questions. Best of luck with your mobile app!AM
-
Pre-seed / seed funding for a community app... valuation and how much to take from investors?
To answer your questions: 1) Mobile companies at your stage usually raise angel funding at a valuation equivalent of $5,000,000 for US based companies and $4,000,000 to $4,500,000 for Canadian companies. 2) The valuation is a function of how much you raise against that valuation. For instance, selling $50,000 at $5,000,000 means you are selling debt that will convert into shares equal to roughly 1% of your company. 3) I would encourage you to check out my other answers that I've recently written that talk in detail about what to raise and when to raise. Given that you've now launched and your launch is "quiet", most seed investors are going to want to see substantial traction before investing. It's best for you to raise this money on a convertible note instead of actually selling equity, especially if you are intending on raising $50,000 - $100,000. Happy to schedule a call with you to provide more specifics and encourage you to read through the answers I've provided re fundraising advice to early-stage companies as well.TW
-
What is the best technology for developing a new mobile app from scratch?
There are two sides to that question. One is the mobile app itself and the other is the backend. If I misunderstood in any way and you didn't mean "native" app I apologize in advance. On the backend, there is no clear cut answer to which is the "best". It depends solely on the developers you are able to get. We for example use Node.js , mongoDB, redis, elasticsearch and a couple of proprietary tools in the backend. But you have your pick of the litter now both on the backend api and the datastore with the myriad of options available and touted as the "best" currently on the market. Now on the app side again it solely depends on what you need your mobile app to do. Experiencing first-hand "develop once, run anywhere" I can say it's more like "develop once, debug everywhere" to quote a Java saying. We have tried Phonegap and Titanium Appcelerator and we have switched to native (ObjC and Java) after a couple of months of trying to go the hybrid route. The reasons behind the choice are as follows: - anything that breaks the pattern of how those frameworks NEED to operate is just a huge technical debt that keeps accruing a huge interest. - anything that uses css3 accelerated animations on Android is buggy at best and slow as hell at worst on any lower (< 4.1 I think) versions of Android I hope this gives you some insight. If you need/want to ask me anything feel free to contact me. MihaiMP
-
How can I make a million dollars?
First, I agree with Chad in that the pure pursuit of money is unlikely to render anything significant. By using a monetary value as a primary goal, you're only diluting the real drivers of success: passion, crafting great customer experiences, building an incredible team and culture etc. That said, making $1m isn't that hard. :) I love this thinking by Amy Hoy and that's how I would go about making $1m: http://unicornfree.com/30x500. Using that logic, this is what I'd do: * To earn $1m in a year, I need to earn +- $80k a month. * To earn $80k a month, I need 1600 customers paying me $50 per month. * So what can I build that could attract 1600 people to pay me $50? * Or, what could I build that could attract 400 people to pay me $200 per month? This logic works on two drivers: * Cumulative revenue and growth. So SaaS works best in this regard, as you only need to focus on having new signups that are greater than your churn. * Building something that people are willing to (really) pay for and going for quality over quantity. If you are building something that sells for $5 pm, you'll need to sell at much higher volumes (which are tricky). In terms of doing that, these are the areas of my business that I would prioritize: 1. Build an awesome team that do things they're passionate about. 2. Prioritize customer experiences above anything else. Do everything in your power (regardless of whether it can't scale) to add value and help your customers. 3. Build a brand and reputation that has long-lasting value.AP
-
What is the generally agreed upon "good" DAU/MAU for mobile apps?
You are right that the range is wide. You need to figure what are good values to have for your category. Also, you can focus on the trend (is your DAU/MAU increasing vs decreasing after you make changes) even if benchmarking is tough. Unless your app is adding a huge number of users every day (which can skew DAU/MAU), you can trust the ratio as a good indication of how engaged your users are. For games, DAU/MAU of ~20-30% is considered to be pretty good. For social apps, like a messenger app, a successful one would have a DAU/MAU closer to 50%. In general most apps struggle to get to DAU/MAU of 20% or more. Make sure you have the right definition of who is an active user for your app, and get a good sense of what % of users are actually using your app every day. Happy to discuss what is a good benchmark for your specific app depending on what it does.SG
the startups.com platform
Copyright © 2025 Startups.com. All rights reserved.