Fully Clickable Video Ad

Taktile helps fintechs build automated decision-making workflows | TechCrunch

Spread the love


The automated logic behind many financial decisions — for example, decisions that determine whether a client is approved for a credit line — is hard-coded. Often, it’s not easily changed. If a head of credit at a bank wanted to adjust the bank’s lending criteria, for example, they’d likely have to raise a ticket with IT.

Entrepreneurs Maximilian Eber and Maik Taro Wehmeyer, who met while studying at Harvard, ran up against the limitations of financial decisioning logic while at QuantCo, a company building AI-powered apps for enterprise customers. In 2020, the pair decided to found a startup, Taktile, to make modifying automated decisioning logic a more self-service process.

“We realized that we were building the same things over and over again, and decided to leverage our learnings to build a platform around it,” Wehmeyer, Taktile’s CEO, told TechCrunch in an interview.

Taktile’s platform — which we’ve written about before — lets risk and engineering teams at fintech firms create and manage workflows for automated decision-making. Users can experiment with data integrations and monitor the performance of predictive models in their decision flows, and perform A/B tests to evaluate each flow.

Blinking Photo Ad

For example, a bank could use Taktile to anticipate how moving the minimum age to apply for an account from 25 to 21 might affect customer churn. Or a loan provider could build a workflow that automatically extracts information from documents, summarizes cases, and recommends next steps for manual review.

Taktile’s backend dashboard.Image Credits:Taktile

“[W]e have invested [significantly] in our data layer,” Wehmeyer said, “which lets users build a complete picture of their end customers across all relevant decision moments, from initial onboarding to fraud checks, and operational decisions like collections.”

See also  Want one of our $230 MacBooks? They’re almost gone…

There is competition in the space. Noble, for example, offers a rules-based engine to edit and launch credit models, and vendors like PowerCurve sell comparable tools focused on unblocking risk teams.

Taktile appears to be growing at a healthy clip, however. Annual recurring revenue climbed 3.5x year-over-year in 2024, and the company’s client base recently expanded to include fintech companies such as Zilch and Mercury.

“[Legacy] software is just hopelessly outdated,” Wehmeyer said. “We’ve won many pitches because even if we were weaker than a specialized vendor in one case, customers want an end-to-end solution.”

This week, New York-based Taktile announced that it closed a $54 million Series B funding round led by Balderton Capital with participation from Index Ventures, Tiger Global, Y Combinator, Prosus Ventures, Visionaries Club, and OpenAI board member Larry Summers. This brings the 110-person company’s total raised to $79 million; the new capital will be put toward product development and building out Taktile’s enterprise sales organization.

“There was no need to raise from a money perspective — we still had more than two years of runway — but we saw huge investor demand because of strong growth in 2024,” Wehmeyer said. “Fintech and financial services tends to be a low-margin business, so people do care about the unit economics a lot. Vendor consolidation is something that people are looking at this year.”

Related Posts
Former Activision boss reportedly wants to buy TikTok – Times of India
Former Activision boss reportedly wants to buy TikTok - Times of India

Bobby Kotick, the former head of Activision Blizzard, is reportedly considering buying TikTok, as the app could be banned Read more

How Apple’s Find My app ‘cost’ a US city millions of dollars – Times of India
How Apple’s Find My app ‘cost’ a US city millions of dollars - Times of India

Apple's Find My app has cost the city of Denver, US $3.76 million in compensation and damages. In 2022, Read more

Moto G54 receives a price cut in India: Here’s how much the smartphone costs – Times of India
Moto G54 receives a price cut in India: Here’s how much the smartphone costs - Times of India

If you have been planing to purchase a budget smartphone, then you can consider buying the Moto G54. Launched Read more

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top