Tag Archives: finance

Investment Yogi… one stop personal financial portal

Investment Yogi is a comprehensive personal finance portal that you should surely check out. It has different sections for personal financial planning – tax planning and online tax return filing, financial portfolio tracking, mutual funds etc besides lots of resources and articles on how to manage your financial position. Online trading is not offered as yet but it is planned soon. Founded by a team of NRIs who are shifting to India (Hyderabad), it also has a complete section on NRI financial planning – something that might give them a quick headstart.

Here’s a demo video

The startup is currently bootstrapped; they are closing an angel investment round soon and will seek VC finding in 4-6 months . The revenue model for the portal (not currently operational) will be three pronged a) premium budgeting, planning and wealth management related services (base model will be free & online any offline support will include fees), b) SAAS model c) Lead Gen model for some of the products where they will offer vertical search.

Investmnet Yogi has a very uncomplicated feel to it and it packs in lots of simple personal financial tools . Check out this lifetime financial planner; or these user forums.

And dont forget to check out these videos which seek to demystify scary financial jargon in a funny way. Here’s a sample –

Personal finance is a very competitive space. All the major banks have comprehensive offerings; portals like PersonalFn, MoneyControl, EquityMaster are well entrenched and there’s a clutch of online tax return filing services like TaxSmile, TaxShax, FilemyITReturn that have taken root. Investment Yogi in that sense has a tough job at hand.

Case Study- Is your business really Internet centric?

Update: Readers seems to be clamouring for revealing more about the business in question; unfortunately doing that is likely to give away the identity of the person (partially if not wholly)… and I have promised not to do that. What I can say is that the business is B2C in the area of personal financial management. It is not a new service in itself, rather it facilitates an online version of what has traditionally been an offline service. The service is not technology intensive… but requires some specialised financial knowledge. Your suggestions could be directed at how personal financial advisory & management services can be scaled into a large business and whether & how the web can play a big role in this… think of any other similar examples in this space.

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This (i.e. the title) is the question I would request all web entrepreneurs to consider deeply while they are planning for their venture. The internet’s significance and hence it’s importance for different ventures is variable- for some, the web is the be-all and the end-all; for others it may represent a significant sales channel but nothing more; for some others, it may largely be a image building vehicle with no sales impact; for yet some others, the internet’s biggest role may lie in its Long Tail effect making it a not-so-significant sales channel, but something that is good to crow about in front of the media folks… there is a whole continuum. It’s possible that in the hype & hoopla surrounding the consumer internet (specially Web 2.0, social networking etc), you may end up having a disproportionate expectation of what the web can actually deliver for you. Here’s why I am saying this-

One of Webyantra’s readers wrote to me asking for advice. He runs a startup in the personal financial services domain and is trying hard to scale his business, having successfully built an initial version. He has the right academic background, he has a great team with him and he also has an initial bunch of paying customers for his service (which is proof that the basic concept works fine). His problem is to expand his business, find new customers etc. As you will find below, he has done a number of activities already. I am intentionally not naming the person, his company or his domain (though I have taken his permission to write about this and reproduce the email that he sent me).

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Hi Amit,

I have this startup called …. It’s an online platform where one can ………. from anywhere in the world. I have been pushing sales left right and centre but have no clue how to market this online. I kinda busted most of my money building it (I know its stupid but I guess am still a bit young to get away with it) and now need some direction in terms of creating buzz in the internet community.

Till now i have been scouring forums wherever there is even a slight mention of …. and putting my two bits about the company, I have also been doing crazy ass chain mails and all and putting in discounts and quasi refferal schemes. I started late with my operations last year but invested about 30,000 bucks in google adwords and rediff.com. should I put in more money there this time? What else should I look at? I don’t have too many friends blogging but would it help if they profile my site? Should i try putting it in social networking sites? Should i try the new yahoo tool for personal advertisements? Is it effective?

Till date I was not looking at VC and all but since am kinda bust and would need to look for a job to tide over my substantial loans (I literally have about another 4 months of cash), I need to drive sales this time so that i pitch and get some damn funding.

I have been reading your blog for a while and had made sure my site was 2.0 all because of you (am serious, the guys who developed the site took 4 months to do it cause they just didn’t have a good ajax guy to integrate the damn thing.). I really would be grateful if you could give me a few pointers. I am not asking you to profile my site as i am not ready with the new rules yet, I just need pointers and am desperate!

Best

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This email actually shook me up because of two reasons. Firstly, because of it’s hard-hitting frankness. And secondly, because honestly, I could give him no advice. Whatever I could have suggested, has already been attempted. However I had a phone chat with him and in the end, I think he is over-relying on the internet for his business. Its possible that he can get some sales online, but I don’t think it will be very significant. The internet may get him some random users from some God Forsaken corner of the world due to the Long Tail effect, but that’s not enough. I think he should concentrate on offline channels largely. And that’s exactly what I told him. That’s my hunch, though I have no specific knowledge of his domain.

What do you feel? Can you share some advise for him on this blog? I think he could do with some. Mine has not been very helpful till now!