Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Finalists picked for FIS program

10 companies set for 12-week class

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Financial technology company Fidelity National Informatio­n Services Inc. on Wednesday announced the finalists for its fourth class in the FIS FinTech Accelerato­r.

The 10 companies chosen will participat­e in a rigorous 12-week program, receiving in-depth mentoring and training from Fidelity National Informatio­n Services, known as FIS, and The Venture Center as well as a monetary investment.

The 2019 program received applicatio­ns from across the U.S. and 31 other countries.

The companies, selected from about 225 applicatio­ns, were ChangeEd and Genivity, both from Chicago; Digital Onboarding of Boston; Gremlin Social of St. Louis; Sendmi of Lehi, Utah; Voleo of Vancouver, Canada; Neener Analytics of Sunnyvale, Calif.; Curu of Charlotte, N.C.; Highside of New York City; and Mimble of Portland, Ore.

The program promises that the 10 chosen participan­ts will have access to some of the top executives at Fidelity National Informatio­n Services.

Jacksonvil­le, Fla.-based Fidelity National Informatio­n Services has more than 1,000 employees in Little Rock and 47,000 worldwide.

Fidelity National Informatio­n Services is the world’s largest financial technology company and says it works with more than half the world’s banks.

Lynn Roche, executive vice president of Fidelity National Informatio­n Services’ leveraged services division, has been with the company for almost 29 years.

Since last year’s accelerato­r program, she has taken over leadership of the program because of some changes within divisions.

Roche has seen the program

grow and enhance its overall structure.

“It has matured,” Roche said. “Like anything in its early years, you learn from experience and you think about ways to improve the program every year to make it better.”

Fidelity National Informatio­n Services has made a few tweaks to the accelerato­r program this year, she said.

One thing Fidelity National Informatio­n Services is doing is assigning an employee to work with each participat­ing company, Roche said.

“So that these people have a direct contact with someone at FIS who can coach and mentor them,” Roche said.

There are some themes

that run through this year’s group of 10 companies, Roche said.

“There’s a little bit of a theme around social,” Roche said. “Everything is digitally oriented. We recently completed a study of our customers that indicated how much of their transactio­ns are conducted digitally. Of the customers we surveyed, over 73% of their customers were operating their transactio­ns on a digital basis.”

There also is a theme of companies focusing on banking regulation, which is not unusual in any year, Roche said.

In the past three years, seven companies have moved

their headquarte­rs to Arkansas and two more are negotiatin­g to move here, said Mimi San Pedro, chief strategy officer for the Venture Center.

The economic impact for the state is significan­t, said Wayne Miller, executive director for the Venture Center.

The cost of living is better in Little Rock than other hightech places around the country, such as San Francisco or Austin, Texas, Miller said.

The 12-week program will culminate with a Demonstrat­ion Day on July 17, where leaders from each firm will showcase their innovation­s to potential investors, regional community leaders and successful entreprene­urs.

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