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Fast Company named Tally one of the Most Innovative Companies of 2021 for helping people pay off their credit card debt faster with our automated payoff app. "Tally has built a debt management service in the form of an automated app. After users scan in their credit cards, Tally helps them prioritize payments, pay bills on time, and ultimately get out of debt. And the product works: on average, Tally customers pay off their debt 10 years faster. The company is currently managing over $1 billion in consumer debt."
On International Women's Day, we celebrate the women of Tally. It's been a year since we've seen each other in the office, but that hasn't stopped Women of Tally, our employee-led affinity group created by and for women, from maintaining a supportive community to lift each other up every day and new opportunities for professional and personal growth.
Awesome profile of Tally CEO Jason Brown in the SF Business Times today on how we're helping people combat financial anxiety. Plus, a cool glimpse into Jason's daily life and the lessons he's learned through the pandemic. "With technology, we’re finally at a point in history where it’s possible to build into software what is possible if you have a team of financial experts working for you full-time. We started Tally to build the first fully automated debt manager that could grow into our vision of automating people’s entire financial lives."
Business Insider on why Tally is a startup to bet your career on in 2021: "Tally Inc's ability to help reduce financial and emotional burdens for consumers is especially useful during this time of economic uncertainty and stress."
Welcome to Tally! Anthony Schrauth joins as our new VP of Product and Meg Ciarallo as VP of Marketing. "Both Anthony and Meg bring the talent, experience and empathy critical for bringing financial peace of mind to the masses through Tally, and we’re thrilled to have them on board to help lead the charge.” says CEO @Jason Brown
Congratulations to Tally's VP of Engineering Jan Chong on being named one of the Top 25 Women Leaders in #fintech by The Financial Technology Report. There are no shortage of startups working on interesting technology, but what stood out most to Jan Chong about Tally was the opportunity to eliminate a huge source of financial anxiety and hardship for countless Americans. As the company’s vice president of engineering, she is tasked with scaling the team as it builds a financial autopilot capable of making smarter money decisions for consumers and helping them achieve their financial goals more effortlessly. She is no stranger to overseeing large technical teams, having joined Tally from Twitter where she was a long-time top executive managing over 300 engineers. Her many accomplishments include playing a critical role in launching and growing Twitter’s core mobile and web products, as well as fostering a more diverse and collaborative workplace that has had a lasting impact on the organization.
Tally was recognized by CB Insights as a leader in the personal finance space on the 2020 #Fintech250 list for our work in helping people overcome credit card debt. We are in great company this year - congratulations to all!
Today, Forbes named Tally to its "Next Billion-Dollar Startup" list and we're in great company. Tally CEO Jason Brown, has been thinking about how to help people overcome debt since he was a teenager in a household where money was tight. Especially among the educated elite in America, there's a big lack of empathy for people who don't reach their financial goals, he says. He didn't think that giving people the context and tools to handle debt was enough to solve the problem. So in 2015, he founded Tally, an automated app that helps people pay off their credit-card debt, with Jasper Platz. Credit-card debt is expensive (with an average APR of 15.05% last year, according to the Federal Reserve), and Tally says it can typically save users five percentage points on their rates. The San Francisco-based company currently manages $500 million of debt, a number that's likely to grow as consumer debt mounts.