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Posted by , Apr 14

It is with great pleasure that I share with you the great news:  Lending Club has been nominated for a Webby Award in the Banking/Bill Paying category.  The Webby Award is the most prestigious recognition of web design, innovation, and internet product excellence.

Lending Club is no stranger to the Webbys, having won in 2008 and receiving nominations or honoree designation in both the 2009 and 2010 editions of the famous event.   We are back in 2011 with a new brand and complete website revamp.

It is quite rare for the Webby judges to bring back sites that have won in the past, so we take this nomination with pride and excitement as a recognition of our dedication to product excellence.

The official judges from The International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences will select the winner for The Webby Award, while the community (that means you!) will vote for The People's Voice Award. Other nominees in the Banking/Bill Paying category are Chase, US Bank, Kashoo and Billeo.

Please cast your vote for us by April 28th.    Unlike last time we won the award in 2008 when we were going through registration with the SEC, we promise to be loud this time around.

The 15th Annual Webby Award.  VOTE for us now >>


Posted by , Mar 4

So . . . Charlie Sheen. There’s not much to say except that someone should get the poor man some help before it’s too late to save him. If you’re not familiar with the story, thank the lucky stars you were born under. For the rest of us, well, we might as well learn from him since we can’t shut him up.

While there are a lot of life lessons we can learn from Charlie’s very public downward spiral, there are some things we can learn about personal finance, too. Hey, if he’s going to keep talking, we have to make the best of it, right?

1. There’s a Right (and a Wrong!) Time to Ask for a Raise

While Charlie’s life has been a bit of a saga for quite a while now, the current hullabaloo started when CBS postponed the rest of the season of his sitcom, Two and a Half Men, because Charlie was in rehab and seemed to be living erratically. In return, Charlie made some public allegations about the producers. They went back and forth several times, and the network ended up cancelling the rest of the season. Now, Charlie (who, at $2 million an episode, is already the highest paid TV actor around) says that he will not go back to the show unless he gets a raise - to $3 or $4 million per episode.

If I were his boss at CBS, I would laugh in his face, and your boss will laugh at you, too, if you ask for a raise when the company is struggling (especially if you had a hand in causing that struggle). There are good times to ask for raises, not-so good times, and downright terrible times. If you’d like to make more, look for times when the company is succeeding overall, you’ve had some recent personal successes, and people are generally in a good mood.

2. Your Financial Decisions Affect Other People

Charlie’s actions didn’t only cost him his paychecks for the rest of the season, but the rest of the cast and crew lost theirs as well. While CBS did relent and offer to pay them for half of the cancelled episodes, that still leaves some people with significantly less income than they’d planned on. Charlie’s addictions and his erratic behavior don’t just mean that he’s making less this year, but could put some families in very difficult situations.

While you’re probably not going to be responsible for reductions in income for quite that many people, it’s important to remember that the financial decisions you make every day do touch others. If you’re part of a family and you make a large purchase without consulting the others, it might mean skimpy rations for a while or someone else foregoing something they really need. Remember that you’re not alone with your money, no matter how it might feel that way sometimes.

3. Spending Excessively Doesn’t Make You Happy

Charlie’s always been a party boy, so flying from Aspen to Vegas to LA and back to Vegas in a weekend isn’t unheard of. And back in 1996, he once spent more than $6,500 to buy most of the seats behind left field in Angel stadium, just so he would be able to catch a homerun ball (if one was hit that night, which it wasn’t).

I could go on and on about his antics, but I don’t need to. He has a lot of money and a lot of leisure time, and yet it’s pretty clear that he’s not exactly happy right now. We all know that money doesn’t buy happiness, but it’s another thing to see it in such an awful, public way. The next time you’re tempted toward excess, remember Charlie and maybe you’ll think twice.

4. Having Good People Around You Makes All the Difference

One of Charlie’s latest antics is to have not one but two beautiful young women sharing his home. And he’s had several very public . . . relationships, if they can be called that . . . over the last several months, sharing hotel rooms with up to several prostitutes at a time.  He seems to think that these women love him, and maybe they are fond of him, but they also seem to be rather fond of all the stuff he buys them... and the media attention, clearly.

Whether Charlie’s experiencing true love or not, the people he needs right now are stable and wholesome, not ones who are going to push him farther over the edge. And it’s the same for you, especially when you’re trying to make changes in your financial life.  If you surround yourself with people who spend, you’ll spend more, too.  But if you have people in your life who live simply because they know what really matters, you’ll be more likely to live that way, too.

That’s what I’ve learned from Charlie over the last several weeks. What about you?

Image courtesy of Poster Revolution.


Posted by , Feb 7

Well, not really. In fact, they were mostly absent in a sea of food, car, and movie commercials. Financial innovation was not to be seen anywhere during super bowl commercial breaks, while websites and other "techie" products barely made a stand.

Let's face it, banking and financial products are not the sexy, fun, hot stuff that is typically shown during those mega expensive ad slots. Will they ever be? I can dream, right? In the mean time the latest and fastest cars, the latest stories for the silver screen and crappy cheap food and drinks that generate millions dominate the super bowl advertising landscape.

But even when Doritos, Budweiser, BMW, Pepsi, Chevrolet, Audi and even Mini USA dominated the airwaves this time around, some websites, "techie" stuff, and even an investing product were conspicuously present.

Check them out:

E*Trade Investing Toddler
To tell you the truth, the e*Trade baby ads are old by now.  The joke is over but that did not stop them from trying a follow up.  You have to give them credit for being the only financial related product on during the commercial breaks.

CareerBuilder.com Chimp Ad
Probably one the more memorable ones, CareerBuilder attempts to get herds to their website was funny and to the point.  I'm just worried that now PETA will launch an anti-careerbuilder campaign for unjust stereotyping of chimps.

GroupOn's Tibet Ad Post Google Offer Ad
As excited as I was to see a local start up on the main advertising stage, I was also appalled by the cheap shot taken at Tibet and its citizens.  I guess they had to desperately swing big and get some attention after passing a clear multibillion dollar opportunity with Google.

Homeaway.com's Conspiracy Theory
I did not care much for the story, but was happy to see an alternative travel website take the spotlight away from the big travel websites like Expedia, Orbitz and Travelocity.

Carmax.com
One of the most clean fun and simple of all the ads.  Carmax also promoted its twitter and facebook pages on its commercial.

GoDaddy.co's Girls
I did not find them (I mean the ad) appealing at all. I guess I'm not in their target market.  We will see in the numbers whether paying top dollars for celebrity endorsement will get them the traffic they bet for.

Bridgestone
Ok, I know this one has no technology or website to promote, but come on! Something like this has happened to you, when you realize that you just replied to all.

Cars.com's Don't Go First Advice
This commercial from the car-buying website strikes a chord with the Lending Club team when they point out the various reasons why it's best not to be the first to try something.  Isn't it always better to do it right?

Motorola's Tablet
The new Xoom looks slick.  But the fun part of this ad is how Motorola takes aim at Apple and their drones carrying iPads.

So there you have them: the "techie" and financial super bowl commercials.  Which one was your favorite?

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@RobGarciaSJ


Posted by , Jan 27

The following is a guest post by Kyle Psaty of Perkstreet Financial, the progressive online financial services company that offers the most valuable online checking account and debit card rewards combination in the U.S.

The buzz has been exciting.  The videos have been empowering.  The last entries are rolling in and the votes will be tallied this very weekend.

The Shred Your Credit Card video contest is helping people get motivated to dump their debt in the new year, and the grand finale is almost here!  The sponsors, including Perkstreet Financial, Lending Club, and a dozen or so of the best independent personal finance blogs online, are declaring January 31st the first-ever Shred Your Credit Card Day.

So here is your last chance to submit a video to ShredYourCreditCard.com to get yourself in the running for the $1,000 grand prize! We’re also giving away hundreds more dollars to the most creative submissions.

Not competing in the contest?  Motivate friends to get out of credit card debt by sharing the site with them.

Tell them about ShredYourCreditCard.com on Monday, January 31st by tweeting, Facebooking or emailing a link to the contest.  Remind them that it’s never to late to fight back against debt!

You can also show your support for the Shred Your Credit Card community by liking it on Facebook, following it on Twitter, and voting or commenting on the site.  By visiting and sharing ShredYourCreditCard.com between now and February and you’ll be helping us spread the message that debt can be conquered and no one should be alone in the battle.

Give everyone out there who made a New Year’s resolution to dump debt and cut their credit cards motivation to try again this February by spreading the word about ShredYourCreditCard.com.

Call it a second-chance New Year.  Call it social motivation.  Call it video vindication.  Just don’t call it too late to try!

Note to contestants: All videos and votes must be submitted through ShredYourCreditCard.com by 12:00 midnight (ET) on Friday, January 28th. (That’s tomorrow) We’ll declare the $1,000 Grand Prize and two $300 Second Place winners in the contest on January 31st (Shred Your Credit Card Day), as well as a bunch of $25 runners-up.


Posted by , Jan 16

The Shred Your Credit Card contest is well underway, and with 3 $50 weekly prizes out of the way, it's getting down to the last 2 weeks of the contest.  So what are you waiting for?  Get shredding, blending, slicing, or hammering that pesky credit card.  Not in a destroying mood? Just tell us your debt story and what your plans are for getting credit card debt under control.

Need inspiration? Check out these videos first or read Denver's 9News take on the innovative and fun challenge we are posing to you.

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@RobGarciaSJ

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