finance fun.
Cofounder Bolun Li, 22, compares the app to Duolingo, in how it offers games and quizzes about various financial topics.
Li told Insider about the launch, why he thinks Gen Zers struggle with finance, and how the pandemic changed things.
Bolun Li realized back in high school that financial institutions have no idea how to connect with Gen Z.
Li recalls how bank spokespeople would come to his school, St. John s Prep on the North Shore of Boston, and give two-to-three-hour lectures. In the end, they would leave a flyer, say open a checking account and you ll get $20, and just leave, he told Business Insider.
Courtesy of Zogo
Zogo is a fintech startup from Gen Z cofounders that seeks to make learning about finance fun.
Cofounder Bolun Li, 22, compares the app to Duolingo, in how it offers games and quizzes about various financial topics.
Li told Insider about the launch, why he thinks Gen Zers struggle with finance, and how the pandemic changed things.
Bolun Li realized back in high school that financial institutions have no idea how to connect with Gen Z.
Li recalls how bank spokespeople would come to his school, St. John s Prep on the North Shore of Boston, and give two-to-three-hour lectures. In the end, they would leave a flyer, say open a checking account and you ll get $20, and just leave, he told Business Insider.
After being located in a house that was donated to them in the midtown area for over 20 years, the Prince Albert Big Brothers Big Sisters moved to a new location in the downtown district on Nov. 25. Its new office space is located at 29-11 St. E.
In a media release on Thursday, development coordinator Natasha Thomson said the move is an upgrade to a commercial space.
“Moving to this new office space is a positive change for us, and we are looking forward to becoming part of the downtown rejuvenation in Prince Albert. Our former building was a charming old character home, but the time had come for us to find a more suitable commercial space,” Thomson said.