Old Credit is History: Klarna’s new campaign

Klarna looks at the history and future of payments its latest interactive campaign.
Klarna looks at the history and future of payments its latest interactive campaign.

Klarna, the largest fintech in Europe, launched its OOH campaign ‘Old Credit Is History.’ The campaign looks over the history of payments and highlights how outdated the credit model has become and its need to join history. In addition, Klarna uses this timeline to illustrate how it can bring credit into the modern age by not charging customers interest. 

The pop up event

It has launched a pop-up ‘Old Credit Is History’  in London on Soho’s Greek Street to engage customers. The event will run from today until Saturday and provide several visuals to educate guests on the evolution of payments. To complement the event’s tongue-in-cheek neanderthal theme, guests will receive a complementary paleo lunch. In addition, visits are welcome to receive free blow drys and beard trims.

Over the three days, Klarna will host two guest speakers: financial expert Kia Commodore and Sunday Times best-selling author and Psychotherapist Owen O’Kane. Commodore and O’Kane will discuss the psychology of money and how it impacts our emotional and mental wellbeing. 

Klarna’s latest pop up will take place from 10am – 6pm, 23rd – 25th September at 19 Greek Street, London W1D 4DT
Its time to leave behind antiquated payments

Following research from Klarna, it has tracked the evolution of finance, dating back as far as 2500BC. It concluded that money is now in its fourth revolution as digital currencies, neobanks, and biometric payment systems become the norm. Despite this evolution, Klarna emphasizes that finance areas are still outdated: interest charges and consumer fees. According to the Swedish fintech, Britons paid £5.7bn in credit card interest and fees in 2020, whereas Buy Now Pay Later produced saved them £76million in interest payments. 

This installation / interactive event seeks to bring attention to this while also welcoming customers back to enjoying the in-person experience of retail and events that have been so missed over the last nineteen months. Alex Marsh, Head of Klarna UK said, “At Klarna, we’ve always been vocal in our belief that traditional credit models are stuck in the past and don’t benefit consumers. It’s time antiquated financial businesses listened to what consumers want and offered better ways to pay that provide flexibility, choice and control, without any hidden fees.

Klarna worked with a historian to track the history of money

“It’s been so insightful working on the campaign to understand the journey money has taken over thousands of years and what could be coming up next. We believe that old credit solutions should become a thing of the past and Old Credit Is History is a fun, tongue-in-cheek way to bring that important message to life.”

READ MORE:

About Klarna

With over 90 million global active users and 2 million transactions a day, Klarna is meeting the changing demands of consumers who want to shop, pay and bank on one intuitive platform and with one trusted brand. Over 250,000 global retail partners, including H&M, Saks, Sephora, Macys, IKEA, Expedia Group, Samsung, ASOS, Peloton, Ralph Lauren, Abercrombie & Fitch, Nike and Shein have enabled Klarna’s innovative shopping experience online and in-store. Klarna is one of the most highly valued private fintechs globally with a valuation of $45.6 billion. Klarna was founded in 2005, has over 4,000 employees and is active in 17 markets. Klarna has been backed by Sequoia Capital since 2010 and more recently, SilverLake, Dragoneer, Bestseller Group, Permira, Ant Group, HMI Capital, TCV, NorthZone, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Chrysalis Investment Company Limited, funds and accounts managed by BlackRock amongst others.

For more news from Top Business Tech, don’t forget to subscribe to our daily bulletin!

Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter

Amber Donovan-Stevens

Amber is a Content Editor at Top Business Tech

Six ways to maintain compliance and remain secure

Patrick Spencer VP at Kiteworks • 16th September 2024

With approximately 3.4 billion malicious emails circulating daily, it is crucial for organisations to implement strong safeguards to protect against phishing and business email compromise (BEC) attacks. It is a problem that is not going to go away. In fact, email phishing scams continue to rise, with news of Screwfix customers being targeted breaking at...

Enriching the Edge-Cloud Continuum with eLxr

Jeff Reser • 12th September 2024

At the global Debian conference this summer, the eLxr Project was launched, delivering the first release of a Debian derivative that inherits the intelligent edge capabilities of Debian, with plans to expand these for a streamlined edge-to-cloud deployment approach. eLxr is an open source, enterprise-grade Linux distribution that addresses the unique challenges of near-edge networks...

Embracing digital AI recruitment without rocking the boat

Katherine Loranger • 11th September 2024

Artificial intelligence (AI) is set to become indispensable in business operations. For global enterprises, AI offers significant benefits by simplifying complexity and enabling confident decisions—when used in the right way. Those HR recruitment teams that seamlessly integrate AI technologies will optimise their recruitment practices and will have the opportunity to better realise their commitment to...

Why a data strategy underpins a successful AI strategy

Jim Liddle • 05th September 2024

AI and machine learning offer exciting innovation capabilities for businesses, from next-level predictive analytics to human-like conversational interfaces for functions such as customer service. But despite these tools’ undeniable potential many enterprises today are unprepared to fully leverage AI’s capabilities because they lack a prioritised data strategy. Bringing siloed and far-flung unstructured data repositories into...
The Digital Transformation Expo is coming to London on October 2-3. Register now!