Entitled routes vetted microloans to low-wage workers in India through their employers – using the payroll relationship as a trust layer that lenders can't fake.
ENTRY ANGLES
Full-stack employee financial wellbeing platform combining credit, insurance, savings, and benefits · Software platform model that partners with third-party financial providers rather than extending credit directly · Employer-configurable toolkit enabling nuanced incentive structures and multiple monetization surfaces
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Platform integration and API management across multiple financial product providers, Employer software and benefits administration expertise, Financial product partnerships and distribution networks
ENTITLED FOUNDER
“financial opportunities that people would otherwise never access”
Entitled is an Indian startup on a mission to bring "financial opportunities that people would otherwise never access" to low-wage workers.
Founded three years ago, it started by connecting workers with microloan providers – third-party lenders whose terms Entitled vets to ensure they're fair, and whose repayment processes it monitors to keep things from turning adversarial.
Crucially, Entitled doesn't go directly to borrowers. It reaches workers through their employers, turning financial products into a retention and motivation tool. The logic is straightforward: employees under financial stress perform worse and leave more often.
The platform has since expanded well beyond credit. Today it offers:
- Insurance products, including health coverage - Savings instruments, including fixed deposits - Assistance with government subsidy applications - Employer-issued bonuses, including discount vouchers from partner retailers
Entitled's core technical play is deep integration with employer HR systems, from which it pulls employee data: days worked, attendance records, tardiness patterns, performance flags, bonuses. This lets companies build custom incentive programs on the Entitled platform – rewarding performance with preferential access to financial services, better loan terms, discounts on everyday purchases, and so on.
The company claims to have opened access to additional financial services for 700,000 low-income workers across its client companies over the past three years.
Entitled recently closed an additional $482K as part of a seed round totaling $1.2M.
Entitled operates in India, which is far from the world's wealthiest market. The numbers bear that out: roughly 80% of Indian workers run out of their paycheck before the next one arrives.
But the "paycheck-to-paycheck" problem isn't confined to developing economies. In the US, 62% of workers live paycheck to paycheck – and 32% of those can't make it to the next pay period even while earning more than $100,000 a year.
This gets at something deeper about how poverty is defined. In 2002, around 4 billion people were considered poor if they earned less than $1,500 annually. By 2017, the threshold had shifted: 3.5 billion people were considered poor earning less than $10,000. The percentage of people below the poverty line stays roughly constant – only the dollar figure moves. And the poor have always substantially outnumbered the middle class and wealthy combined.
The commercial opportunity in serving this population is real and large – a point made memorably in the 2002 paper "The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid," later expanded into a book. A 2019 follow-up by the original author's daughter argued that the line between the poor and middle class has blurred, paradoxically expanding the market opportunity for companies that serve people with constrained finances.
Entitled is one player pursuing this opportunity. It won't be the last.
A [recent review](/review/ne-uchi-a-pomogaj) covered ZayZoon, which gives small and mid-sized businesses the tools to offer their employees earned-wage advances – targeting employers who lack the infrastructure to provide financial support on their own. ZayZoon has raised $75M.
Salt Labs, [covered here](/review/dlja-posetitelej-est-a-dlja-sotrudnikov-net) in December, took a more inventive approach: issuing workers a proprietary digital currency earned per hour worked, redeemable at partner retailers. Entitled appears to be building toward a similar model. Salt Labs raised $18M.
Trunk Tools, [covered previously](/review/smeni-auditoriju-bolshe-zarabotaesh), built a micro-rewards platform targeted at construction workers – a predominantly low-wage workforce. They raised $9.9M.
Onaroll, [reviewed in fall 2022](/review/prostaja-mehanika-reshenija-novyh-problem), targeted shift workers – delivery drivers, warehouse staff, restaurant workers – rewarding them for timely, high-quality performance. Onaroll raised $20M.
The general direction: build a business serving people with constrained finances.
One of the smarter approaches is to do it without putting your own capital at risk – don't extend credit yourself, don't sell products directly. Entitled, Salt Labs, Trunk Tools, and Onaroll all took this route: they build software platforms and bring in third-party partners for the financial products themselves.
Entitled's particular angle is to be a full-stack platform for employee financial wellbeing – combining credit access, insurance, savings products, employer bonuses, and partner discounts into a single configurable toolkit. That breadth lets employers design more nuanced incentive structures, and it gives Entitled more monetization surfaces.
The larger point is that this market is enormous – and likely permanent. The dollar threshold that defines "financially constrained" keeps moving up, but the share of the population that falls below it stays roughly the same. As Jeff Bezos famously put it: "Everyone asks what will change in the next ten years. The better question is what won't change." The existence of a large population of people who need better access to financial tools isn't going away.