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by Krishna.Nelluri@experian.com 5 min read April 10, 2026

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At its core, EVA makes financial information accessible and actionable. Experian members can ask questions, receive personalized financial insights, and potentially take action in real time. Whether freezing or unfreezing their Experian credit file, managing membership features, or exploring tailored offers via third-party lenders in Experian Marketplace, they can do it within a seamless conversational experience designed to simplify decisions

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Our latest evolution expands beyond credit insights to provide clearer visibility into spending and cash flow. Through connected permissioned financial accounts, members can track spending trends, recurring expenses, and changes over time. EVA also can deliver tailored recommendations to help reduce unnecessary spending, manage subscriptions, and better plan for monthly obligations.

By translating complex financial data into practical next steps, EVA serves as an intelligent financial copilot. It helps people move from insight to action with confidence and supports smarter budgeting, saving, and borrowing decisions aligned with their goals and financial priorities

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At Experian, our mission is bringing Financial Power to All™. EVA represents Consumer First AI in action by combining advanced artificial intelligence, human centered design, and a trusted data foundation to expand access to personalized financial tools and support greater financial inclusion.

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At its core, EVA makes financial information accessible and actionable. Experian members can ask questions, receive personalized financial insights, and potentially take action in real time. Whether freezing or unfreezing their Experian credit file, managing membership features, or exploring tailored offers via third-party lenders in Experian Marketplace, they can do it within a seamless conversational experience designed to simplify decisions.

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Our latest evolution expands beyond credit insights to provide clearer visibility into spending and cash flow. Through connected permissioned financial accounts, members can track spending trends, recurring expenses, and changes over time. EVA also can deliver tailored recommendations to help reduce unnecessary spending, manage subscriptions, and better plan for monthly obligations.

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Trust is foundational to everything we do at Experian. It’s how we build products people rely on, how we serve clients and consumers, and how we work together every day. That focus makes this year’s recognition from Fortune’s 100 Best Companies to Work For List even more meaningful.

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What makes this honor especially significant is how it’s earned. The ranking is based entirely on employee feedback from the Great Place to Work survey. Our people told us they feel welcomed, trusted to do their jobs, respected for who they are, and valued for the impact they make. They shared that Experian is a place where people can be themselves and count on one another.

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That internal trust matters externally. When employees trust their workplace, they do their best work. That translates directly into the trust our consumers and clients place in us—to handle data responsibly, deliver insights with integrity, and help people and businesses move forward with confidence.

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Our way of working has earned Experian the2026 BIG Innovation Awardfor its AI-powered Experian-Assistant for Model Risk management, Top Score in the2026 Equality 100,Best Place to Work for Disability Inclusion, and as one of the25 World’s Best Workplaces™ 2025.

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Our latest evolution expands beyond credit insights to provide clearer visibility into spending and cash flow. Through connected permissioned financial accounts, members can track spending trends, recurring expenses, and changes over time. EVA also can deliver tailored recommendations to help reduce unnecessary spending, manage subscriptions, and better plan for monthly obligations.

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This milestone builds on our broader strategy to embed intelligent, trusted AI across the consumer ecosystem. Through continued advancements in EVA’s adaptive financial guidance and the launch ofExperian Insurance Marketplaceintegrate with theChatGPTplatform, we are meeting consumers wherever they are with personalized insights and relevant financial opportunities delivered through conversational experiences.

  • This mission is deeply personal to me. I was born in the United States but spent my formative years in Taiwan, where credit was not part of everyday life. When I returned to the United States for college, I realized that being financially responsible did not automatically translate into having a strong credit profile. I was fortunate that credit did not stand in my way, but that uncertainty stayed with me and shaped my perspective.
  • That experience fuels my passion for building tools like EVA. Financial health shapes where we live, what we can plan for, and how secure we feel. Yet managing money and credit can still feel complex or intimidating. EVA helps cut through that complexity by meeting people where they are and adapting in real time to their needs with guidance that feels clear and relevant.
  • Improved targeting and personalization: Demographic segmentation powers highly customized campaigns so you can cater to different income levels, family structures, job types, and so forth. B2C brands can provide offers based on factors like age, income, and gender, while B2B brands can target by occupation to reach decision-makers.
  • Better product and service development: Understanding which demographics use your product or service is a great way to inform future improvements.
  • Higher engagement: With highly customized content, you can speak directly to specific demographic groups and increase engagement.
  • Cost efficiency: As you target the most relevant segments, you optimize your spending around the most likely buyers and will see better returns.
  • Increased conversion and retention: Relevant, targeted messaging leads to higher conversion rates, and when people feel understood, they’ll want to keep coming back.
  • Clearer customer insights: Demographic data provides precise, actionable insights for refining your marketing strategy.
  • Simplicity and effectiveness: Demographic insights are immediately actionable and easy to implement, which gives you a great starting point for focused campaigns
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Experian Celebrates International Women’s Day by Inspiring Inclusion Every Day

Happy International Women’s Day! Across the globe, we have celebrated this week with special events in-person and virtual, featuring best-selling authors, Experian leaders, and topics to further our team’s professional and personal growth. Volunteer events to brought us together and provided opportunities to give back to our communities. This year’s International Women’s Day theme, “Inspire Inclusion” could not be a better fit for Experian. “At Experian, we understand that promoting gender equality is not just a core principle; it’s a strategic pillar for nurturing our growth. We remain firmly committed to creating a diverse and inclusive workplace. The contributions of women are fundamental to our success, underscoring the importance of creating an environment where all individuals, regardless of gender, have equal opportunities to thrive,” says Jennifer Schulz, North America Chief Executive Officer and Global Ambassador of the Women in Experian employee resource group (ERG). Global and business unit ambassadors from our Women in Experian ERG share how to Inspire Inclusion every day. Helen Emmett — Chief Financial Officer for Global Financial ServicesI inspire inclusion by consciously ensuring that every talent, performance and recruitment review is undertaken with a diversity and inclusion lens. I won’t recruit any role without a diverse shortlist and with goals for each job level. Actively mentoring and sponsoring female talent is important, as is calling out teams where diversity is not at acceptable levels. Charlotte Gillan — Global Head of TaxOur diversity is a very visible value at Experian; inclusion is tougher to get right, particularly post-pandemic. If we just have a diverse team, we won’t win. To win, we need people to bring different thoughts and experiences to the table, call or meeting. If we are inclusive, we need to ensure people are listened to and heard. One focus area for me is to really listen and then ask what people think and why. Sometimes this can lead to new ideas, new processes and innovations Marcela Velasco — Spanish Latin America Vice President of Human ResourcesI generate spaces for continuous and open communication, recognize and celebrate individual differences. I create an environment where everyone feels valued, respected, and empowered. Inclusive leadership is not only a responsibility, it’s also an opportunity to create a more enriching and productive work environment. Maria Pou – North America Senior Director of Consumer Information Services Product OperationsI inspire inclusion by actively seeking differences in views and perspectives from a place of love and wanting to understand. I want everybody I come in contact with to feel valued and respected.  Rodrigo Rodrigues — Vice President of Experian Information Technology ServicesInvest in science, technology engineering and mathematics (STEM) education for girls and underrepresented communities. To build a more inclusive future in technology, we must start by addressing the pipeline. Encouraging participation in STEM from an early age is crucial. I advocate for companies and organizations to support programs that expose girls and students from underrepresented communities to technology, offering scholarships, internships, and mentorship programs to help them pursue careers in tech. Maryam Damavandi — North America Senior Vice President and ControllerYou can develop an inclusion mindset by being open to differences in ideas, viewpoints and way of thinking and asking difficult questions when having authentic conversations with diverse individuals. Educate yourself with challenges that diverse individuals face.  Being aware can go a long way but having a voice, especially when something isn’t right can make a difference. Sumeeta Maxwell — Chief Human resources Officer for Experian Global Technology and Software SolutionsSupport the women around you and speak up for them if needed. Remind colleagues in real time of the actions that aren’t inclusive like when they interrupt. Be clear on how you want to be treated. Seek feedback – and do something with it. The women who have your back will tell you the truth!

Published: March 8, 2024 by Editor
Experian’s Fraud Forecast Predicts Generative AI Fraud and Deceptive Scams in 2024

Recent technological advancements are ushering in a new era of innovation for businesses and consumers but can also help perpetuate fraud. Today we released our annual Future of Fraud Forecast, highlighting five fraud threats that businesses and consumers should be wary of this year, which include: Generative AI accelerates DIY fraud: The explosive popularity of generative AI has brought many benefits, but it’s also made fraud more accessible. Experian predicts fraudsters will use generative AI to accelerate “do-it-yourself” fraud with a wide range of deepfake content, such as emails, voice and video as well as code creation to set up scam websites and perpetuate online attacks. Fraudsters may also use generative AI to socially engineer “proof of life” schemes. Using stolen identities, fraudsters will leverage generative AI to create fake identities on social media. They can then interact online with these new profiles that look like a real consumer. This could dramatically increase the number of fraud attacks. To safeguard customers, companies will likely have to utilize multilayered fraud prevention solutions that “fight AI with AI.” Branches are cool again: Although there’s been a substantial migration to digital lending experiences, many consumers are heading in-person to bank branches to open new accounts or get financial advice. Consumers are doing this as they want to feel safer and think they’re avoiding online security risks by being in-person. When it comes to verifying identities at the branch, there can be human error or oversight that can happen in-person. According to an Experian report, 85% of consumers report physical biometrics as the most trusted and secure authentication method they’ve recently encountered, but the measure is only currently used by 32% of businesses to detect and protect against fraud. Experian forecasts that lenders will introduce more digital identity verification steps, such as physical biometrics, at branches for in-person account openings to protect legitimate customers and mitigate losses. Retailers hit with empty returns: With a rise in online shopping, fraudsters have found creative ways to scam some retailers and small businesses. The customer says they’re returning their purchased item but when the business receives the box, it’s empty. The customer then says they returned the product and it must have gotten lost in the mail. Experian predicts that more criminals will use this method to keep merchandise in 2024, leaving businesses with lost goods and revenue. Synthetic identity fraud will surge: During the pandemic, many fraudsters created synthetic identities but then quickly found easier methods to steal funds through various aid programs. Though they may have been dormant, these synthetic identities now have a few years of history. Experian predicts this will make it easier to elude detection — leading to fraudsters using those dormant accounts to “bust out” and steal funds over the next year. Businesses will need to collaborate more closely than ever with their fraud-prevention partners to review their current portfolios for synthetic identity accounts. Fraudsters expand into cause-related and investment deception: From fake GoFundMe campaigns, social media giveaways, investment opportunities and text fraud, fraudsters are employing new methods that strike an emotional response from consumers with cause-related asks or too-good-to-be-real offers to gain access to consumers’ vital, personal information. Experian predicts that these deceptive cause-related methods will surge in 2024 and beyond. To avoid becoming victims, consumers will have to be extremely cautious and confirm these opportunities, charities or texts are from the intended party before interacting with them. To mitigate fraud in 2024, businesses need to work with a trusted partner to implement a multilayered approach to identity verification and fraud prevention. Experian offers a full suite of automated tools that harness data and analytics to detect and prevent fraud. Learn more about Experian’s fraud prevention offerings here and register for our webinar for a deeper dive into these five fraud predictions and other emerging fraud trends.

Published: February 13, 2024 by Kathleen Peters
Experian’s United for Financial Health Partnership Wins Anthem Award

We often say creating a better tomorrow isn’t just a slogan, it’s our goal. From our talent recruiting to our products and services, we want to play a positive role in your financial future. That desired impact extends to the work we do in the communities in which we live work and serve. That’s why our recent honor from the 2024 Anthem Awards is so exciting. Created in 2021 by The Webby Awards, The Anthem Awards honors the purpose and mission-driven work of people, companies and organizations worldwide. We are thrilled that our modern and more relatable approach to financial health has been honored with a Bronze Anthem Award for the video series, “HeartBroke,” produced in partnership with The Singleton Foundation. As part of our United for Financial Health initiative, the show brings together couples for frank and honest conversations about their finances and how relationships are tested with financial issues. Financial expert Misty Lynch coaches them through those issues to help them determine if they can work through it or end up HeartBroke(n). It’s no surprise that money matters can put enormous strain on relationships and our daily lives. That’s why we’re also working with The Singleton Foundation to help young adults master money basics in the show “Your World on Money.” Now in its second season, “Your World on Money” explores topics like insurance, how to negotiate your salary, credit invisibility and stock market basics.   It’s exciting to be among the distinguished winners honored this year. But for Experian, helping you feel empowered when it comes to your credit and finances is the bigger reward.

Published: February 8, 2024 by Abigail Lovell

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