Nesha Brown launched PurposeMint, a fintech platform that uses automated micro-savings habits to help first-time savers secure a foundational $500 emergency buffer.
In the banking deserts of Tulsa, Oklahoma, mainstream financial tools often fail because they assume a level of economic stability that millions of unbanked households simply lack. To repair this structural friction point, founder Nesha Brown launched PurposeMint, a fintech platform that uses automated micro-savings habits to help first-time savers secure a foundational $500 emergency buffer. By systematically stabilizing these individuals, the platform transforms an overlooked population into a verified, de-risked customer pipeline for traditional financial institutions.