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The Spectrum Of Closing Eligibility With Camelia Martin And Amy Moses
It's good to have you back with us again and reading another episode. This show was created by mortgage professionals. It is for you, mortgage professionals. We're so grateful to have you as our reader. Our commitment is to bring you timely information anytime and anywhere. It's interesting. I get more realtors reading our episode. They are trying to find out what's going on. What are those mortgage lenders up to? We welcome all of our realtors, builders, and also those considering entering the industry. This is somehow caught on within those in the finance departments of a number of universities. We're so grateful. It’s so much fun to go into an office. I was visiting my daughter where she works. I walked into the office. The receptionist said, “Mr. Lykken, I love your show.” I go, “Really?” Another guy walks out, and he says, “I graduated. I'm in an intern program. Our whole finance class reads your show.” It's like, “Are you kidding? That's so cool.” It's a great way, folks, for those of you hiring new people into the industry, to educate them. The Hot Topics segment is with Camelia Martin, the Head of Industry and Regulatory Affairs, and Amy Moses who is the Senior Field Marketing Manager. They're both with Snapdocs. They're going to be talking in the Hot Topic segment about the spectrum of closing eligibility and how to power the perfect mortgage closing. Another thing that's interesting for me, and some of you may find interesting about Snapdocs, is they did another major round of funding. They got a $1.5 billion market cap value. This is interesting what's going on with the evaluation of the technology world. It’s nuts, but I got to tell you that I did not know anything about Snapdocs when I started hearing this story and going, “Let's get that out of the show and let our readers get exposed to all that's happening in this part of the industry.” We are focusing a little bit on the eMortgage, the eClosings, and the closing eligibility, very good stuff. You'll enjoy the interview. I had so much fun doing this interview. I will share more of that later. Anyway, if you haven’t checked out Industry Syndicate, do so at IndustrySyndicate.com. Also, the Mortgage Bankers Association. We're grateful for their sponsorship, as well as Finastra, whose Fusion Mortgagebot Solution helps make the decision parameters easier by streamlining the approval process and keeping your lending team compliant and efficient. Also, Lenders One and the Mortgage Collaborative. We're proud to be a part of both of these coops. These two coops help lender and vendor members get closer to each other in the sense of getting to know each other and a closer relationship. I'm glad to be a part of both of them. Check out both of these two coops to see which one is right for you or do what we do. We belong to both of them. Also, the Community Mortgage Lenders of America, CMLA. They do a great job with independent mortgage bankers, as well as Indecomm, Alice's old company. They partner with lenders, services, mortgage insurers, and talent companies to achieve one specific goal to help people grow. I could go on and on about what a great job they do. Also, we have Insellerate. Josh Friend will be coming on with us here shortly. He is looking forward to sharing more information about how to engage the consumer more effectively and also going back and dealing with prospects and past customers. I have a great way of working on all of that. I encourage you to be looped in on that interview coming up. Also, Knowledge Coop. I’m very happy to work with Ken Perry and the team there, as well as Mobility Mortgage Market Intelligence or Mobility MMI, and MobilityRE. It is one of the same company. One focuses on the real estate side, and one focuses on the mortgage market intelligence. It is very exciting, as well as Modex. MobilityRE, Venture Link, as well as Modex, both of them is a father-son team. I love stories. Family business stories are so fun. Venture Link and Mobility MMI have a dad who worked in the business. Also, so it does Modex family. The Larsons are together in this, the third as well as the junior. Junior is the older guy my age. It's fun to see what these family-run businesses can do for you. By the way, check out both of these companies on our website, Lykken on Lending, and look at our sponsorships. We used both of these technologies when looking at market intelligence, where to go, and where to advise our clients to go. If they're looking for recruiting, we encourage you to use both but also look at what is going on in the markets that you're in or considering going into. Finally, I want to say a special thank you to Rob, Les, Alice, Allen, and Matt for all of their contributions to each and every episode of the show. Welcome to the Hot Topic segment. It is June 14th, 2021. We're so honored to have you here with us. We finished up the weekly mortgage update. Go back to that. There is great information there. I'm so excited about two of my favorite people on the planet that we get to have here. I met these two at the NEXT Conference. It's a great conference. Anyone who's looking at getting out to a great conference, it showcases the powerful women in our industry. A real shout out to the NEXT Conference because that's where I met these two. I had my show studio set up next to their booth, and as luck would have it, we got to know each other. There are so many wonderful stories that came out of this. Let me introduce our guest. We have Amy Moses, Senior Field Marketing Manager. Also joining us is Camelia Martin. She is the Head of Industry and Regulatory Affairs of Snapdocs. We’re talking to the leaders at Snapdocs. We want to share with you readers about what's going on. Camelia, I'm thrilled to have you as a guest at the show. When we met a few years ago, you were at MERS working on some crucial projects related to the MERS eRegistry, then you led the digital mortgage advisory group at Falcon Capital Advisors. Now, fast-forward to January 2021, you became the Head of Industry and Regulatory Affairs at Snapdocs. For our readers who may not be familiar with Snapdocs, can you share with us what Snapdocs does and explain the value it brings to the industry? Camelia, if you could follow us, why you decided to join Snapdocs and what your role with the Industry and Regulatory Affairs involves. I'm thrilled to be here. It's always a pleasure to speak with you. If you bear with me a little bit, it will probably make more sense if I try to answer those questions in reverse. I'll take the scenic route if you don't mind. As you mentioned, I've been working in mortgage for years. Admittedly, for some part of that, I had a pretty naive view of what it would take for the industry to make the transition away from manual, labor-intensive paper processes to fully automated digital closing. It's easy to think that it should be that complicated or surrounded by automation. eSignatures have been around for decades, but what I quickly learned is that a lender can't make this transition to digital mortgage closings. We asked you this with a concert or host of whole other market participants that interact with their loans. As you called out in my consulting work, I also came to quickly appreciate the not-so-insignificant process re-engineering that comes along with all of it. What keeps me excited and why I still stick around in this industry and focus on the field of work is I’ve also had the opportunity to see the massive gains that a lender can recognize when they invest in this change and when they're able to scale it. As you can probably imagine, after working on any mortgage all of this time, I've seen a lot of mortgage closing tech. What sets Snapdocs apart in my mind is that they recognize the broader challenges of connectivity and interoperability, challenges that are at the core of the fragmentation that we see now in mortgage closings. In my opinion, challenges are a big part of what pedals back from this digital transition, and then they work backward from there. [bctt tweet="Snapdocs recognizes the broader challenges of connectivity and interoperability that are at the core of the fragmentation that we see today in mortgage closings." username=""] Our CEO and Founder, Aaron King, got his start in the industry as a notary. He taught himself how to code. Our first product was a scheduling platform that connected settlement companies and notaries. That network has since grown to 50,000 settlement agents and 140,000 notaries. David, you'll have to have him on at some point because he does a better job at telling himself. Fast forward to now, the product has expanded to support hundreds of lenders in every type of mortgage closing, powering more than $3 million in closings a year and touching nearly 20% of all mortgage transactions. To answer your question, as far as my role, I have a different title and a different company, but I'm still doing much of the same type of work at Snapdocs. To try and summarize it, I partner with our lenders across a number of functional teams and try to stay close to these types of challenges and opportunities. We are trying to make sure that we're constantly trying to find ways to add value to our lenders in the broader industry, and I get to work with Amy Moses. That is the super bonus, for sure. That's interesting. I can't wait to get more into that. Amy, it's so good to have you joining us in the show as well. You were running marketing at MERS before you joined Snapdocs. You used MERS’ position as an operator of the MERS eRegistry system to educate the industry about eMortgages and eNotes. Why did you make the transition to Snapdocs? Thanks, David. First of all, I appreciate you having me on here with Camelia. Nowhere else I'd rather be than spending time with the two of you. You are right. We did a ton of education while I was at MERS. For the past years, we've been blanketing the industry with thought leadership and education about eNotes and eMortgages because we determined that's what the industry needed in order to move forward. There's a large team of people at each lender who need to be trained on the concept and the technology. While speaking with these lenders, I'd always heard such amazing feedback about Snapdocs both about their implementation process and how quickly lenders could ramp up and also about their customer service, both during implementation and throughout the entire life cycle of the lender being with them. That resonated with me and left an impression. Camelia joined Snapdocs months ago. I started talking with her about the difference she was making there and what the company could make in the industry. I started talking to other people there and realized what an incredibly talented team it is and how obsessed they are with creating results for the lender and bringing innovation to their industry. I thought that was a very passionate place that I wanted to work and be a part of, so here we are back together again. I want to give a shout-out to MERS for the education. You had a lot of that up and organizing that, Amy. They are to be credited with so much education that they brought the industry as a service. Camelia, you explained a bit about Snapdocs, but what I understand is you are different than other eClosing providers. You don't have a LOS or a POS, and you don't provide docs, which is confusing because when I first heard your name, it got docs in the name Snapdocs. Explain to me how working with a company focuses exclusively on providing an eClosing solution and how that can be valuable to lenders. To go back to something Amy said, to close a single mortgage loan, if you think about it, there are more than a dozen participants that have to coordinate to make that happen. You've got loan officers, settlement agents, notaries, borrowers, and title ensures. If you get the point, the list goes on. Closing is the point where most of this coordination needs to converge, and it's also the part where collaboration and visibility into the process tend to break down. At Snapdocs, recognize that all of these constituents have a course system that they might be working in on a day-to-day basis. Those systems serve a very specific and important purpose. We want everyone to continue to work in their core systems, have access to the data they need when they need it, and seamlessly be able to perform those functions. Our goal is to serve as this connective tissue that runs and cuts across all of these courses in participants, not to upend them. Our lenders can continue to use the POS, LOS, doc prep, or any systems of their choice and still have one single workflow for all of their closings, regardless of closing types. We do that through robust integrations with these core systems, proprietary AI that's agnostic to doc providers, workflow automation, collaboration tools, and, as Amy mentioned, deep investments and supporting our lenders not just through implementation but continuously throughout our relationship with them. To answer the second part of your question, I think with anything. There's always inherent value in specializing versus generalizing. Snapdocs, Amy is the word obsessed. I'll use the word fanatical in the most positive connotations of the word. We're fanatical about ensuring a perfect closing experience for everyone on our platform. All of our time, energy, and resources are anchored on that vision. We spend a great deal of resources making sure that we fully understand the uniqueness of everyone's role and the needs in closing, which differ from any other part of the loan production processes that might be otherwise better served by an upstream POS or LOS system.

Important Links
- Snapdocs
- IndustrySyndicate.com
- Mortgage Bankers Association
- Finastra
- Lenders One
- Mortgage Collaborative
- Community Mortgage Lenders of America
- Indecomm
- Insellerate
- Knowledge Coop
- Mobility Mortgage Market Intelligence
- MobilityRE
- Modex
- Teraverde Advisors
- Snapdocs.com/eligible
- Camelia.Martin@Snapdocs.com
- Amy.Moses@Snapdocs.com
- Venture Link