Rahul Conda’s Post

Thanks for this great summary, Simon Taylor. With a truly open mindset, aligned goals and strong incentives, FI / Fintech partnerships can be rewarding for all parties involved

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Simon Taylor Simon Taylor is an Influencer

Head of Strategy & Content @ Sardine / Writer FintechBrainfood 🧠

Large banks spend Billions on technology. 90% of banks want to buy from Tech and Fintech companies, yet nearly half of all signed contracts failed to Go Live. How do we fix this? 👇 I’ve been selling to large banks for 10 years and worked for a bank helping startups get deals internally for 5 years. Here are the most important lessons I learned when selling to banks (or any large enterprise). 🧠🧠🧠 1️⃣ Why would you want to sell to an incumbent? They sign long contracts (5+ years) for large sums. They’re less worried about price and more worried about performance. Their complex tech stack and being highly regulated means they need A) Every certification B) Detailed policies and procedures C) Massive throughput / low latency 🧠🧠🧠 2️⃣ Understand their world A) Their tech stack is hard to change with 1000s of systems. Adding anything new is complex. B) A meeting isn’t a deal. You might meet “Head of X” but from that to signed deal usually takes years. C) Relationships matter. Understand their world, their pressures and stay patient and you can capture the opportunity. 🧠🧠🧠 3️⃣ They have a complicated buying process A) Innovation teams have PoC budgets. You can get $50k or $100k to prove your product could work but still have low odds of success long term B) Becoming an “approved supplier” is hard. Countless forms, processes and sign-offs are needed, not obvious which at outset 🧠🧠🧠 4️⃣ Their buying is designed for big, not small A) The incumbent has no downside for going slower in a negotiation for a startup that can cost survival. Manage with advocates and senior buy in. B) Don’t assume integration will be easy for them. 81% of banks struggle to integrate with a tech company because the bank lacks experience with APIs. 🧠🧠🧠 5️⃣ The gatekeepers matter. A) Legacy providers are already in and likely have a competing product. Sometimes good > great if it can be operationalized B) Consultants run the show. They recommend vendors for RFIs / RFPs and manage integration. C) Other Fintech companies can be frenemies. RFPs look for “comprehensive solutions,” but sometimes that comes from a partnership not one co. 🧠🧠🧠 6️⃣ Set yourself up for success A) Document your processes, and get your certification in order. B) Sell to the “awake at night” pain point like new regulations C) Find partners who care about your success like legacy providers or consultants 🧠🧠🧠 7️⃣ Closing thoughts There’s an old saying that “incumbents want to be first to be third.” They want innovation only if it's secure and robust enough for their scale. But don’t worry; there’s always one that will make a leap. Find your advocate; find someone who can get it done, and one will lead to many. 🧠🧠🧠 👉 If you enjoyed this, I hope you’ll subscribe to fintechbrainfood (link in bio) #fintech #fintechpartnerships #baas #partnerships

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