The rise of embedded finance: It’s the end of fintech (as we know it)

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The rise of embedded finance: It’s the end of fintech (as we know it)

Image: Unsplash – Matthew Guay

Non-finance brands are already embedding financial services within their existing offerings, blurring the lines between traditional fintech services and other technology-enabled services, writes Sophie Guibaud, Chief Growth Officer at OpenPayd.

Embedded finance is the future of fintech – a future that builds on the promise of the last wave of innovation and delivers a true revolution in financial services, and one that will change spending, saving, transferring, and borrowing forever.

The rise of embedded finance is only just beginning. Non-finance brands have started to embed financial products and services into their apps and ecosystems but over the next couple of years, we’re going to see an explosion that will forever change perceptions about fintech, innovation, and the future of finance.

From competition to collaboration

The new paradigm brought about by the rise of embedded finance will require a completely different approach to innovation. For too long, fintech has been characterised by brutal competition. Embedded finance will change that approach because it demands that fintech players understand themselves as part of a broader ecosystem, rather than in a zero-sum race.

There is still a widespread idea within fintech that there is one ‘big prize’: to be the next neobank unicorn. This is going to change. There will be a greater focus on ‘downstream’ products, and less obsession with building the next world-beating bank.

Of course, developers are at the heart of fintech innovation. For them, embedded finance will be transformative. Simple, elegant APIs, developer-first product approaches, and a focus on interoperability are all combining to massively reduce the resource burden associated with building financial services. Developers don’t have to worry about building the stack from scratch anymore, and this means they can spend more time innovating.

Innovation in fintech will be significantly accelerated by the rise of embedded finance, and it will reshape multiple streams, from product development all the way through to the systems that govern access to fundamental tools, like payment rails.

Banking made invisible

Perhaps the defining shift in consumer finance will be the transition of the High Street banks and other legacy institutions away from their public-facing role. Of course, many people – especially amongst older demographics – will continue to bank with the household names. But in the medium term, we are going to see a rebalancing in which the dominance of those big names is challenged.

For the next generation of consumers, banking will be something that you ‘do’ with your favourite brands rather than your chosen bank. Many of the tasks that currently require consumers to leave one ecosystem and enter another one (that of their bank) will be folded into the products and services that they already use.

And it’s not just the big banks that are going to have to deal with this – even the challengers are going to be impacted. Embedded finance is going to accelerate the consolidation process amongst challengers, and from the huge number of hopefuls currently in the market, relatively few will make a mark. The sensible fintech founders of the future probably won’t be thinking about banks, or at least not in the sense that we currently imagine them. Instead, they’re more likely to be thinking about relatively niche use-cases for specific embedded finance technologies. We’ll see more industry or vertical-specific products, along with greater personalisation.

Every company will be a fintech company

At a larger scale, though, fintech and the financial services industry as a whole are going to have to navigate a complete 180 in public perception of what finance is and where you ‘do’ it.

As Angela Strange of Andreessen Horrowitz says, soon ‘every company will be a fintech company’. Consumers and businesses will no longer see banking as a separate sphere or sector, and will instead come to expect that day-to-day financial tasks will be carried out within their favourite brand ecosystems.

But what does this mean in practicality? For businesses, it will mean access to crucial new revenue streams, along with the opportunity to generate additional revenue from existing products. It will allow non-financial brands to leverage their expertise in experience design and the troves of data they hold on their customers to augment and future-proof their businesses. It will increase brand loyalty, and will boost customer lifetime value.

By embedding finance, we are not signalling the end of fintech but rather a transformation which will ensure it permeates every aspect of our day to day lives.

Originally written by
Sophie Guibaud | February 4, 2021
for AltFi

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