The fintech industry has spent the last decade obsessing over seamless experiences and bringing financial products inside the tools that consumers were already hooked on. Instant approvals, one-click funding, and frictionless onboarding became the benchmarks of success. And for good reason; they removed friction that had frustrated their customers for generations.
But here’s what we’re learning as embedded finance matures: The consumers and businesses that use embedded financial products repeatedly and stay loyal to their platforms are not just staying for the technology and platform. They’re staying because when they need it, they’re able to get help from people who understand the product, can anticipate their issues, and guide them through decisions that carry real financial weight. It’s not just the technology that is required to win, but the right level of service also.
EMBED SOLUTIONS, NOT JUST PRODUCTS
Embedded fintech puts financial services directly inside the software people already use to manage their everyday life or business. Here’s why the human element matters from day one. Say you’re a restaurant owner looking to apply for capital through your point-of-sale system. When a business owner needs to understand their costs, their options, and whether it makes sense to take a bank loan or advance, reassurance and education are the difference between gaining a customer and losing one. Financial issues carry real consequences and static. Confusing FAQ pages often aren’t enough to build the trust needed to work through them.
Tomorrow’s embedded solutions cater to the full experience. They offer support from onboarding onwards, and a person to call when need arises. An API that works smoothly is embedded finance. A specialist who walks a customer through why their funding limit changed and what they can do about it? That’s a true embedded solution.
SPEED ALONE WON’T HELP
Fast approvals get customers excited. A three-minute application that results in instant access to $50,000 in working capital, or a next generation embedded credit card, feels impressive at first. But speed without guidance often leads to confusion and eventually customers who stop using the product.
Consider the restaurant owner we mentioned above who is applying for working capital through their point-of-sale system. They’re looking at questions about personal guarantees, wondering what happens to their home if the business hits a rough patch. They’re trying to figure out if automatic deductions will interfere with making payroll next week. A self-serve flow can’t anticipate or answer questions like this. It makes it hard to build trust or drive long-term use.
Human support changes the numbers by helping customers understand what they have access to and how to use it. When someone has access to a human to help them work out how to use a product, the math is simple. They use it a lot more.
BETTER SERVICE EQUALS MORE ADOPTION
The most successful embedded fintech products combine great products with a team of people who know how to guide customers through complex decisions. It’s not about choosing between automation and service. It’s about using both where they work best.
Even with a smooth digital experience, first-time financial product users benefit from talking to someone who understands their business. The best specialists don’t just answer questions. They help customers see how to get the most value.
Most businesses don’t use the maximum available credit. Not because they don’t need it, but because they’re unsure when it makes sense to access more. When a specialist reaches out to say, “We noticed you’re growing quickly and using about 60% of your available capital. Want to talk about whether increasing your limit makes sense?” two things happen. First, the customer feels seen. Second, they’re more likely to access additional capital that actually helps them grow.
THE FUTURE OF EMBEDDED FINANCE
The embedded finance industry is moving past the early “automate everything” phase. The platforms and providers building long-term relationships understand that financial products are fundamentally about trust, and trust comes from consistent, helpful interaction backed by reliable technology.
This doesn’t mean every fintech provider will build massive support teams. It means the successful ones will figure out how to deliver expert guidance at scale, using technology to make human expertise more accessible and effective, not to replace it.
For software platforms, this creates an opportunity. As embedded finance becomes more common, service quality becomes a key way to stand out. It’s not just about access to capital and financial services. The platforms that help their customers actually use them to grow will build stronger relationships than platforms that simply offer another feature.
Luke Voiles is CEO of Pipe.
source https://www.fastcompany.com/91464948/what-embedded-finance-needs-to-succeed
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