So Your Fintech Startup Wants to Issue a Payment Card?

Tomáš Vyšný
FinTech Innovation
Published in
3 min readAug 12, 2016
Source: Wirecard

Come to think about it, a payment card is one of the key touch points (if not the touch point) customers use in their daily lifes to interact with their financial products and services.

Payment card is a commodity product— or at least, it has been one up until recently. In my view, the traditional banking way of thinking about a payment card is of “a payment medium linked to a current/credit/prepaid account or other fund storage medium”.

This paradigm is flipped on its head in the fintech world. The thinking is different — a card is no more just an subordinate of an account but rather a substantial part of the product itself. In sync with an underlying account; it enables creation of compelling and unique customer use cases and propositions.

It has also probably never been easier and [relatively] cheaper to issue a payment card for non-regulated businesses in Europe.

It is no wonder then that many of the most interesting fintech startups are employing payment cards as a core element of their customer proposition.

Source: Number26

Fintech Startups Leveraging Cards in their Proposition

Revolut is a startup that claims to be “the new fair way to instantly send and spend money globally”. With an underlying multicurrency account and obviously a payment card Revolut is seeing some solid traction- $500 million (£342 million) of customer money has been spent or transferred on its cards in just 10 months.

Curve is an example of another card-centered proposition backed by the likes of Seedcamp and Speedinvest. It claims to be “the next generation payment card — a single card built on the MasterCard network that combines all your cards into one. Upload your existing debit and credit cards into the Curve app, and sync them with the Curve card…Curve has created a single, efficient, user focused touchpoint between a user and their money.” [source:Crunchbase]

Pleo, which has recently won best of the show award at Pioneers Festival in Vienna is an example of a card-centered small business proposition. This Copenhagen-based startup is working on a “a company payment card that works for you” —for better management of employee expenses and related back office processes.

Then there are the challenger banks. A next generation of banks obviously cannot do without offering the traditional plastic card — Berlin-based pan-european Number 26 was one of the first one to roll out their card/account offering; followed by an UK-based challenger Mondo and soon to be followed by others as they roll out their product offerings.

Mondo-issued card (source: www.getmondo.co.uk)

Learnings & Considerations

I have recently worked on conceptualizing a card product with one of the challenger banks — drawing on this experience I came up with couple of high-level considerations I believe are useful to keep in mind before diving into the process of issuing your own card.

Note: The below is aimed at fintech startup people with no payments/card issuing experience rather than experts in the area.

#1 Understand the supply chain

Especially if you do not have background is not from cards/payments, the supply chain of a card programme can become quite intimidating. At the very minumum you will be talking to or contracting the following people:

A/ BIN Sponsors

BIN sponsors are companies (usually subsidiaries of banks or banks themselves) who own and sponsor the card’s BIN range (the first 6 digits of a card number which identify the cards’ issuer).

Interested to learn more? Find all the learnings over here https://www.tomasvysny.com/blog/fintech-startup-issue-payment-card

--

--