Now, any company can be a financial services company.
Fintech as a Service (FaaS) allows for any company to use fintech APIs to embed financial capabilities into their existing applications, products and services.
FaaS solutions include white-label ewallet platforms, card issuing, payment acceptance, payouts and remittances, identity verification, fraud prevention, virtual accounts and merchant services, as well as solutions for provisioning, managing and reporting.
With Fintech as a Service, the work of building the infrastructure, integrating multiple, disparate financial systems, licensing and compliance is handled by a third party, so businesses can quickly integrate and offer many financial services to customers that were once only available through traditional banking and financial companies.
The Three Essential Pillars of Fintech as a Service
Businesses need to understand the three main benefits of FaaS. Each benefit can help address the most pressing challenges facing global businesses dealing with financial, payments, and money movement services.
Pillar 1: A Unified Tech Stack
To make FaaS fast and easy to implement, you need a single, integrated technology stack designed from the ground up to give product managers and developers maximum flexibility to craft high-quality, localized user experiences for local and cross-border commerce.
Fintech as a Service consolidates all financial management, payment, and money movement services that modern businesses need to build effective applications through a single, global, scalable API.
This can involve a number of moving parts, such as:
- Receiving payment or collections in globally with locally preferred methods, including bank transfers, locally issued cards, ewallets, in stores, and via cash
- Compliance – Identity Verification (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) screening
- Foreign Exchange Management – allowing users to collect funds in local currencies and settle in the currency of their choice.
- Disbursing or paying out funds worldwide using payout methods such as, bank transfers, ewallet transfers, instant card-to-card payments or cardlessly in cash
- eWallets, many with features such as multi-currency accounts and loyalty programs
- Card Issuing – both virtual and plastic cards for discrete use cases
Given a single centralized tech stack, solutions architects are free to adopt a user-centric approach to their design efforts. This lets your company place the focus on experience above all else, while simultaneously minimizing the need to invest resources in backend infrastructure. The next step is using FaaS to break down the barriers that stop global expansion.