ARTICLE
12 December 2023

Forbes Thinks Banks Will Stop Partnering With FinTech Companies In 2024

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Foley & Lardner

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Foley & Lardner LLP looks beyond the law to focus on the constantly evolving demands facing our clients and their industries. With over 1,100 lawyers in 24 offices across the United States, Mexico, Europe and Asia, Foley approaches client service by first understanding our clients’ priorities, objectives and challenges. We work hard to understand our clients’ issues and forge long-term relationships with them to help achieve successful outcomes and solve their legal issues through practical business advice and cutting-edge legal insight. Our clients view us as trusted business advisors because we understand that great legal service is only valuable if it is relevant, practical and beneficial to their businesses.
The most persuasive reason given by the article is that the relationships are more akin to client-vendor instead of partnerships.
United States Technology
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This Forbes article details several reasons why banks will stop partnering with FinTech companies, including insufficient personnel, insufficient organizational structure, and lack of partnership competency. True, small banks do not have the resources to manage FinTech partnerships and large banks with the resources do not need the FinTech companies.

The most persuasive reason given by the article is that the relationships are more akin to client-vendor instead of partnerships. The article correctly notes that the term "partnership" means shared risk and reward. This isn't the nature of most bank-FinTech relationships, however—banks purchase or procure technology and services from FinTechs.

Going forward, banks should:

1) Refocus "innovation" efforts on tangible process improvement and revenue creation. Banks need to find and select vendors who help them operationalize process change and new product/service creation.

2) Change vendor selection criteria. Vendors' innovation capacity needs to become a more important component of selection criteria. Filling gaps in features and functionality is easier than helping banks innovate on processes and products.

3) Make data-driven vendor decisions. Banks need a more data-driven view of whether FinTechs are delivering on their promises.

Prediction: By the end of this decade, bank-fintech partnerships will be a thing of the past.

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ARTICLE
12 December 2023

Forbes Thinks Banks Will Stop Partnering With FinTech Companies In 2024

United States Technology

Contributor

Foley & Lardner LLP looks beyond the law to focus on the constantly evolving demands facing our clients and their industries. With over 1,100 lawyers in 24 offices across the United States, Mexico, Europe and Asia, Foley approaches client service by first understanding our clients’ priorities, objectives and challenges. We work hard to understand our clients’ issues and forge long-term relationships with them to help achieve successful outcomes and solve their legal issues through practical business advice and cutting-edge legal insight. Our clients view us as trusted business advisors because we understand that great legal service is only valuable if it is relevant, practical and beneficial to their businesses.
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