FinTech Marketing in a Post-Doge Era by Leslie Campisi | Wednesday, May 22nd
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Hi there,
As someone who has helped many founders and investors find their way into the FinTech discourse, I pay a lot of attention to the “zeitgeist” of finance. I don’t just mean what Mary Ann Azevedo is writing about (always important!) or which FinTech startups are splashing out on billboards and subway ads (good luck out-buying Mullvad VPN). I’m talking about the larger cultural trends and conversations around finance that form the backdrop to the storytelling we do in this space.
It’s easy to imagine we’re floating along in our own global FinTech bubble, bouncing from event to event, caring exclusively about the niche decision-makers that matter to our business. But I’ve been helping entrepreneurs tell stories for a long time, and the communications environment we’re operating in now is more cynical, hardened and skeptical than I’ve seen at any point in my career.?
While the slow but steady erosion of media continues, reducing the number of trusted publications and journalists out there to tell our stories, we’re also faced with a new cultural narrative around innovation and entrepreneurship that, sorry to say, does not believe the new is always best.?
But before I get into the implications, it might be worthwhile to consider… How did we get here?
I opened my talk at the Empire Startups conference last month with my own personal come-to-Jesus moment. There I was, three years ago, standing on the top of a hill in Elysian Park as a freshly expatriated New Yorker in LA, listening to a 20-something friend read a Coindesk story aloud as I walked my dog. Apparently Elon Musk was about to host SNL, where it was rumored he’d pump the price of Dogecoin—so my decidedly analog friend, hooked by the promise of fast cash, opened up a Robinhood account (“So easy, did it in like five minutes”) and dumped all of his savings into the memestock.?
In that moment, an end-of-life montage of every FinTech story I’d pitched to the media, every talk I’d helped a founder give, flashed before my eyes.
I was just coming off of four years as a FinTech VC CMO, working on a zany project called Hacking Finance to make the financial services industry more colorful, inclusive, and appealing to people outside of the biz. Was I the butterfly whose wings flapped that ultimately drove Leon into zero balance checking account territory? How many other Leons were out there? How the hell did we get here?
Y’all, there are millions of Leons out there. You don’t need to have one blow up their savings in close proximity to you to understand that.
Not long after this episode, I watched Dumb Money at BAM, a film about the Gamestop short squeeze, in which hedge fund villains are played by Seth Rogen and Nick Offerman. But there were two more villains in the story—the founders of Robinhood, everyone’s favorite democratizers of finance. And Roaring Kitty—who, as I’m sure you know, now looks poised to make a comeback—was situated firmly as the story’s hero.
So, in addition to Doge playing the role of Joe Camel of FinTech, we’ve got Hollywood situating startup founders as villains alongside billion-dollar financial services companies. We’ve got consumer FinTech products that are designed like Candyland, with twee fonts and color palettes, throwing confetti in your face telling you how fun it is to risk your money.?
We’ve got a shrinking media landscape, and, we’ve also got…founders of FinTech companies doing bad things. Sneakily selling their customers’ customers behind their backs, getting into fights with said customers on social media—and not apologizing for it. Building, and exiting, companies based on fake users and iffy data. Calling their employees dumb dolphins…like I said, just read Mary Ann Azevedo.
As Matt Levine ponders what he’d put in his Wharton MBA Meme Financial Markets class final exam, let me offer my own lessons on this complicated FinTech marketing moment and what to do about it.
At this point in my presentation, I asked to speak directly to the marketers in the audience. So founders, please stop reading now. Great.?
To all my fellow marketing and communications professionals who have somehow made it to the end of this long, colorfully worded email: If you find yourself in a professional environment where the leaders are behaving in a shady manner. If the product is designed to trick people. Or you are asked to put a happy face on a company whose business model, or operating style, simply doesn’t have the customer’s best intentions at heart, I have one word for you.
Go.
There are plenty of companies building real stuff the right way that will appreciate your talents. Don’t compromise. Think of the Leons—of your Leons.
_
Leslie Campisi ,Co-Founder of Beginners , Empire Startups Contributor
Empire Startups Contributors?are a community of experts providing unique perspectives and insights on the latest in FinTech. Our model is is merit-based and does not offer monetary compensation.
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Thought Partner | Strategy Builder | Content Creator
10 个月Love the end of this. You are awesome, Leslie Campisi!
Public Relations Director @ HAUS: The Deep Tech Agency
10 个月This was a really well-done newsletter. The writing was so effective. Really enjoyed it.