Roshan Kumar Shetty, BFSI Head & Public Sector Americas – Tech Mahindra.
In my experience, the financial industry has spent the better part of a decade in a gold rush—a frantic race for territory, fueled by disruption and rapid expansion. But the landscape is changing. The conversations I’m having with leaders today are no longer about moving fast and breaking things; they’re about building things that last. This isn’t just a feeling; it’s a market reality.
A recent report from the World Economic Forum confirms that the fintech industry is transitioning from “rapid expansion to sustainable growth,” with customer acquisition rates moderating to more stable levels. The average customer growth rate has also moderated, decreasing from a pandemic-driven high of 55% to a more stable 37%.
We are entering a new, more deliberate era that requires a fundamental “reimagination” of our business models. To succeed, we must build genuinely resilient, intelligent and trustworthy financial systems for the long term.
The New Mandate Of Dual Resilience
The concept of resilience has become a popular talking point, but I believe that to truly build for the future, we must embrace a more nuanced, two-pronged approach: dual resilience. This is about architecting a business that can thrive in a world of constant change.
First is technology resilience, which means skillfully balancing the robust stability of our legacy systems with the agility of modern technologies. For example, leading banks are now using APIs to allow nimble fintech services to plug directly into their mainframe cores, enabling them to offer innovative digital products without sacrificing the security of their foundational infrastructure.
Second, and increasingly critical, is business resilience. This requires a shift from monolithic global strategies to hyper-localized models. A QR-code-based payment system that dominates in Asia, for instance, is built for a different consumer behavior than the card-centric, NFC-powered systems of the West. This collaborative approach is already becoming the new standard, with a striking 84% of fintechs now partnering with incumbent institutions to build a more integrated and adaptable ecosystem.
The Human-AI Symbiosis: Beyond Automation
The future of our workforce is perhaps the most misunderstood piece of this reimagination. The conversation should not be about replacement by AI, but about a powerful new human-AI symbiosis. As emerging technologies like Agentic AI begin to manage complex, multi-step processes, our human talent becomes more critical, not less. We see this in practice in wealth management, where an AI can analyze a portfolio for thousands of risk variables in seconds, but a human advisor is essential for understanding a client’s life goals and risk tolerance.
This dynamic creates roles that demand our most unique human skills: strategic oversight, ethical judgment and the emotional quotient needed for high-stakes decisions. This is supported by data; the WEF finds that 50% of financial firms reported no change in workforce size after AI adoption, with more firms increasing their staff than reducing it. The “human-in-the-loop” is evolving from a simple checkpoint to our most valuable strategic asset.
Digital Trust As The New Foundational Currency
At the heart of these shifts is a concept that must be elevated from an IT concern to a C-suite obsession: digital trust. In an ecosystem built on interconnected partnerships and algorithmic decision-making, trust is no longer just a brand attribute; it is the foundational currency that enables everything else. The proliferation of AI-generated deepfakes and the constant threat of sophisticated cyberattacks make this more urgent than ever.
Leaders across the industry share this concern. Nearly 85% of financial firms view data breaches as a moderate to very high risk, and 76% see regulatory uncertainty around AI as a major hurdle. Without the unwavering confidence of customers and regulators in our ability to secure data and govern technology ethically, the most brilliant strategies will fail.
The Future Outlook: A Mandate For Leadership
Looking ahead, the path is clear. It calls on us, as leaders, to evolve from mere disruptors into thoughtful architects of a more resilient ecosystem. The coming years will be defined by our ability to build businesses anchored in dual resilience, fueled by genuine human-AI collaboration, and grounded in an unshakeable foundation of digital trust. This is the true work of reimagination—and the defining mandate for leadership in our industry.
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