Top B2B Fintech Marketing Tactics (with Examples)

Based on our experience running a fintech marketing Slack group, speaking and attending conferences, running a fintech marketing podcast, and a marketing agency, we believe the following to be the ultimate truth in B2B marketing:

In the B2B world, the most effective marketing medium is sharing expertise.

When it comes to high-ticket purchases, it all comes down to trust. And what’s the best way to build trust before the sale? By sharing expertise and establishing yourself as the trustworthy expert. 

If you’re reading this, it’s likely you’re looking for inspiration for B2B fintech marketing strategies or tactics that have worked well for others and have successfully helped other fintech companies share expertise and establish themselves in the market. 

In this guide, we’ll be going through a few fintech marketing tactics and fintech companies that seem to be doing a good job with their marketing.

Note: we believe one of the best ways to share expertise is with expert-based content. Learn more about our framework that helps fintech companies use content to acquire customers and establish themselves as experts.

Top B2B fintech marketing tactics with examples

Written content marketing

Content marketing is playing an increasing role in the B2B fintech marketing sales for a few reasons:

  • If you’re targeting small to medium businesses, there’s a lot of education required to help them understand how payments work.

  • For the consultative sale, more buyers are wanting to do their own research and educate themselves before reaching out to a salesperson.

  • Content is one of the most effective ways to share expertise and establish yourself as the trusted expert.

We’ve been doing work with payment infrastructure companies, and we know that targeting very specific keywords like “intelligent payment routing” and “faster payments api” is bringing in highly qualified customers.

Read more about our approach here: Can Blog Content Bring in SQLs for Enterprise B2B? Yes, and Here's How

When it comes to content marketing for B2B, most fintech companies do it wrong, and there’s an opportunity to do much better content. What they do wrong is:

  • Most B2B content is for beginners. They start off with “what is an API” and defining terms that a product manager or Head of Payments would already know. See below for example:

  • Most B2B content is not designed to convert. In the B2B payments world, it makes no sense to “write for your grandma” or “write for a 5-year-old”. You’re writing to get customers, and your target market is not a grandma or a 5-year-old. You’re also not writing to entertain. No one (except those in the industry) reads payment content for pleasure. Get to the point and don’t try to entertain.

  • Most B2B content is not based on expertise. A lot of companies outsource their content to a freelancer who knows nothing about the product, the market, or the customer. Instead, they write content that is essentially rephrased or recycled from Google or white papers, and they call it “thought leadership.” This won’t position your company as an expert and it won’t turn your readers into customers. It is essentially a waste of money.

  1. There’s a large opportunity to write B2B content that is:

    • Advanced and based on expertise.

    • Written for the target audience, not beginners.

    • Designed to attract customers, not to entertain.

  2. Webinars

    Webinars and virtual events are an untapped area when it comes to B2B fintech marketing, especially when it comes to complex payment topics. The most common issue we hear is: what do you do with the attendees once the webinar is over? How do you turn attendees into customers?

    It’s not easy to find companies who are doing a good job at this, especially in the B2B sector. However, 11FS, a financial services consultancy, have gone full on with virtual events – especially during Covid. They did:

    • LinkedIn Lives

    • Webinars/virtual events

    • Live Youtube videos and more

  3. You can check their Youtube channel to see those in action: 11FS Youtube channel

    LinkedIn

    Many fintechs are understandably hesitant to invest in social media marketing. But if there is one social media platform that makes sense to invest in as a B2B fintech company, it’s LinkedIn. Pretty much every B2B thought leader in the fintech space is on there in some capacity, and when done correctly, it can produce huge returns.

    One great example of a company doing this is Tilled, a payment facilitator. In our case study, Caleb, the founder, breaks down in detail how he went from 500 to 12,000 LinkedIn followers. 

    By sharing advanced technical content and being authentic, LinkedIn has become one of the primary drivers for leads and deals for Tilled. In just one year, 95% of the 150+ deals they got came in through inbound: with a majority through LinkedIn. 

    If you want to master LinkedIn, make sure to look at what Caleb is doing:

    Caleb’s LinkedIn

    .

Free tools

If you’re a B2B Fintech that can build software or widgets, offering free tools is a great B2B marketing tactic.

People (and businesses) love free tools. It’s a great way to add value and acquire a loyal customer in return; you’re offering something so a customer can do something they couldn’t do before - for free!

It’s mostly B2C Fintechs that offer free tools, however there may be an opportunity for a B2B Fintech to offer tools as well. Most of the B2B free tools we find in Fintech are using a freemium model:

The other bonus of offering free tools is that it’s a great way to gather backlinks to a website. As people link to your free tool and recommend it to others, your website gains authority and is more likely to appear on the first page of Google — that’s a triple win for everyone!

The other thing to mention is that this marketing tactic is not as saturated as others, so you’re more likely to stand out.

Email marketing

Practically all B2B fintechs will be engaging in email marketing – the data says it’s effective, however in our panel event last year opinions were divided. 

Watch the panel:

It’s hard to find an example of a fintech company doing a good job at email campaigns, since we’re not really their target market and haven’t been on the receiving end. When asked for examples of companies doing this, Cognism comes up as a company that’s doing a great job (although they aren’t fintech).

They have different people in different departments who send out newsletter-like emails every 2 weeks packed with useful, actionable information. 

Events and speaking

In certain B2B areas, sponsoring, speaking or organising an event can help a lot with brand awareness, positioning as an expert and customer acquisition. 

One company that’s been doing this very well is LendInvest in the UK.

They host events in London, with an attendance of over 50 people. They’ve hosted and spoken at events on:

They allow others to host events in their office space, which also helps with brand awareness and hiring.

Although they haven’t shared how the events are going and the results they’re getting, the fact that they’ve been doing them since 2016 is a good way to demonstrate their effectiveness.

If you’re looking for a list of fintech events to attend in 2023, check out this website:Fintech Events

Partnership marketing

Partnership marketing can be one of the highest ROI marketing tactics specifically for B2B fintechs. Why? Because partnerships are an inherent part of that fintech model. By making use of Open Banking and partnering up, fintechs increase the value of the services they offer. 

Partnership marketing basically involves partnering with another company in a way that benefits both parties. The partnership marketing campaign could focus on improving a fintech product through collaboration, releasing a joint venture, or agreeing on a distribution deal. Since Fintechs work with open platforms and APIs, finding partners may be easier than in other industries.

We recently interviewed Yvette Edsall, COO at Fintel Connect, on all things partnership marketing:

The main thing to note is that it’s important that partnerships are not created for the sake of a partnership. That means that there should be a specific goal, and both partners should know why they want to work with each other. 

As mentioned before, B2B Fintechs have partnerships in their blood, so there are tons of examples of B2B fintechs implementing business development. Here are a few:

  • Onfido with Revolut

  • TrueLayer with Zopa

  • Square with Xero

  • Klarna with Adyen

Podcast

More fintech companies are starting podcasts as well as sponsoring them. In an interview with the demand generation manager at Railz, Nabi says that sponsoring a data science podcast generated a high number of leads.

Community

More and more people are looking to set up or organise a community for their company. This could be a Slack group, or an in-person event or some type of forum.

We, for example, run a fintech marketing Slack group with over 1,000 members now. It’s a great place to exchange ideas, ask people what they’re thinking and look for inspiration.

But we’re not the only ones who have done it. Moov, a payments infrastructure company, also has a Slack group with over 8,000 members. There are discussions in there all day about specific tech issues people might be facing.

And many other fintech companies have Slack groups as well.

B2B fintech companies need marketing now more than ever. The fintech industry is getting more competitive, and everyone wants to position themselves as the expert. 

And yet, it’s not possible to be the expert without sharing knowledge and expertise – and that’s where marketing comes in. If you’re aiming to be profitable, reduce CAC and become a leader in the field, then owning marketing and doing it properly will take things to another level. 

How Mint Studios creates B2B content that converts 

At Mint Studios, we specialise in creating BOFU, expert-level written content for fintechs and financial services designed to help financial companies position themselves as experts and acquire customers.

Here are four key aspects to our approach that you might find useful:

1. Start with BOFU content first

We recommend starting with high-quality BOFU content and gradually building up the funnel.

A common mistake in fintech marketing is leading with top-of-funnel (TOFU) content. While there’s a time and place for it, TOFU content often attracts readers who aren’t ready to buy. Think: “What is open banking” or “How to manage business finances.” These keywords may have higher organic traffic, but the conversion potential is low.

Instead, BOFU content targets B2B buyers who are actively looking for a solution: they’re a potential customer. They’re comparing providers, evaluating integrations, or trying to solve a specific problem (that our educational content offers a solution to). 

These articles have lower traffic, but much higher conversion rates compared to TOFU content. 

Here are a few common types of BOFU content that work well in fintech:

  • “[Tool] vs [Tool]” comparison posts

  • “[Tool] alternatives”

  • “[Category] pricing”

  • “Best [tools] for [use case]”

  • “How to [solve problem] with [your product type]”

That’s not to say TOFU or MOFU content isn’t helpful. Once you’ve built a foundation with BOFU, top and mid-funnel content can support remarketing, brand visibility, and long-term growth. However, if your goal is to drive qualified leads and conversions, start where intent is highest.

2. Talk to SMEs to get a deep understanding of your customers 

Before content creation, you need a clear understanding of your customers.
Start by speaking to your internal teams, including sales, product, and customer success. Find out what questions customers are asking, what problems they are trying to solve, and what actually drives a sale. Building an accurate picture of your buyer persona is the foundation of every effective content strategy.

When possible, base your articles on interviews with subject matter experts. Whether it’s your product manager or someone from the sales team, they know the market better than a generalist writer will.

Their input will help you uncover unique angles and speak your customer’s language.

.

3. Set up tracking as soon as you can 

Proving the value of content is harder than ever for marketing teams. In B2B financial technology, buyers often convert weeks or months after their first interaction, across a mix of marketing channels, and rarely in a straight line. If you’re not tracking content performance properly, it becomes impossible to know what’s working and what isn’t.

At Mint, we set up tracking early. Before any content goes live, we work with our clients to connect their CRM, analytics, and CMS to ensure we can measure the full impact of what we create. That usually includes:

  • Tracking form submissions tied to specific blog posts

  • Logging which pages are viewed by qualified leads or closed-won customers

  • Setting up clear conversion goals in GA4 or HubSpot

We also build custom Looker Studio dashboards when possible, tailored to each client’s needs. These dashboards help you see which articles are driving sales conversations, which ones are influencing high-value deals, and which need improvement.

For most of our clients, a blog is rarely the final step in the buyer journey. That’s why we focus on multi-touch attribution. We track all the pages a user visits and assign value to any content that plays a meaningful role in moving them closer to conversion.

Without a data-driven content strategy, it’s hard to prove the value of your content marketing efforts. 

4. Optimise for both search engines and AI tools

As AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google’s AI Overviews become part of the research process, your content needs to be discoverable beyond traditional search.

At Mint, we treat Answer Engine Optimisation (AEO) as an extension of SEO. That means creating clear, well-structured content that answers specific questions in depth — and monitoring whether that content appears in AI-generated answers.

It’s early days, but some of the steps we are experimenting with include:

  • Publishing individual blog posts that directly answer key commercial questions, increasing the chance of being referenced by AI tools.

  • Using Peec.ai to track when and where our content appears in AI search experiences.

  • Keeping FAQ and product pages up to date with clear, specific answers to common queries.

  • Prioritising high-intent queries, even if it won’t rank for anything. A recent Semrush study found that AI tools often cite well-structured content even when it doesn’t rank on the first page.

AI tools don’t just look at rankings: they surface content that clearly and usefully answers the question. Structuring content around real customer queries helps improve visibility in both search and AI assistants.

These tips are rooted in our four pillar framework. Using these principles to create in-depth lead generation content, we’ve helped payment and B2B fintech companies acquire new customers worth $1 million and above. Read this article to learn more: How Many Leads Can You Generate with Content Marketing?

Examples of companies that are doing content well:

Looking to get more tips like these? Join our newsletter to receive practical content marketing advice for fintechs. You’ll get strategies, templates, and real-world examples sent straight to your inbox each month.

FAQ

What is the most effective B2B fintech marketing strategy?

One of the most effective B2B fintech marketing strategies is expert-led BOFU content that solves real customer problems. This type of content attracts decision-makers who are deep in the purchasing journey and actively comparing fintech solutions.

How can fintech startups generate leads through content marketing?

Fintech startups can generate qualified leads by creating digital marketing content focused on high-intent keywords. This includes in-depth blog posts, comparison guides, and SEO-optimised resources that reflect how real buyers research fintech products.

Why does BOFU content convert better in fintech marketing?

BOFU content speaks directly to business buyers making purchasing decisions. Instead of educating beginners, it helps fintech companies engage with warm leads who are comparing solutions.

Which digital marketing channels work best for B2B fintech?

The most effective digital marketing channels for B2B fintech include SEO content, LinkedIn thought leadership, webinars, and email campaigns. These channels help build credibility, move leads through the customer journey, and drive inbound traffic.

How can you track the ROI of fintech content marketing?

To track ROI from content marketing, fintech businesses should link their CRM, CMS, and analytics platforms. This enables multi-touch attribution across the customer journey—showing which blog posts influence pipeline and revenue.