In the financial sector, the fundamental principle that all businesses are built on relationships becomes clear: trust is the foundation of every relationship. This is why companies in the sector must constantly build and cherish their trust capital. How can marketing communications, especially in a rising fintech company, support this goal?
Companies in all industries face skeptical judgement but addressing it is particularly important in the financial sector and financial technology, fintech. When a client’s capital is at stake, trust is critical, as my colleague Jirimiko Oranen has pointed out.
A brand that inspires trust and is instantly recognizable delivers concrete, measurable value. Achieving this requires that company leadership treats marketing and communications as a prerequisite for the business, not as a supporting function.
1. Build trust in the company as a whole
Trust should be treated as the company’s most valuable asset from the very beginning. Building and strengthening trust requires hard, long-term work. The less well-known, newer, and smaller a fintech company is, the harder it must work to earn trust compared to established players.
The most important task of marketing communications is to accumulate trust in the eyes of a demanding audience. It is not enough to state that services are innovative and secure. The audience must be convinced that the entire company is trustworthy.
Well-planned, consistent marketing communications help potential customers take the decisive step of transferring their funds to the company’s services.
2. Use differentiators to build credibility
Established financial institutions benefit from a long history, large scale, and a widely recognized brand. However, trust does not arise solely from a company’s age or market position.
A fintech company that communicates proactively and carefully, and uses its strengths intelligently, can narrow the credibility gap. Modern systems, for instance, enable smoother services, better reliability, and lower risk.
A growth-oriented company can emphasize lighter bureaucracy, transparency, or modern technology. What matters is tying these differentiators clearly to tangible customer benefits.
3. Frame messages around risks that customers perceive
Regardless of the company, marketing communications in the financial sector cannot be limited to gaining visibility and lead generation. At its core, it’s all about risk communication.
Fintech communications must help potential customers believe that the company’s solutions do not expose them to new risks. Customers evaluate companies based on security, service reliability, continuity, regulatory compliance, and reputation.
This is why every marketing message should reduce friction and uncertainty, not increase it. That requires a full understanding of the origins of customer skepticism and the ability to address them concretely rather than offer vague reassurance. Success demands tangible proof.
4. Convert external validations into trust signals
In the financial sector, authorities, regulations, key industry standards, and audits provide strong proof for trust-building. These should not be treated as dull, purely administrative milestones, but as valuable communication opportunities. A strong communication strategy translates legal and technical details into understandable benefits that simultaneously increase trust capital.
When a company, for example, meets the requirements of significant new regulation, it is an achievement worth bragging about. It is important to show that regulation and compliance are not a necessary evil, but something the company is genuinely proud of.
Alongside hard facts, it is worth explaining what compliance means for the customer and how it protects them. Ideally, this validation is articulated by customers, authorities, and partners.
5. Prepare for crises and difficult questions in advance
An essential part of a fintech company’s reputation strategy is preparedness for crisis communication. The company must create a clear plan for how it operates and communicates when something goes wrong.
In advance, you should document potential questions that customers, authorities, investors, or the media may ask. A well-prepared Q&A document is a handy tool when it contains a wide range of categorized questions, including scenarios that may currently seem far-fetched. Model answers should be clear, precise, and trust-building.
The preparation process forces the company’s management to examine business risks and communication readiness. If the organization hesitates or struggles to respond under high pressure, trust erodes immediately. Crisis simulations provide a particularly strong means for ensuring success.
Building trust capital is not about who’s got the loudest voice or makes the boldest promises. It is about demonstrating an ability to understand customer concerns and to address them consistently, based on facts and with a long-term perspective.
Do you want to ensure that your company is able to build trust capital and communicate consistently even in tough situations? Netprofile helps assess risks, strengthen communication readiness, and turn building trust into concrete action! Leave us a contact request, and we’ll roll our sleeves together with you.
AI 2026: From an Efficiency Pipeline to an Infrastructure of Power
Exceptional SABRE success – What’s the awards program all about?
Netprofile report: B2B leaders reveal – communications and marketing professionals offered a more strategic role in business
Nitor grew profitability by 23 per cent and strengthened its core business in a challenging market
Netprofile shines at SABRE Awards EMEA 2026: finalist in six categories
In the maritime industry, rescue training is routine – why don’t companies bother to train for cybersecurity emergencies?
Is sustainability dead?
5+1 tips for effective expert videos
When the production line stops without warning – how industrial companies prepare for cyberattacks
Social acceptance siphons investment decisions in the electricity market
Finding your sweet spot: How IT companies can truly stand out
3 smart ways to generate standout content ideas in the energy sector
From R&D to ROI: The last mile of innovation is communication
Can AI be used responsibly?
Seven key manufacturing trends shaping 2026
In financial services social media strategy is about trust and expertise
Web Summit 2025: The media landscape is shifting, Gen Z takes the lead, and AI Agents enter everyday life
Create a story before product development – new technology doesn’t sell itself
AI Doesn’t Explain Itself – That’s Why Communication Matters
ICCO Global Awards 2025: Netprofile Is the World’s Best Mid-Size Consultancy of the Year
Communications professionals, help save journalism!
ICCO Global Awards: Netprofile ranks among the world’s best communications and marketing agencies – two strong client cases selected as finalists
When a brochure just won’t cut it: 15 marketing ideas to dominate your next trade fair
Turning narrative into competitive edge – a trust engineer’s guide to fintech
Lust, pride, wrath…– the seven deadly sins in B2B communication
The big tackles are yet to come – how should enterprises approach AI adoption?
AI value hunt – and limited success
We wrote a report on AI in marcomms – here’s how AI helped us do it
Insight Track 2025 report: AI boosts marketing and communications efficiency – but where’s the competitive edge?
Netprofile’s award-winning team grows with two new talents
Silence is golden – but does this hold true in media relations?
Marimekko partners with Nitor and Hi Shine – aiming for a unique digital customer experience
Help! What to do when dominoes start to fall?
Beware of destructive denialism
Take LinkedIn by storm – Seven tips for aspiring thought leaders
AI dominates the media — will other tech topics only get the scraps?
AI + Industry = A Leap for Finland? Yes, with effective communication!
Master Meta-Skills and Thrive – A Communicator’s Toolbox for the Future
Nitor joins the Science Based Targets initiative to drive ambitious climate action
Ville Himberg appointed as Chief Commercial Officer at Nitor
Cyber crisis simulation helps ensure business continuity
When Project Management Succeeds, the Team Thrives – Lessons Learned Through Lego Play
“German audiences value thoroughness and authenticity”, says Markus Engel of Communication Consultants
Insights from a Week Immersed in Stuttgart’s PR World
Netprofile’s success at the ICCO Global Awards continues – reaches the finals of the prestigious international communications competition
5 key learnings from the Nordic Business Forum for communications professionals
In a cyber crisis, you quickly run out of time and money – Here’s how to boost your resilience
So, what’s up in tech comms? And what does Esko have to do with it?
Netprofile dashes to the finals of the Finnish Comms Awards 2024 in five categories
Finding clarity when your strategic horizon is blurred
Nitor appoints Pasi Niemi as Vice President, R&D
I think, therefore I am a thought leader? – AI raises the bar, and only a few will clear it
Netprofile Industry Report: AI has a huge impact in tech PR and marketing – action required now
Netprofile Industry Report: AI Has a Huge Impact on Tech PR and Marketing – Action Required Now
Nitor has appointed Santtu Vuori as the Managing Director in Sweden
The quantum threat is rising – why should every company take note?
The answer is why – creating a successful podcast often boils down to answering one simple question
Heini Dahlström of SOK receives Agile Influencer of 2023 Award
Netprofile picks four Sabre EMEA awards finalist spots – green transition propels success