From the outside, modern fintech often appears deceptively simple. APIs abstract complexity, onboarding flows feel seamless, and money appears to move instantlyFrom the outside, modern fintech often appears deceptively simple. APIs abstract complexity, onboarding flows feel seamless, and money appears to move instantly

What It Actually Takes to Operate FinTech at Global Scale

From the outside, modern fintech often appears deceptively simple. APIs abstract complexity, onboarding flows feel seamless, and money appears to move instantly across borders. For many companies, financial infrastructure is treated as a feature rather than an operating discipline.

That perception changes quickly once fintech becomes core to the business.

Zack Shooter learned this firsthand while helping operate and scale Deel’s global financial infrastructure during a period of rapid international expansion. Over five years, his work sat at the intersection of payments, compliance, treasury operations, and provider strategy as Deel scaled financial operations across more than 100 countries. Decisions in this function directly affected market expansion, customer experience, and regulatory exposure.

Operating fintech at that scale revealed a reality rarely discussed outside operator circles. Financial infrastructure is not just software. It is a living system that must function reliably under regulatory, geographic, and economic constraints, every day.

When Fintech Stops Being a Feature

Many companies begin their fintech journey by embedding payments or payouts into an existing product. Early on, this can feel straightforward. A single provider covers core use cases, volumes are manageable, and edge cases are rare.

At scale, those assumptions fall away.

As Deel expanded into new regions, financial operations quickly became foundational infrastructure. Payment flows touched nearly every part of the organization. Provider performance affected onboarding. Settlement timing influenced cash management. Compliance requirements shaped product decisions.

“The moment payments become central to your product, you stop treating them like a feature,” Shooter explains. “They become infrastructure, and infrastructure behaves very differently.”

The Reality of Global FinTech Operations

One of the most underestimated challenges in fintech is integration. It is often framed as an engineering task, but in practice it requires sustained involvement from product, compliance, operations, and finance teams.

Each provider introduced its own onboarding requirements, documentation processes, reconciliation formats, settlement windows, and regional limitations. Sandbox environments rarely reflected real-world behavior, forcing teams to validate routing logic, error handling, and settlement timing in production with carefully controlled volumes.

Integration was never a one-off effort. It required ongoing maintenance as providers updated systems, regulations evolved, and usage patterns shifted.

“What looks simple in a demo often turns into months of operational work when real money and real customers are involved,” Shooter says.

Reliability Beyond Uptime

At global scale, reliability is not measured by system availability alone. A payment flow can be technically operational while still failing customers due to corridor-specific behavior, banking partner issues, or regulatory friction.

Shooter saw how reliability became an end-to-end concern. It required understanding how funds moved across intermediaries, how long settlement actually took in different markets, and how failures surfaced downstream.

Redundancy, often assumed to be a straightforward solution, introduced its own complexity. Supporting multiple providers meant additional routing logic, monitoring, and operational overhead.

“Reliability in fintech is about outcomes, not dashboards,” Shooter notes. “You need to understand how money actually moves, not just whether an API responds.”

Licensing as a Practical Constraint

As companies scale, licensing shifts from a legal consideration to a practical operating constraint. Relying on third-party licenses can accelerate early growth, but it also introduces dependency on external risk frameworks, onboarding rules, and regulatory interpretations.

Shooter observed how licensing constraints influenced product design, customer eligibility, and expansion timelines. Providers could change requirements or restrict use cases, sometimes with little notice.

“At scale, licensing decisions directly shape what you can build and where you can operate,” he explains. “They are not abstract legal details. They are product constraints.”

This reality forces companies to make strategic decisions about control as their financial operations mature.

Operating in Constant Change

Unlike traditional software, financial infrastructure operates under continuous external change. Regulations evolve. Banking partners adjust policies. Providers modify APIs. Market conditions shift.

At Deel’s scale, these changes were not exceptions. They were part of day-to-day operations. Managing them required strong processes, monitoring, and cross-functional coordination well beyond engineering.

“The work doesn’t end when something goes live,” Shooter says. “In many cases, that’s when the real operating challenge begins.”

Why These Lessons Matter Now

The challenges Shooter encountered are no longer limited to large fintechs. As more companies embed financial functionality into their products, they inherit the responsibilities that come with operating regulated systems.

Automation and software-driven decision-making are accelerating this shift. As financial operations become more automated, the margin for error narrows. Systems designed for human oversight are increasingly expected to operate continuously and at scale.

Shooter believes this is where many companies will feel strain.

“Scaling fintech isn’t just about better technology,” he says. “It’s about building the operational foundations that let those systems run safely over time.”

What Shooter Is Focused on Today

After years operating global financial systems under real-world constraints, Shooter turned his attention to the structural challenges he repeatedly encountered. Today, he is working on early-stage infrastructure focused on helping companies manage the operational, compliance, and governance complexity that emerges as financial systems scale.

Rather than building consumer-facing fintech products, his work centers on foundational layers that support visibility, control, and reliability across complex financial stacks. The goal is to help companies operate fintech systems with the same rigor they apply to core infrastructure.

The perspective he brings is shaped by responsibility rather than abstraction. It reflects lessons learned in environments where decisions had immediate consequences for customers, compliance, and the business.

As more companies find themselves operating fintech by necessity rather than choice, those lessons are becoming increasingly relevant.

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