
The once adversarial relationship between banks and fintechs has shifted into collaboration. Instead of viewing fintech startups solely as competitors, community and regional banks are increasingly forming partnerships to leverage innovation in payments, lending, customer engagement, and compliance. According to Cornerstone Advisors’ “What’s Going On in Banking 2025” report, over 60% of community banks reported at least one fintech partnership, with nearly half planning to expand collaborations by 2026. This new ecosystem fundamentally changes recruiting needs, as both sides require professionals who can bridge traditional banking and emerging fintech.
Technology acceleration: Banks gain faster access to cutting-edge tools without building them in-house.
Regulatory coverage: Fintechs benefit from banks’ regulatory infrastructure while banks gain agility.
Customer expectations: Consumers demand digital convenience plus trust and security.
Revenue diversification: Partnerships enable new products, from instant lending to embedded finance.
Hybrid skill demands
Professionals must understand compliance, risk, and operations and modern fintech platforms, APIs, and cloud systems.
Cultural differences
Bank cultures emphasize structure and risk mitigation; fintechs emphasize speed and disruption. Candidates must bridge both.
Ambiguity in roles
Joint projects blur lines between bank and fintech staffing, complicating job definitions and reporting structures.
Talent competition
Both banks and fintechs compete for scarce engineers, compliance officers, and product managers.
Retention risks
Employees may leave if partnerships stall or corporate strategies shift.
Focus on collaboration skills: Recruit candidates who thrive in cross-functional, cross-company teams.
Promote innovation exposure: Market roles as opportunities to shape next-gen banking through real partnerships.
Offer hybrid benefits: Blend fintech flexibility (remote work, innovation projects) with bank stability (benefits, career paths).
Cross-train staff: Upskill bankers on fintech systems and fintech staff on compliance to reduce skill gaps.
Highlight visibility: These roles often work closely with executives on both sides, offering unique influence.
Case Example: Midwest Community Bank + Fintech Partner
A $3B-asset bank partnered with a lending fintech to streamline small business credit. Recruiters sourced product managers with both SaaS and banking experience, emphasizing exposure to innovation and executive leadership. The hires enabled smoother integration and faster rollout.
Case Example: Regional Bank + Payments Startup
A regional bank launched a payments app with a fintech partner. Recruiters targeted engineers with ISO 20022 and API development skills. By emphasizing innovation plus stability, the bank attracted candidates who might otherwise have gone to Big Tech.
Recruiters add value by:
Sourcing crossover candidates from SaaS, Big Tech, and compliance backgrounds.
Benchmarking compensation packages across both fintech and banking.
Advising banks on job descriptions that reflect hybrid responsibilities.
Educating candidates on how partnership roles combine innovation with stability.
The Candidate Perspective
Professionals considering partnership roles often ask:
Will I work directly with fintech teams and bank executives?
How much autonomy will I have to innovate?
What career path exists in these hybrid roles?
Does the employer truly commit to fintech collaboration, or is this experimental?
Recruiters must address these concerns clearly, ensuring alignment between employer vision and candidate expectations.
Future Outlook: Recruiting in Partnerships Beyond 2026
Specialized partnership managers: Banks will recruit more staff to manage fintech collaborations.
Growth in API expertise: Recruiting will focus heavily on API developers and integrators.
Compliance hybrids: Demand will surge for compliance officers who understand fintech innovation.
Expanded ecosystems: Recruiting will extend beyond one-to-one partnerships into broader networks of vendors and platforms.
The fintech-bank partnership model represents a transformative era in financial services. Recruiting for these roles requires finding hybrid professionals who can operate comfortably in both worlds—traditional banking and agile fintech. Employers must emphasize collaboration, innovation exposure, and blended benefits to attract talent. For candidates, these roles offer rare visibility, influence, and the chance to build the future of finance. Recruiters are the linchpins, translating between two cultures and ensuring the right people drive these partnerships forward.