Fintech founders often make assumptions about how software development works. Agile frameworks let you adjust plans after every iteration. As your product growsFintech founders often make assumptions about how software development works. Agile frameworks let you adjust plans after every iteration. As your product grows

3 Common Misconceptions Fintech Founders Have About Engineering Teams

2025/12/12 13:50

I've spent the last 10 years managing engineering teams for fintech projects, and I keep seeing the same patterns. Non-technical founders come in with specific assumptions about how software development works – assumptions that make perfect sense in other industries but create serious challenges in ours.

Let me share the three biggest misconceptions I encounter, why they matter, and what you can actually do about them.

Misconception #1: Planning Software Is Like Planning Construction

When you build a house, you lay the foundation, then build the structure, and finally do the interior. You create a detailed plan, form a budget, and execute. The entire process takes, say, a year or eighteen months. But software engineering works differently.

When building software products, there's a much higher level of uncertainty – details that you simply cannot plan and understand until you've actually started the execution. For example, building an MVP usually takes six months. But in six months, your requirements change due to customer development, new insights from early adopters, unexpected technical challenges, or market shifts. Now, the initial plan is no longer relevant, and you need to change the product concept or its functionality. 

This is exactly why Agile frameworks exist in software development – they let you adjust plans after every iteration.

Why it matters: This directly impacts budgets. When you're a startup founder with an idea and a pitch deck, and you've raised your first round of investment, estimating the final cost of a product is extremely difficult. That’s why the scope of the first version should be as minimal as possible in both budget and time – to achieve a fast time-to-market and keep numbers predictable.

Misconception #2: You Build a Product Once, Then You're Done

Many fintech founders think: we'll invest X amount of money now to build a product, and that's it – no more development processes and costs. But that is not a viable strategy.

Your market is constantly changing, your clients are evolving, and your competitors are innovating – so, you need to keep developing the product to stay competitive. Moreover, you shouldn’t forget about basic maintenance to solve bugs and make improvements. 

There's also another important layer – security. Sometimes, solution providers stop supporting and updating their products or certain versions. This means that the company no longer monitors potential vulnerabilities and makes new changes to stay security compliant. If you don't invest time in updating this technology, your platform risks becoming critically vulnerable to hacker attacks.

Solution: Have an agreement that the technical team can invest 30% of their time over a year in technical work. This agreement cannot be broken. If you break it, you must compensate. If you ignore this, you dramatically increase security risks.

Misconception #3: Development Costs Should Stay Consistent

As your product grows, so does the complexity of its functionality and the number of dependencies between different parts of the system. This directly affects development costs over time.

For example, when building the first version of your product, creating a simple login feature might take one week and cost around $2,000. Two years later, implementing the same feature could take six weeks and $12,000.

The reason is simple: you now have to account for a much larger number of existing dependencies in the system and ensure you don’t break anything that already works. As the system becomes more interconnected, the cost per feature naturally increases.

I’d also recommend investing early in QA engineers who write automated test scripts. When you have good coverage, you can move very fast without worrying that everything will fall apart. The only challenge is that it can increase development costs by 30%.

The Real Driver of Product Quality

The best collaborations happen when founders treat engineering teams as partners and invest in good relationships. They understand that the hidden element of a great product quality and success is team motivation. That’s why they invest time in explaining the problem they solve, the audience they help, and are transparent with any successes or failures. 

They recognize the effort and, when possible, build relationships not with the team in general but with each person individually. Two years ago, one of our clients organized a conference for their customers and invited our engineers to directly participate in preparing the presentation and in presenting the AI system we built together. That simple gesture improved the collaboration and helped to strengthen trust, deepen ownership, and make everyone feel part of the mission.

The Bottom Line

Fintech products are never “build once and forget.” They are living systems – full of uncertainty, evolving requirements, increasing complexity, and ongoing security risks. Founders who embrace this reality, plan for continuous development, and treat engineers as strategic partners build better products, faster, and with far fewer surprises. \n \n

\

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

CEO Sandeep Nailwal Shared Highlights About RWA on Polygon

CEO Sandeep Nailwal Shared Highlights About RWA on Polygon

The post CEO Sandeep Nailwal Shared Highlights About RWA on Polygon appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Polygon CEO Sandeep Nailwal highlighted Polygon’s lead in global bonds, Spiko US T-Bill, and Spiko Euro T-Bill. Polygon published an X post to share that its roadmap to GigaGas was still scaling. Sentiments around POL price were last seen to be bearish. Polygon CEO Sandeep Nailwal shared key pointers from the Dune and RWA.xyz report. These pertain to highlights about RWA on Polygon. Simultaneously, Polygon underlined its roadmap towards GigaGas. Sentiments around POL price were last seen fumbling under bearish emotions. Polygon CEO Sandeep Nailwal on Polygon RWA CEO Sandeep Nailwal highlighted three key points from the Dune and RWA.xyz report. The Chief Executive of Polygon maintained that Polygon PoS was hosting RWA TVL worth $1.13 billion across 269 assets plus 2,900 holders. Nailwal confirmed from the report that RWA was happening on Polygon. The Dune and https://t.co/W6WSFlHoQF report on RWA is out and it shows that RWA is happening on Polygon. Here are a few highlights: – Leading in Global Bonds: Polygon holds 62% share of tokenized global bonds (driven by Spiko’s euro MMF and Cashlink euro issues) – Spiko U.S.… — Sandeep | CEO, Polygon Foundation (※,※) (@sandeepnailwal) September 17, 2025 The X post published by Polygon CEO Sandeep Nailwal underlined that the ecosystem was leading in global bonds by holding a 62% share of tokenized global bonds. He further highlighted that Polygon was leading with Spiko US T-Bill at approximately 29% share of TVL along with Ethereum, adding that the ecosystem had more than 50% share in the number of holders. Finally, Sandeep highlighted from the report that there was a strong adoption for Spiko Euro T-Bill with 38% share of TVL. He added that 68% of returns were on Polygon across all the chains. Polygon Roadmap to GigaGas In a different update from Polygon, the community…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:10