Fintech startups that raise Series A funding share a set of measurable characteristics: they have achieved product-market fit as evidenced by 15%+ month-over-month revenue growth, they operate in markets with addressable opportunity exceeding $10 billion, and they demonstrate a clear technology advantage over incumbents, according to a 2025 PitchBook analysis of 1,200 fintech funding rounds. Understanding what investors evaluate — and in what order — gives founders a practical framework for positioning their companies for capital.
What Fintech Investors Evaluate First
The evaluation framework has standardised significantly. According to Boston Consulting Group, fintech investors at the seed and Series A stages evaluate companies in a consistent sequence: team (do the founders have relevant domain expertise?), market (is the addressable opportunity large and growing?), product (does the technology solve a real problem better than alternatives?), traction (is there evidence that customers want the product?), and unit economics (can the business generate profit at scale?).

Team evaluation weighs heavily in fintech because the sector requires a rare combination of financial services domain knowledge, technology expertise, and regulatory awareness. According to McKinsey, fintech founders with prior experience at both a technology company and a financial institution raise 40% more capital on average than founders with experience in only one domain. The combination signals an ability to navigate both the technical and regulatory challenges that determine whether a fintech company succeeds.
Market evaluation focuses on the total addressable market (TAM) and the specific dynamics that create opportunity. Fintech startups targeting markets where incumbents are constrained by legacy technology, regulatory burden, or high cost structures attract the most investor interest because these constraints create structural openings for technology-driven alternatives.
Demonstrating Traction and Differentiation
Traction metrics vary by fintech category. For payment companies, investors evaluate transaction volume growth, take rate, and net dollar retention. For lending platforms, key metrics include origination volume, default rates, and unit economics per loan. For digital banking platforms, deposit growth, customer acquisition cost, and engagement metrics (daily active users, transactions per user) drive evaluation.
According to Forrester Research, the most successful fintech fundraises present metrics in the context of industry benchmarks rather than in isolation. A lending platform reporting a 2% default rate is more compelling when presented alongside the 5% industry average. A payment company reporting $50 customer acquisition cost gains context when compared to the $200 average for traditional merchant acquirers.
Technology differentiation is the third critical factor. Investors expect fintech startups to demonstrate a technology advantage that creates a sustainable competitive moat. According to industry data, the most common technology moats in fintech are proprietary AI models (trained on unique datasets), network effects (platforms that improve as more users join), and data advantages (access to information that competitors cannot replicate).
The Role of Credibility in Fundraising
Beyond metrics, fintech fundraising success depends on founder credibility. Investors evaluate not just what the company has built but what the founders have said publicly about their market and strategy. According to CB Insights, fintech founders who publish industry analysis, speak at conferences, and maintain visible professional profiles raise 35% more capital than founders with equivalent metrics but no public presence.
The credibility effect reflects a practical concern: venture investors know that fintech companies need to build trust with banks, regulators, and enterprise customers. Founders who demonstrate the ability to articulate their vision publicly provide evidence that they can build the external relationships their company will need to scale. Published thought leadership, media coverage, and conference presentations serve as leading indicators of a founder’s ability to evangelise their product and attract customers, partners, and talent.




