Australia’s fintech ecosystem is booming. The Big Four banks are investing in digital infrastructure, fintechs are solving problems in payments, lending, insurance, and embedded finance, and the regulatory environment is becoming more conducive to innovation. For a B2B company selling into this fintech market, the opportunity is real.
But the challenge is equally real: Australia’s fintech scene is concentrated. The major players are known. Everyone knows everyone. Cold outreach gets ignored because these teams are besieged with pitches. And the Big Four banks are bureaucratic enough that deals move slowly, but competitive enough that you need to win the relationship before you even pitch.
This is exactly where account-based marketing shines. ABM is the antidote to cold outreach in a concentrated, relationship-driven market like Australian fintech. Instead of blasting 100 prospects with a generic pitch, you identify the 10 most valuable fintech companies (or divisions within the Big Four), research who the key decision-makers are, and execute a coordinated, personalized campaign designed just for them.
For B2B companies selling into Australian fintech, ABM isn’t a luxury, it’s a necessity.
Australia’s fintech ecosystem is smaller and more concentrated than the US. The Big Four banks (Commonwealth, Westpac, NAB, ANZ) control 80% of banking and payments revenue. Major fintechs are well-known: Square/Block Australia, Stripe, Suncorp’s digital initiatives, startups like Airwallex and Judo Bank. The scene is tight-knit.
When the decision-maker at a major fintech receives a cold email, they’ve probably received the same message from five other vendors that week. Without a warm introduction or clear relevance, it gets deleted.
ABM solves this by making your outreach so specific and personalized that it stands out. You’re not pitching a solution to “fintech teams.” You’re pitching a solution to “the payments integration team at Commonwealth Bank, who are responsible for modernizing legacy SWIFT infrastructure and have a Q3 deadline.”
The Australian business culture values relationships and personal connection more than the US market does. A cold email gets ignored. A warm introduction or a referral from a trusted partner gets a meeting. ABM is built on relationships: researching decision-makers, finding warm intros, building credibility through content and thought leadership.
This plays to Australian relationship-driven norms better than broad-based demand generation.
FinTech teams at Australian banks and major fintechs typically have 3-5 decision-makers: a CTO or engineering leader, a product lead, a finance or procurement person, and a compliance officer. ABM accounts for this by identifying all the stakeholders and creating messaging for each one, rather than assuming a single buyer.
Demand generation in the Australian market is expensive and underserforms. Paid ads are costly, content takes time to rank, and SDR hiring is expensive. ABM concentrates your budget on the 10-20 accounts you actually want, delivering more pipeline per dollar spent.
Start with a list of 15-20 high-value fintech companies or divisions within the Big Four. For an infrastructure or integration company, this might look like:
Big Four Banking Divisions:
Major Australian Fintechs:
Others to Consider:
For each company, identify the division most likely to use your product and the decision-maker most likely to care.
Once you’ve identified your TAL, research the buying committee at each company.
For Commonwealth Bank’s payments division, the buying committee might include:
Find names. Search LinkedIn, check company leadership pages, ask your network for warm intros.
Create a simple Airtable or Salesforce record for each company with:
This is where relationships come in. Don’t cold email these decision-makers. Find warm intro paths.
Warm intro sources:
For each decision-maker on your TAL, ask: do we know anyone who knows them? If yes, start there.
Australian fintech executives often attend a small number of core industry events. Sponsoring or attending those events and building face-to-face relationships is high-ROI for ABM.
Once you have warm intro paths, create messaging that’s specific to each company and account.
Commonwealth Bank, Payments Division:
Context: CBA is one of Australia’s largest banks with significant payments volume, a large portion still on legacy infrastructure. They’re modernizing.
Messaging: “As CBA modernizes payments infrastructure, the challenge isn’t technical, it’s operational: how do you migrate from legacy to cloud without disrupting 40 million customers? We’ve helped similar institutions at this inflection point. Worth a conversation?”
Judo Bank:
Context: Judo Bank is a digital-first bank focused on SMB lending with venture backing. They’re scaling lending operations.
Messaging: “Judo’s focus on SMB lending is ambitious, but rapid lending growth often means operational friction. How are you managing underwriting and fulfillment without adding headcount? We work with growing lenders facing this exact problem.”
Airwallex:
Context: Airwallex is expanding into embedded finance and payments infrastructure with strong venture backing.
Messaging: “Airwallex’s embedded finance play depends on partnerships with fintech companies that want to offer currency and payments capabilities. How do you manage the integration and compliance complexity? We help embedded finance platforms scale partnerships.”
Notice the messaging doesn’t say “buy our product.” It shows that you understand the specific context of the company and have experience with similar problems.
ABM isn’t one email. It’s a coordinated campaign across multiple channels:
Warm Introduction Email: (Week 1)
A mutual connection introduces you via email. Keeps it short, explains why they should take a meeting, and schedules a follow-up for a few days later.
Personalized LinkedIn Message: (Week 2)
A message from you to the decision-maker on LinkedIn, referencing the mutual connection and the business context. “I saw in your recent presentation that you’re focused on modernizing payments infrastructure. We worked with [similar company] on exactly this, and thought it might be useful to share what we learned.”
Thought Leadership Content: (Week 3)
Share a piece of content you’ve created that’s relevant to their business. For example, if you’ve written a guide on “Modernizing Legacy Payment Systems,” send it with a note: “Thought you might find this relevant given CBA’s current roadmap.”
Second Personalized Outreach: (Week 4)
If they haven’t responded, a follow-up message or email. Keep it personal, reference the previous outreach, acknowledge they’re busy, and offer a specific time or call option.
Retargeting Ads: (Ongoing)
While you’re doing personal outreach, show them display ads on LinkedIn or programmatic channels. But again, the ads should be personalized. If they’re from Commonwealth, the ad messaging should reference CBA’s known priorities or industry challenges.
The goal is consistency: they see your company across multiple channels, always with messaging tailored to them, always from multiple people on your team (not just one sales rep).
ABM works best when multiple people at your company are involved in the account engagement:
In a concentrated market like Australian fintech, the CEO or VP meeting with the customer signals that you’re serious and that they’re important to you.
Track for each ABL account:
Score accounts based on engagement. If an account shows high engagement (opened emails, attended a meeting, showed interest in a specific use case), increase the intensity of outreach. If an account is cold after multiple touches, move to nurture mode (occasional content, quarterly check-ins) rather than pushing harder.
For your highest-value accounts, create content that’s specific to them.
For Commonwealth Bank, you might create:
For Airwallex, you might create:
This content is specific enough to that company that it shows deep understanding, but broad enough to be genuine thought leadership.
Fintech deals in Australia are long. The Big Four banks have procurement processes, compliance requirements, and architectural reviews. Even smaller fintechs do multiple rounds of technical vetting.
Plan for 6-12 month sales cycles. Your ABM campaign isn’t meant to close in 90 days. It’s meant to build credibility and keep you in the conversation over that entire period.
Choosing the Wrong TAL
If your TAL is full of prospects that don’t fit your ICP, you’ll invest heavily with poor returns. Be ruthless. Pick 15-20 accounts that are both high-fit and high-value.
Treating ABM as Personal Outreach Only
ABM requires coordination across sales, marketing, and product. If it’s just your sales rep sending personal emails, it’s not ABM, it’s outbound. Involve your team.
Not Providing Enough Value Before Asking
Australian buyers are skeptical of vendors that ask for meetings without providing value first. Before you pitch, give them something (content, insight, introduction to a relevant person). Build credibility.
Ignoring Compliance and Risk Concerns
Fintech companies in Australia care deeply about compliance, data security, and risk. If your company can’t speak credibly to these concerns, ABM won’t work. Get your compliance and security story down before you start ABM.
Underestimating Deal Length
Most sales reps underestimate how long fintech deals take. A 3-month forecast might not close until month 6. Don’t assume, plan for 9-12 months.
Not Updating Your TAL
Your TAL isn’t static. Companies merge, divisions reorganize, leadership changes. Review and update your TAL quarterly. If Commonwealth Bank’s Chief Risk Officer left and was replaced by someone from a different background, that’s a signal to adjust your messaging.
Start small. Pick three accounts from your TAL. Map the buying committee. Find warm intros. Create personalized messaging. Execute the multi-touch campaign over 6 months. Measure the results.
If you win one deal out of three, your ABM motion is working. Scale from there.
For B2B companies selling into Australian fintech, ABM is the most efficient path to building a scalable pipeline. It replaces cold outreach with warm relationships, generic messaging with tailored context, and hope with strategy.
Abmatic enables B2B companies selling to Australian fintech to identify high-value accounts on their TAL, map the buying committee, track engagement across touchpoints, and measure the impact of account-based marketing on pipeline and revenue.