In finance and fintech, where credibility and trust are everything, standing out requires more than just a great product. It requires a communications strategy that builds reputation, attracts the right audiences, and adapts to the rapidly evolving media.
As Avenue Z’s new Director of PR, I have worked with some of the biggest names in finance and blockchain, including Kraken, RBC Wealth Management, Mercer, and Direxion ETFs, and I know what it takes to break through. Having supported these brands through fast-changing markets and highly competitive categories, I’ve seen firsthand the elements that consistently set industry leaders apart.
Here are the three things I believe no brand in this space can go without:
1. Stay Positioned with Industry Trends & News
Markets move fast, and so does the news cycle. Brands that monitor developments in real time and can respond quickly with informed commentary position themselves as industry leaders. Being part of the conversation isn’t optional; it’s what separates the trusted voices from the forgotten ones.
Journalists, investors, and customers alike look to companies that can interpret events as they unfold. Whether it’s new SEC guidance, a sudden market downturn, or a breakthrough in blockchain adoption, the brands that earn attention are the ones ready to provide clarity and perspective. Speed matters, but so does consistency. Thought leadership is built when companies repeatedly show up in the right conversations with insights that add value.
In today’s multi-modal attention economy, brands need to earn visibility not just in headlines but in the discovery engines fueling AI tools. Avenue Z helped Extend do exactly that using a dual strategy of proactive media and search-optimized content. The result? Extend emerged as a Top-10 fintech brand in AI visibility, topped the AI Sentiment Score rankings, and became one of the top three sources for fintech insights, proof that trend positioning today means being seen and recommended everywhere.
2. Monitor Competitors for First-to-Market Advantage
Innovation in fintech and blockchain doesn’t wait. I advise brands to keep a close eye on competitor product rollouts and communications strategies. By knowing where others are headed, companies can anticipate market needs and seize the first-to-market advantage that defines category leaders.
Being first to market with a new product or narrative doesn’t just deliver short-term buzz – it can set the tone for how an entire category evolves. Consider the rise of embedded finance: those companies that moved quickly into offering financial services within non-financial platforms gained visibility and loyalty well before the trend became mainstream.
As reported by the Hampton Global Business Review, top U.S. fintech players, including PayPal, Square (Block), and Robinhood, have embedded a Lean Startup–inspired experimentation culture into their organizations. These firms rely on A/B testing, real-time analytics, and machine learning to power rapid innovation cycles. This structured approach allows them to test hypotheses, optimize product features, personalize user experiences, and manage risk, fostering agility that turns experimentation into a competitive advantage.
By institutionalizing such frameworks across engineering and product teams, these brands can pivot quickly, stay aligned with market signals, and even redefine user expectations before competitors catch up.
3. Master Media Readiness
Even the best strategy falls flat without strong execution in the spotlight. Leaders need to distill complex ideas into concise, compelling soundbites. Media prep, condensing company messages into a few memorable lines, can mean the difference between headlines that move markets and missed opportunities.
The stakes are high. According to a study by Grammarly and the Harris Poll, poor communication practices can cost U.S. companies as much as $1.2 trillion annually, and about one in five business leaders say they have lost business due to poor communication. How executives show up in the media can directly impact both perception and the bottom line.
A Cornell University study found that trimming messaging by just 10–20% drives significantly stronger outcomes. This uplifts both perception and recall. In interviews or press outreach, that means every extra word is a potential distraction. Executives should treat every sentence as an opportunity: trim, sharpen, and let the core insight stand out.
Why It Matters
For me, public relations is about people – teams, leaders, and audiences. If you don’t understand and invest in people, you can’t build trust or influence. At Avenue Z, we are helping clients like Easterly Asset Management, Easterly DEA, Tassat, and Lynq apply these principles, ensuring they’re not just part of the industry but shaping its future.
Is your finance, fintech, or blockchain brand ready to make headlines? Talk to our team today.
Make Headlines That Matter
From Wall Street Journal to The New York Times, we secure the media coverage that shapes perception, drives growth, and positions your brand as an authority.