Written by Karine Martinez, Head of Strategic Partnerships at Wallester
In the world of corporate payments, cards are often reduced to little more than a commodity. But Karine Martinez, Head of Strategic Partnerships at Wallester, makes a compelling case: the real value lies not in the payment itself, but in the experience it enables.
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When a user reaches for a card, the transaction is just the final step in a much larger journey. The card is the tool. The experience is the product.
For example, take insurance. Insurers don’t sell payouts but claims management. They sell a seamless process that restores trust and resolves a customer’s urgent need. Or consider a marketplace. It doesn’t sell card transactions; it sells order fulfilment or inventory replenishment. The card is simply the means to an end. But what really matters is the experience.
Yet too many platforms still treat payments as an afterthought. They force users to log into a bank portal, initiate a payment, and then manually reconcile it back in their ERP or accounting system. By breaking workflows, this creates friction. Even worse, it weakens the user’s relationship with the platform.
The Experience Is the Differentiator
There is a different path, though. When a platform embeds payments, branded card issuance, and account functionality, it keeps the user fully within its ecosystem. This eliminates the need for switching between tools and manual reconciliation. So what the platform – and its users – get instead is a smooth, purposeful journey where every spend is tracked, categorised, and optimised in real time.
It’s convenient. More importantly, it’s about retention as well. A user who manages their spend, cards, and reconciliation through your platform isn’t shopping around for competitors. They’re evaluating you on the quality of the experience and the absence of friction in their workflows.
Finally, there’s a commercial argument. Card transactions generate interchange revenue, a recurring income stream that grows with usage. For platforms processing meaningful transaction volumes, it’s a revenue driver that scales with their business and not just another feature.
The Real Challenge Used to Be Execution
Many platforms used to hesitate because they assumed they needed to build their own infrastructure, navigate regulatory hurdles, and manage compliance. But embedded finance has changed that. Today, platforms can offer card issuance, accounts, and payment functionality under their own product, but without owning the underlying rails.
The division of responsibilities is simple:
- The infrastructure provider, like Wallester, handles the regulatory, technical, and compliance layer.
- The platform owns the user experience, the relationship, and the commercial upside.
The question really is how quickly you can do it, not whether you should or not.
For platforms, the message is straightforward. You are selling an experience, not a payment. What that really means is building a layer of stickiness that compounds over time. Those who wait will find their users accessing it elsewhere, which, in turn, makes their relationships easier to replace.
At Wallester, we’re built for this. Our White-Label solution gives platforms the opportunity to embed card issuance, account functionality, and payment rails – without the regulatory burden or years of development. The experience stays yours and we handle the rest.


