In recent years, marketing has evolved from generic greetings to deeply individualized engagement. But in fintech, this evolution comes with responsibility.
“We’ve moved beyond ‘Dear Customer’ and ‘Hello, Name,’” Satya explained. “Personalization now means knowing who you are, where you are, what you want, and what you do, but using that knowledge responsibly.”
That responsibility hinges on consent and preference management—two pillars that have matured significantly over the last decade. “Earlier, marketing preferences were binary: yes or no. Now customers can choose what topics they want to hear about, which channels they prefer, and even the time of day they’d like to be contacted,” he said.
For marketers, respecting these boundaries isn’t just about compliance. It’s about trust.
“As long as you use the data for the benefit of the customer, you are good,” Satya noted. “The moment you cross that boundary, that’s when personalization becomes creepy.”
In today’s interconnected world, compliance doesn’t stop at national boundaries. Even companies operating locally can fall under global privacy frameworks such as GDPR.
“If your website is accessible in the European Union, you have to follow GDPR,” Satya explained. “Privacy now is not just a domain issue—it’s not country-specific. It depends on your geography of operation.”
That means multinational fintechs must map and align with overlapping privacy standards, from Australia’s Privacy Principles to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). Satya emphasized the importance of having “a strategy around all the different privacy principles of all the different countries that come into account.”
Australia’s approach to privacy is built on a set of 13 principles that govern how companies collect, store, and use personal data. These rules form the backbone of ethical martech practice across industries.
“It revolves around three things,” Satya explained. “How data is collected, how data is stored, and how data is used for marketing communication or analytics purposes.”
Marketers must be transparent about how they acquire customer information, especially when data comes from third parties, and be prepared to show that data’s lineage. “If a customer asks where you got their information, you should be able to put it on the table,” he said. “And if they want that record deleted, you need a process in place for data deletion.”
Failure to comply is costly.
“The penalties are quite hefty,” Satya warned. “It’s around 4.1 million dollars. You can’t get away with that.”
Compliance isn’t only about obeying the law; it is about ethical restraint. Access to customer data is expanding, but so are the risks of misuse.
“Sometimes you have access to a lot of data,” Satya cautioned, “but that doesn’t mean you can use all of it. You have to be very clear about what data is appropriate for personalization.”
In industries like banking, healthcare, and gaming, sensitive data cannot be used for marketing promotions. Satya says, the goal is to use data to serve, not to sell.
“A lot of organizations say they’re customer-centric,” he said, “but they work on a P&L and end up being product-centric. That’s when things start to feel invasive. If you truly serve the customer for their benefit, compliance naturally follows.”
Artificial intelligence offers tremendous potential to streamline compliance processes—from monitoring consent to automating privacy reviews. But it also introduces new risks.
“AI can eliminate repetitive tasks and improve compliance workflows,” Satya said. “For example, tools now exist that can automatically check terms and conditions and correct compliance errors in marketing copy before it goes out.”
Yet, even as AI gets smarter, human oversight remains essential.
“Treat AI like a junior brand manager,” Satya advised. “It’s passionate and eager to help, but it can make mistakes. You still need a QA department, a human check, to make sure everything is right before it reaches the customer.”
For regulated industries like finance, a single error can trigger financial penalties, reputational damage, and costly rework. “You can’t get it wrong,” he added.
Satya believes that compliance is not a box-ticking exercise—it is a culture. From governance frameworks to internal training, every team must understand how data flows, where risks lie, and how to mitigate them.
“It’s about doing things simpler, better, faster, with consistency and standardization,” he said. “Governance is not about slowing you down; it’s about ensuring you do it right.”
For newcomers entering martech, he offered one final piece of advice:
“Go slow. Understand the principles first. Learn how technologies work hand in glove, how data flows, what upstream and downstream impacts exist. Then package that knowledge around governance. That’s how you accelerate your career.”