Flywire, the Boston-based payments processor currently operating exclusively within the travel, health and education sectors, landed its unicorn crown last month with the help of backer Goldman Sachs. But to CEO Mike Massaro, this much-prized tech status âmeans nothing until it is somethingâ.
âIâm the most anti-unicorn terminology person, so itâs quite ironic,â says Massaro. âTo me, itâs an interim step. Itâs nice of course and gives validation to all our hard work, but the reality is we still have more work to doâ.
This work includes its expansion into the health care sector, following its acquisition of health tech start-up Simplee. The sector is still in its infancy in terms of digital potential, giving Flywire â a company whose trade is digitising payment methods â a playground of opportunity in which to spread its business.
Itâs an industry where people want to spend money, whether they have access to public healthcare like in the UK or Malaysia, or not like in the US, but where payment methods are still lacking in ingenuity and flexibility.
Massaro says one of the key pillars to Flywireâs success has been taking a sector by sector approach to payments, rather than going âpan-paymentsâ all at once. âPeople talk very broadly about payments, but the reality is that all these payments move differently.â
For Flywire, only 15% of the payments it processes are credit cards, with most actually being bank to bank transactions which require layers of extra software to initiate.
âYou canât swoop in and disrupt some of these more complex industries without a differentiated offering,â says Massaro. âThatâs why our combination of software and payments is pretty rare in the industry right now.â
This also comes into Flywireâs business-to-business model. Instead of following in the footsteps of TransferWise or WorldRemit which help the payment sender, the fintech has focused its efforts on the payments receiver, using its business customers as a channel to consumers.
âThereâs lots of tech companies burning through cash, but thatâs not our business,â says Massaro. Flywire still refuses to publish its own financials, filing a report as recently as last month to the US Securities and Exchange Commission in which Massaro declines to disclose Flywireâs US profits.
Flywire has been listed as profitable since its Series B funding round as far back as 2013 according to PitchBook, and a filing held by Companies House shows that the fintechâs UK business made ÂŁ174,453 in 2018, alongside ÂŁ1 million in issued share capital.
Massaro says that instead of scraping together bumper investment rounds like many challengers trying to tap the far less profitable direct consumer market, Flywire has had the joy of saying no to a swathe of investors.
âIâve got good at saying no,â says Massaro. âIâve had to say no to a lot of investors, simply because the company doesât need that much capital.â
For Flywire, its last three funding rounds, most recently its $120 million Series E, have taken just ten weeks to complete âfrom start to finishâ. Massaro puts this down to looking for the right investors.
âSome players have been taking money from the highest bidder, which doesnât necessarily lead to the smartest use or governance of capital,â he says, referring generally to some of the worldâs challenger bank fundraises which include Revolutâs half a billion funding led by TCV.
âWe donât try and say we know the future,â says Massaro on Flywireâs past pitches to investors. âWe base our performance projections on past, short-term achievements, instead of predicted long-term growth with no history to back it up. Thatâs because investors appreciate candour.â
Last year, Flywire expanded into emerging markets such as Latin America and South Africa. The fintech is also open to breaking into more verticals, such as manufacturing, or import and exporting, where payments are in dire need of a digital overhaul.
The fintech started out making most of its money through transaction fees, but now there is âa growing SaaS componentâ to what it does as it becomes more specialised in certain sectors, giving it the ability to charge for a subscription-based model on top of these fees.
Now a growing team of 550 people spread across 12 offices, Massaro believes Flywire is in prime position to keep pushing its international expansion plan and further conquer space in sectors whose payment processes have long been neglected.