More than 20 years ago, I had my first introduction to the world of corporate products, an area that quickly became part of my daily work and the most relevant focus of my professional experience.
The corporate card (credit or prepaid) has not fundamentally changed from its core value proposition—financing, control, and security—but the payments ecosystem in which it operates today isalmost unrecognizable.
In the early 2000s, more than 60% of the spending captured on corporate cards came from T&E (travel and entertainment). The product was physical, equipped with a magnetic stripe, and the control tools we now consider basic—reporting, limits, and hierarchy management—were competitive differentiators.
Supplier payments (B2B), both from an acquiring and issuing strategy perspective, were largely based on recurring, high-transaction expenses with moderate discount rates and automatic charge schemes, enabling high acceptance and easy adoption by companies. Likewise, the “purchasing card” was, in many cases, a piece of plastic kept in a drawer or a virtual product with limited controls.
Then came 2008.
The global financial crisis, triggered by the collapse of the U.S. mortgage market, caused an abrupt contraction of credit and a significant decline in corporate spending worldwide.
For the corporate card segment, the impact was immediate: T&E spending dropped dramatically, budgets were frozen, and issuers faced an environment of higher risk and lower liquidity.
It was not just a temporary revenue decline; it marked a turning point in the business model.
In their effort to become sustainable and adopt a much longer-term vision, banks turned their attention to companies’ tactical spending—an area that represented both a major challenge and a significant opportunity to differentiate themselves from competitors.
They restructured their commercial teams by verticals, professionalized their campaigns, and began “speaking” the same language as their clients to understand not only their processes, but their entire ecosystem—thereby increasing scalability across their portfolios.
They aligned their B2B strategies to design products for small and medium-sized businesses while continuing to strengthen their solutions for large multinational corporations. Their risk and fraud models evolved to the point of supporting millions of dollars in credit lines, and discussions about profitability and working capital dominated business meetings.
However, the true transformation was still to come.
By 2025, it is estimated that more than 60%[1] of global B2B payments are still processed through traditional methods (such as checks or cash), demonstrating that corporate digital payment adoption is far from fully consolidated. This gap represents a significant opportunity for issuers, acquirers, and platforms that are betting on automation, integration, and digitalization.
The corporate segment no longer competes solely among traditional banks. It competes with B2B FinTechs offering onboarding in minutes, SaaS platforms integrating embedded payments, and API-first solutions that connect directly to ERPs.
The true competitive advantage will lie in the ability to integrate ecosystems, turn data into intelligence, and strategically support the entire flow of business spending.
Today’s CFO is no longer looking solely for financing. They are looking for:
- Real-time visibility
- Accounts payable automation
- Working capital optimization
- Actionable data
- Simple and secure integrations
In this context, the corporate card ceases to be just a payment method and becomes a financial management platform.
After 25 years of watching this product evolve, I am certain that the corporate segment will not stop—but it will not forgive inertia either.
The future does not belong to those who issue the most cards, but to those who best understand their clients’ business.
[1] https://gitnux.org/digital-transformation-in-the-payment-card-industry-statistics/
