These are independent analyses — not paid client work. We audited three fintech products, identified the revenue leaks, and documented every fix. This is exactly how day one of every paid engagement looks.
Transparency Note
These audits were conducted independently. No client relationship with Finix, Adyen, Mono, or Flutterwave existed or is implied. They demonstrate exactly how FlowForge Revenue operates — before a retainer, before a brief, before anyone asks.
Finix's acquisition funnel targeted developers and engineers — but the buying decision sits with CFOs and VPs of Product. Their homepage led with API flexibility and integration docs. The financial argument (stop renting your payments stack at 2–3.5% per transaction) was completely absent. They were selling the product to the wrong person in the wrong language.
Rebuilt the full acquisition funnel around one financial argument: "Stop Paying the Payments Tax." LinkedIn ad campaign (3 variants — CFO, VP Product, Head of Ops) plus a 7-section landing page where every section quantified the cost of staying on a third-party stack using Finix's own published rates.
Adyen's demo page — the highest-intent moment in their entire enterprise funnel — opened with "Say hello to your new financial technology partner." The form asked for details with zero explanation of what the prospect would receive. At enterprise deal sizes, generic framing loses qualified buyers who have intent but need a specific reason to give up 30 minutes of their calendar.
Repositioned the demo from a generic sales form into a diagnostic session buyers actually want. New headline: "Where your payment stack may be losing revenue — and how to fix it." Added four specific analytical outcomes. Rewrote the CTA from "CONTINUE" to "Book My Payments Review." Eight copy decisions, each documented with a conversion hypothesis.
Homepage led with "Powering African businesses with open Banking" — passive, abstract, buyer-agnostic. No specificity about coverage, no named buyer types, no proof. Developers and fintech product leads had to decode whether this was built for them. Every second of decoding is conversion loss.
New headline: "Access Every Bank Account in Africa Through One API." Named three buyer types upfront. "50+ institutions across 4 countries" for verifiable coverage. Renmoney's 70% underwriting time reduction moved to the trust layer.
"Endless possibilities for all" communicated nothing. For enterprise buyers evaluating payment infrastructure at scale, aspiration language reads as an absence of proof. The strongest trust signals — 34 licensed markets, 1M+ businesses, enterprise logos — were buried where nobody reads them.
New headline: "The payment infrastructure Africa's fastest-growing businesses run on." Led with 1M businesses, named logos (Uber, Netflix, Microsoft), territorial claim (34 licensed markets). Every vague claim replaced with a falsifiable number.