In payments, design is not decoration. It is the first diligence the buyer runs before the transaction. PayAiro came to us at the transition from product to platform — needing a brand that read as trustworthy and a go-to-market that moved the number.
PayAiro sat at the seam of two regulated categories: payments and travel. The product was solid. The brand was not telling a single story. The GTM was under-resourced. User acquisition was flat and engagement was drifting.
The ask was the kind a consulting engagement cannot answer from a deck. The company needed a senior operator inside the room — someone to hold brand, marketing, and growth together while the product scaled through a window that was open, but not for long.
We took a hybrid CMO mandate for thirteen months. The work ran on three rails in parallel.
Inside the company, the job was also managerial. The marketing function was small. The remit was wide. Hiring, vendor discipline, and reporting cadence were part of the engagement from the first quarter.
Over the thirteen-month mandate, user acquisition lifted by 35% against the prior baseline. Digital engagement grew by 28% on a cohort-weighted basis.
More consequentially: the company came out of the engagement with a brand that a regulated partner recognised on sight, a growth function that read its own numbers, and a marketing org that did not need another CMO to continue the work.
The work concluded in November 2025. PayAiro remains a reference point for what an embedded mandate actually looks like when the brief is “move the number.”
Embedded mandates that carry brand, marketing, and growth together — for the window when the number has to move.