Three packed days at Money20/20 in Amsterdam, and the halls were buzzing about two things: trust and agentic commerce.

Behind the buzzwords, Trust is really three concrete demands from banks: whether they can rely on AI they didn’t build; whether customers’ money, identity and data stay safe with the bank (including how the bank itself uses them); and whether a non-deterministic decision can be proven to a regulator under DORA and the AI Act. Agentic commerce lives in a narrower reality than the word implies: agents today work at discovery and assisted checkout stages, not autonomous buying. The consumer demand and the control layer that grounds an agent in policy and identity aren’t there yet.

For tech vendors, this means naming the specific problem you solve and not hiding behind a category label. The clearest way to do that depends on what you sell:

  • If you sell fraud solutions, acknowledge that AI agents now play on both sides. Attackers use them to industrialize deepfakes and synthetic identities; fraud teams are starting to deploy their own detection agents; and an agent acting for a customer now has to be verified itself before it moves money. Message that you keep pace in an arms race: a stack that adapts, corroborates across layers, and can verify agents, not just people, and ideally with ROI from comparable deployments.
  • If you sell payment solutions, the European dynamic is important to point out. Account-to-account (A2A) payment is growing through open banking, and the domestic schemes are interconnecting to stand independent from the global card networks. The more sovereign schemes there are, the more interoperability becomes essential.
  • If you sell banking platforms, your buyer’s job is to keep the lights on and innovate within budget and legacy constraints. DORA makes system resilience a legal baseline, and the EU AI Act adds the demand that an AI-driven decision must be explained and audited. Lead with de-risking the strategic change.

And for your own GTM operations, the bigger shift is this: AI is changing how the function runs.

  • You have a new audience, the LLM. Forrester’s Buyer Journey Survey shows that 91% of business buyers used or plan to use a genAI tool to support their purchase process. The genAI tool is the audience and influencer, sitting alongside your human buyer. What gets your brand surfaced is specific, authoritative coverage of the problem you solve. To get ahead, you will need to build credibility off your own site such as third-party communities, reviews, analyst coverage, PR because models often prefer to cite external sources. Anticipate the whole arc of the inquiry: buyers on these platforms ask follow-up questions instead of clicking through, so your content has to answer not just the first question but the chain behind it. Use Best Practices For Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) as a guide for your LLM content development.
  • Use AI inside your own team. Pioneering marketers are already doing this, and the first effect is the obvious one: producing content and surfacing the right material for sales gets faster and cheaper. The content bottleneck that teams have complained about for years is easing. Align AI Agent Use Cases With Strategic Marketing Initiatives To Accelerate The Revenue Engine can help you deploy your B2B marketing AI more effectively.
  • But AI doesn’t touch the hard part. The persistent challenge in selling into banks isn’t producing content, it’s holding one consistent message across the whole sales cycle, and continuing to deliver on it after the deal closes. A faster content engine doesn’t create that consistency. If marketing and sales are working from different stories or different goals, AI just produces the inconsistency faster. Fixing it still takes aligned metrics and a close working relationship between the two teams, the same operational work it has always taken. Use Master B2B Growth With The Power Of Aligned Revenue Planning to guide your marketing-sales alignment planning.

Want to get this right?

This is the work we do at Forrester Consulting. Our offerings help vendors position themselves against buyer needs and competitors, build messaging that holds up across the cycle and resonates with the people making the decision. If this is your world, let’s talk.

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