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Andrejus Trofimovas on the Leadership Lessons Behind Scaling a Digital Finance Group

28th May 2026
The founder and CEO of Aventus Group reflects on growth, risk, trust and the management discipline needed to build a digital finance business across markets. Scaling a fintech business can look quite straightforward from the outside. A company enters a market, launches a digital product, acquires customers and starts growing volumes. In digital finance, where the product is often fully online and easy for the customer to understand, the model can seem even simpler. Andrejus Trofimovas, Founder and CEO of Aventus Group, has a more cautious view of that process. For him, scaling a digital finance group is not about copying one successful formula from one country to another. It is much more about understanding how risk, customer behaviour and trust change from market to market. “Growth is important, of course. But growth alone does not mean that the business is becoming stronger. In fintech, the real question is whether you can grow and still keep the quality of your decisions,” says Andrejus Trofimovas. Aventus Group started as a local Baltic business and has grown into an international financial services organisation operating in more than 20 countries across Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. That scale gives Andrejus Trofimovas a practical view of how differently the same business model can work depending on regulation, access to data, financial habits, customer expectations and the maturity of local financial infrastructure. A product may work well in one country and still need serious adjustment in another. A scoring model may look reliable in calm economic conditions and behave differently when employment, inflation or household income changes. This, in Andrejus Trofimovas’ view, is why fintech leadership has become more demanding than it was in the early years of the sector. Growth needs discipline In financial services, growth is often the easiest thing to notice. More customers, more applications, higher volumes and stronger revenue all look like signs of success. The difficulty is that growth can also hide problems. If a company accepts too much risk, volumes may increase quickly and the business may look strong for some time. The real picture appears later, when repayment behaviour shows whether the company actually understood its customers. “Any company can grow aggressively for some time if it accepts too much risk. The harder task is to grow in a way that keeps the portfolio healthy and the customer relationship sustainable,” Andrejus Trofimovas says. For him, scaling is not only about entering new countries or increasing volumes. It is about building systems that can make good decisions repeatedly, including when the market becomes less predictable. That requires restraint. Saying no to a customer can mean losing revenue today, but in financial services discipline is often more valuable than short-term volume. Trust is harder to scale than speed Fintech changed financial services partly because it made access to products faster and easier. Customers became used to online processes, quick decisions and fewer formalities. That expectation is not going away. But speed alone is no longer enough. “Speed is still important. A digital finance product must be fast and convenient. But if speed is the only advantage, it is easy to copy. Trust is much harder to build and much harder to scale,” Andrejus Trofimovas says. Trust in digital finance is usually built through practical details. The customer understands the cost. The conditions are clear. The decision is fast, but not careless. The company does not try to benefit from confusion or from the customer’s lack of understanding. For a CEO, this is not only a marketing issue. Trust is shaped by risk policy, product design, legal wording, technology, collections, data quality and the way teams are managed internally. It is not something that can be handed over to one department and forgotten. Data helps, but judgement still matters Modern fintech depends heavily on data. In a large digital finance business, decisions cannot be made manually at scale. There are too many applications, too many variables and too little time. Scoring models, automation and artificial intelligence have become part of the infrastructure. Andrejus Trofimovas sees data as one of the reasons why some fintech companies become stronger over time, but he is careful not to treat technology as a simple answer to every problem. “AI is only as good as the history behind it. A model needs real cases, real repayment behaviour and real mistakes to learn from. Otherwise it is just a technical promise,” he says. Algorithms can process information faster than people and notice patterns that people may miss. But they do not remove responsibility from leadership. Management still has to understand what the model is doing, where it can fail and how much risk the business is prepared to accept. Responsibility is part of the business model Consumer finance has always carried reputational risk. A small number of aggressive players can damage trust in the wider sector, even when many companies are trying to work transparently. For responsible businesses, this creates a difficult balance: they have to compete commercially while proving that digital lending can be clear, fair and properly managed. Trofimovas treats responsibility as a business decision, not only as an ethical statement. “A good credit product is not one that creates problems for the customer. A good product is one the customer understands, can use responsibly and can repay without being pushed into a worse situation,” he says. This approach is not always the fastest way to grow. Tighter scoring can reduce approval rates. Clearer communication requires investment. Compliance adds work and cost. But the alternative can be more expensive over time: higher defaults, weaker customer relationships, regulatory pressure and reputational damage. The early fintech story was often built around disruption: moving faster than banks, building lighter systems and using technology to remove friction. Much of that still matters, but the sector is no longer new in the same way. Regulators are more attentive, customers have more experience, competition is stronger and being digital is no longer enough to stand out. For Trofimovas, fintech leadership now has to become more practical. CEOs need to think about growth and control at the same time. They need to understand data without blindly trusting it. They need to move quickly, but not in a way that damages the portfolio or weakens the customer relationship. “The future of fintech will not be defined only by companies that issue money quickly. It will be defined by those that can work with data, risk, service and trust at the same time,” he says. For Andrejus Trofimovas, this is the main leadership lesson behind scaling a digital finance group: technology can bring customers in, but trust is what allows the business to continue.

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