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Marqeta chief focuses on revenue diversity, execution

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In late February, Marqeta replaced its former chief executive, naming Mike Milotich, the chief financial officer, to the additional role of interim CEO. It’s a title he might hold for a while as Milotich says Marqeta’s board is comfortable with the current executive team, allowing directors to conduct a thorough, deliberative search.

The company focuses on card issuing and embedded finance, to allow its customers – including large fintechs and online retail marketplaces– to profit from interchange fees on transactions. Oakland, California-based Marqeta faces stiff competition from rivals such as Fidelity National Information Services and Global Payments, as well as upstarts such as Adyen and Stripe.

Marqeta, which went public in June 2021, has gradually diversified its revenue away from Block, which accounted for nearly three-quarters (73%) of the business in early 2021. Block represented 45% of revenue in the most recent quarter, Marqeta reported Thursday.

It’s also planning a “white label app,” rolling out later this year, to allow companies to establish a card program quickly, without spending internal resources or managing cardholders, Milotich said last week on a quarterly earnings call. As the dual CEO-CFO, Milotich is also targeting costs, with a goal of keeping expense growth 10 points below gross profit growth.

Milotich joined Marqeta as CFO in February 2022 after prior roles at Visa, PayPal Holdings and American Express. He spoke with Payments Dive on May 9.

Editor’s note: This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

MIKE MILOTICH: Not really. Although we’ve accomplished a lot at Marqeta, we need to improve our execution a little bit. So I think what I’m really focused on is doing the fundamentals, the little things a little better. We have several innovative things that we’re doing, and we are constantly growing the capabilities we offer. The key is to do everything, finish everything we start and kind of do it really well, is what I’m a little more focused on than you know, maybe we’ve been in the past. I think because we have enough great ideas, that’s not our problem. Our problem is actually focusing, prioritizing and delivering.

You can’t really plan for that. It’s more that you make sure you have contingency plans. It’s more about making sure you have the ability to shift if things change. And sometimes that means the way you execute is slightly different, so that you kind of have some exits and some off ramps if you need to make a change. I think we’re trying to make sure every decision we make, there is some flexibility if things change. Otherwise, what we see in our business is that, at least so far, there isn’t a shift in the way consumers are spending.