The Future of Finance Won't Be Built on Innovation Alone — Here's What It Will Depend On Instead The future of finance and technology depends on collaboration, not isolation.

By Farbod Sadeghian Edited by Chelsea Brown

Key Takeaways

  • Collaboration is essential for the implementation of disruptive technologies. Startups, institutions and regulators must work together to achieve real scale and trust.
  • To scale disruptive technologies like blockchain and AI, entrepreneurs must co-create with regulators and pool infrastructure with competitors to build trust and credibility.
  • Joining a chamber — a space where startups, regulators and institutions align on shared standards — creates access to capital allocators, regulatory advisors and tokenization partners.

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Technologies such as artificial intelligence and blockchain are transforming business, governance and everyday life. Yet even while fintech startups continue to grow, their reach is still overshadowed by the global footprint of established financial institutions. That's because innovation on its own isn't enough to scale.

A new paradigm has emerged: collaboration, where interconnectedness is taking center stage. The implementation of new, disruptive technologies requires building dynamic, highly integrated ecosystems made possible by partnerships fueled by collaboration.

The definition of success is shifting. Once, it was enough to launch a unique product. Today, especially in industries such as blockchain and virtual assets, isolated solutions often fall short. Real success comes from being part of a larger ecosystem, where startups, institutions and regulators combine their strengths to accelerate adoption, scale faster and establish trust across markets.

Related: How Strategic Partnerships Catapulted My Business to 200% Growth — and How They Can Help You, Too.

The case for a networked mindset

Innovation thrives when diverse players come together, and integrated ecosystems can amplify this effect. To scale disruptive technologies like blockchain and AI, entrepreneurs must learn to build together, co-creating with regulators, pooling infrastructure with competitors and building trust with institutions.

No company can scale in isolation. Partners, whether distribution channels, liquidity providers or trusted institutions, are crucial for transitioning from concept to mass adoption. Just as importantly, organizations that bring regulators and institutions into the process early gain a significant advantage. By co-creating with policymakers and aligning with market standards, entrepreneurs not only accelerate approvals but also distinguish themselves as builders of trust, the ultimate currency in industries where credibility is essential.

Leverage networks, not just capital

Traditionally, financial institutions raced to outpace their competitors. But virtual assets operate differently: Technologies like blockchain depend on shared standards and infrastructure. Tokenized securities, for example, require common frameworks for custody, compliance and settlement. Here, competing harder matters less than collaborating smarter. The entrepreneurs who will thrive are the ones who see that the future of finance, and business at large, can only be built together.

In my own experience, even something as complex as obtaining a regulatory license, a process that can take years, can be dramatically accelerated by partnering with specialists. With the right expertise and network, what could take years can be streamlined into months, proving that collaboration isn't just valuable, but also transformative.

Related: How Collaboration Can Help Drive Growth and Propel Your Business to New Heights

Think like an industry builder

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg once said, "Move fast and break things." The motto encouraged agility and captured the spirit of disruption: Launch first, ask questions later. But what may have worked in the early days of social media is far less sustainable in industries where the stakes are higher. Today's technologies involve finance and governance, and they challenge systems that have remained unchanged for decades. In these spaces, collaboration becomes essential. Entrepreneurs who want to build with lasting impact must align with regulators, institutions and even competitors to create trusted, scalable and resilient systems.

Research shows that companies engaged in close inter-firm partnerships experience significantly stronger outcomes in innovation. When JPMorgan wanted to test the tokenization of investment portfolios, it didn't do it alone. It partnered with Apollo, Axelar, Oasis Pro and Provenance Blockchain as part of Singapore's Project Guardian. The result was Crescendo, a prototype that proved tokenized assets could be managed seamlessly across blockchains. Examples like Project Guardian prove that when multiple players align, entire markets move forward. To make collaboration scalable, industries need permanent frameworks, a principle first captured in Henry Chesbrough's concept of "open innovation."

The chamber model

The concept of "open innovation," coined by Henry Chesbrough of UC Berkeley, argued that companies should not solely rely on internal R&D but instead share ideas, technologies and resources across boundaries. In finance and virtual assets, this principle is evolving into structured collaboration.

Regulatory sandboxes in the UK and Singapore have already shown how powerful these models can be: Startups involved were more likely to raise funding and survive long term. But sandboxes are temporary. What industries need now are permanent, neutral structures that turn collaboration into a repeatable advantage.

Just as chambers of commerce once accelerated global trade, new chambers in finance and virtual assets are emerging as convening spaces where startups, regulators and institutions align on shared standards. These platforms have already supported multibillion-dollar projects, such as gold-backed securities, by bringing issuers, regulators and institutional investors under a common framework.

Related: Not Tech but Collaborations to Be the Next Big Thing for Fintech Industry

For emerging platforms, joining a chamber provides more than credibility; it creates immediate access to capital allocators, regulatory advisors and tokenization partners. As these chambers interconnect globally, they form a unified voice capable of shaping international policy, driving market confidence and speeding adoption worldwide.

Finance has always been global, and so has collaboration. Chambers give entrepreneurs a seat at the same table as regulators and institutions. In a market defined by speed and credibility, those who embrace collaboration not as a concession but as a growth strategy will be the ones who shape the future of finance.

Farbod Sadeghian

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Contributor

Founder of TheBlock.

Farbod Sadeghian is a Dubai-based entrepreneur and founder of TheBlock., the International Chamber of Virtual Assets. With 20+ ventures across fintech and Web3, he focuses on RWA tokenization, regulation, and building systems that connect innovators, investors, and policymakers.

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