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Stop blaming users for bad financial products

By Archil Vardidze · Published March 31, 2026 · 4 min read · Source: Fintech Tag
Blockchain
Stop blaming users for bad financial products

Stop blaming users for bad financial products

Archil VardidzeArchil Vardidze4 min read·Just now

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Financial literacy is not your user’s job

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We like to believe that users come to financial products prepared!

We assume:

Reality is simpler — They don’t.

And more importantly, they shouldn’t have to.

The myth we keep repeating

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Somewhere along the way, “Financial literacy” became a convenient assumption.

If users don’t understand something:

It sounds reasonable — It’s also wrong.

Because what we call Financial literacy is not a stable baseline.
It’s a spectrum. Contextual. Emotional. Often inconsistent even within the same person.

A user might understand loans in one situation and make irrational decisions in another — under pressure, time constraints, or cognitive overload.

So when a product relies on literacy, it is not being sophisticated. It is offloading responsibility.

What financial literacy actually is

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Organizations like the OECD define financial literacy as a mix of:

Clean definition. Useful for policy. Almost useless for designing a product.

Why?

Because none of this guarantees that a user, in a specific moment, will:

The real problem

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Financial products don’t fail because users lack knowledge.

They fail because:

In other words, they make users solve puzzles.

What users actually care about

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Not APR.
Not loan structure.
Not product types.

They care about questions like:

If your interface doesn’t answer these directly, the user is forced to simulate the outcome in their head.

That’s where mistakes happen!

Insight layer is not a feature

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It’s the product.

An insight layer translates financial complexity into decisions.

Not dashboards. Not charts. Not more data.

Decisions.

Examples:

This is not “Nice UX” — This is removing cognitive load.

Stop educating, start translating

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There’s a common instinct to “Educate the user”.

Tooltips. Articles. Financial tips.

Most of it doesn’t work!

Because education requires:

Users don’t open a banking app to learn, they open it to act.

Your job is not to increase their literacy.

Your job is to replace the need for it in the moment of decision.

A better model

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Old thinking:

user should be financially literate

Better thinking:

product should be financially intelligent

This means:

Not explaining how things work, just making sure the user doesn’t need to.

The uncomfortable conclusion

If a user makes a bad financial decision in your product, it’s rarely because they are not smart enough, it’s because the product made them think too much.

The bar going forward

The best financial products won’t win by offering more features.

They will win by:

Financial literacy will still matter, just not as a prerequisite!

This article was originally published on Fintech Tag and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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