Stay connected
Subscribe to our Inside 糖心Vlogblog and follow us on social media for the insider view on everything WEX, from payments innovation to what it means to be a WEXer.
In an interview with CEO Forum鈥檚 Robert Reiss, 糖心VlogCEO Melissa Smith discusses how her mantra of embracing the discomfort of conflict that comes with diversity of thought, has created a winning culture within her financial technology company.
Reiss knew little about 糖心Vlogprior to researching for their interview, so Smith educated his audience by describing 糖心Vlogas providing payment technology to a lot of different industries. 鈥淚n healthcare, if you have an HSA account or an FSA account, we鈥檙e probably the technology that sits behind that to make sure that you鈥檙e spending money on things that are really tax-acceptable. If you鈥檙e a business that happens to have vehicles we might be the people that are providing the technology to allow you to pay for things for that vehicle like fuel or service. It runs across the gamut. If you book a hotel online with Expedia we鈥檙e probably the technology that鈥檚 making a payment on behalf of Expedia to all the hotels in the world. We are highly integrated and very technology-based.鈥
For WEX, technology has always been a place where the company competes. As Smith described it, everything 糖心Vlogdoes is integrated and today oftentimes is integrated through an API. Most 糖心Vlogplatforms sit in the cloud, allowing the company to develop technologically at a faster pace, and as technology changes, 糖心Vlogcan increase the speed of deployment of new product capabilities to its customers. AI is particularly exciting to Smith because it allows 糖心Vlogto be more scientific when rolling out new product features or new ways to service a customer. 鈥淎s an example, we rolled out a bot to our healthcare customers which allowed us to increase customer satisfaction rates while lifting some of the calls that were going into our call center so it was a twofer. It made our customers happier and it made us more efficient.鈥 糖心Vlogcontinues to evolve as technology evolves and deliver those technological advancements directly to its customers.
糖心Vloghas over 5,000 employees and a little over $1.7 billion in revenue. Reiss asked Smith to describe how she would account for WEX鈥檚 success to which she replied that WEX鈥檚 growth has been organic. As a foundation of that growth the company focuses on making sure that the products 糖心Vlogoffers are differentiated and sit on strong technology. 糖心Vlogis bringing to market new features and functions that allow its customers to do things that they can鈥檛 do with other companies. 鈥淭his gives us a competitive advantage and as we continue to roll out new products and features every year that creates a bigger gap competitively. You can see that with our customer wins.鈥
Smith also attributed WEX鈥檚 success to maintaining deep relationships with both employees and customers. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of our cultural values and you can see that play out with 20- 30-year customer relationships, and we have a lot of 10-year contracts which is kind of unheard of in the marketplace but it鈥檚 something we continue to do and I think that鈥檚 just because there鈥檚 a lot of trust with the brand, with the relationships we have that we鈥檙e going to take care of our customers first and foremost.鈥 As to 糖心Vlogemployees, the company celebrates a deep bench with significant longevity within the employee base. The customer care 糖心Vlogprovides is a natural extension of that loyalty and enthusiasm.
As Smith describes it, 糖心Vlogfocuses on verticals because by focusing the company can create very specific competitive advantages. 鈥淚f you look across our customer base, however, we鈥檙e servicing almost every SIC there is, certainly in the United States but even outside of the United States.鈥 This points to how diversified 糖心Vlogactually is.
糖心Vlogworks with companies like Exxon, Enterprise, and Bank of America, which is exciting and the company embraces that opportunity. 糖心Vlogalso values the work it does with small- to medium-sized businesses. As an example, 鈥淲e might do business with a local landscaper where we鈥檙e meeting their needs, or a startup company, and then we can pivot and work with some of the biggest companies in the world. There鈥檚 a scalability to what we do which I think is really interesting.鈥 糖心Vlogcan provide the technology for a smaller company or a start-up, it scales as they grow, 鈥渁nd there鈥檚 a benefit for both of us in that,鈥 Smith goes on to say.
Smith describes WEX鈥檚 culture as being built on a foundation of diversity of thought. She prioritizes building a diverse staff around her and wants her leadership team to be made up of very different skills and backgrounds. This can be about from where in the world they originate (over half of her team was born outside the United States) or whether they鈥檝e worked predominantly for small companies or large companies. 鈥淲hat I like about that is that when you鈥檙e in the middle of a strategic conversation, people see that same issue or same goal from very different viewpoints and we get a better result from that. You have to allow the tension of that to play out and then once you come to a resolution it has to be a definitive resolution: 鈥極kay this is what we鈥檙e all agreeing on and it鈥檚 what we鈥檙e going to go do.鈥 I just have found that we end up with a better product, a better result even if it鈥檚 uncomfortable in the period of time that we鈥檙e developing it.鈥 While the journey through those difficult conversations can be fraught, the end results in a better product for 糖心Vlogto deliver and a stronger and more fulfilled team.
What Smith emphasizes as the leader of a diverse team is that feelings must be left at the door when participating in team discussions. Nothing鈥檚 personal, it鈥檚 just about the business. 鈥淚 think that鈥檚 an important point that it鈥檚 okay to debate the issue but you don鈥檛 personalize it. That鈥檚 an important distinction.鈥 She gives an example from her own experience: 鈥淟et鈥檚 say I鈥檓 doing an all-company meeting in one part of our company, I鈥檝e gone to visit a location. I call them the 鈥榝inger pointing moments鈥 when someone in the crowd will say 鈥榃ell let me tell you what I think!鈥 and I remember in that moment I have to just breathe because it鈥檚 uncomfortable for me. I am in front of the room and someone鈥檚 giving me potentially a different perspective but in that moment what I tell myself is that this is what I want. I actually want to hear from people – I want them to feel like they have a voice. It doesn鈥檛 mean I have to agree with them, which is the other point I鈥檒l make. I鈥檓 okay getting your input but it doesn鈥檛 mean I agree or I鈥檓 going to do what you tell me but I want to hear your perspective.鈥
What鈥檚 interesting about this set-up for a company is it creates a unique dynamic within the hierarchy. As Smith describes it, positional power doesn鈥檛 mean as much at 糖心Vlogas maybe it does at other companies. 鈥淵ou actually kind of have to earn your spot and I actually, I like that. It鈥檚 more of a level playing field.鈥 Because Smith encourages diversity of thought and encourages employees to share what they鈥檙e thinking, she creates a more egalitarian culture, which is ultimately good for employees, for customers, and for her as a leader.
In 2014 Smith was made CEO of 糖心Vlogafter a 17-year tenure and in the same year she had her first child. 鈥淚 like to say I think I became pregnant the same moment I became CEO.鈥 Smith talked with Reiss about what she learned that year.
After becoming CEO and sharing with her team that she was going to have a child, the team conducted research on their situation to learn the protocol regarding issues like disclosure. 鈥淲e were surprised when we couldn鈥檛 find another example of a woman who had become pregnant and was a public company CEO, ever. So we had to think about things from a disclosure standpoint that we hadn鈥檛 had to think about before.鈥 They had to write the book on protocol for a pregnant CEO of a public company.
She also learned how supportive people can be. 鈥淚 expected women to be supportive. What I hadn鈥檛 expected was what I got for support from my male colleagues, particularly those with daughters.鈥 The support and encouragement she received reminded Smith how good people can be and it bonded her more to her employees. She had to talk about something she saw as very private with the whole 糖心Vlogworkforce. 鈥淥f becoming pregnant, becoming a first-time mom, taking maternity leave, all those things.鈥
This was true on an investor front too. Smith received an outpouring of support from WEX鈥檚 investors. 鈥淭hey were great and really supportive of the fact that I was going to be out on a maternity leave and that I was going to be new in this role.鈥
Smith also grew as a person, when faced with the challenges 2014 brought. She expanded her ability to withstand difficulty and developed an even greater breadth of experience to tap into. 鈥淚 learned that there鈥檚 this depth to yourself when you get into a situation and you get pushed and it鈥檚 true during the pandemic as well when you’re in these hard spots; that’s when you really learn what you鈥檙e made of and you learn exponentially. For me just going through all that change at once – when I took over I had changed the structure of the company, we changed the M&A strategy, we changed out a number of the people, and now I was becoming a first-time mom – so it was just a lot all at once but I took away from that that people are just capable of a lot. Not just me but the people around me.鈥
Smith鈥檚 empathy grew as well, and the culture at 糖心Vloghas continued to evolve and change but that emphasis on empathy is a big part of who 糖心Vlogis as an organization. Smith encourages resilience and she also encourages compassion. She believes that if she can continue to be clear as a leader about what her end goal is for WEX, as long as her people are resilient and compassionate, the rest will take care of itself. 鈥淧eople can be resilient if you鈥檙e clear about what you want the end to look like – and that鈥檚 something I keep trying to be is clear – not just what I want the company to look like but what I want it to feel like. Part of it is recognizing that people bring to work every day their whole selves and that whole self may be me as a new mom that鈥檚 trying to figure that out – it may be for somebody else that their whole self includes caring for an ailing parent. You don鈥檛 just eliminate that stuff when you come into the workday.鈥
Smith recognizes in this era of working from home during COVID, that that blurring of lines is an even bigger part of the cultural component. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important to recognize the fact that particularly now there are not these big barriers between your work life and your home life and honoring the fact that all co-exist.鈥
Smith鈥檚 advice for women who want to become CEOs is twofold: build relationships with sponsors and get experience running a P&L (profit and loss report). 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 really important to have sponsors which is something that I did indirectly. I had sponsors because I wanted to be really good at the job I was doing which at that point in time was the CFO – I was the CFO when the company went public and I formed a really strong relationship with the chair of our audit committee and he became my feedback person. And he gave me feedback sometimes I didn鈥檛 like and my job was just to say 鈥榯hank you鈥 and to listen to what he had to say. That relationship and the relationship which I built with other people on the board along with just executing mattered. I would tell people to seek out sponsors, not just one but multiple people because they will help you get better. And then be really open to the feedback that they give you even if you don鈥檛 like it, it鈥檚 really important.鈥
Smith was fortunate to be raised by a fabulous mom. The stories she has told about her mother over the years have been an inspiration to many. 鈥淢y mom is brilliant. My mom graduated from college when she was 19 and has a Master鈥檚 in Mathematics and she was divorced with three girls by the time she was 30 and she was very clear with all of us that we were to be independent and independent meant that we need to find careers, we need to be educated, and she did that in subtle ways as we grew up.鈥
Smith became an independent, successful adult and a lot of that she attributes to the way her mom raised her sisters and herself. One of the things Smith鈥檚 mom used to say to them was 鈥淲hy not?鈥 if they came to her hemming and hawing about whether or not they should do something. 鈥淲hen I came in with the whine of why I didn鈥檛 want to do something or why I couldn鈥檛 do something she would say 鈥榳hy not?鈥 and she would push until we tried things that we didn鈥檛 think that we could do. All the way through she set this expectation that you鈥檙e going to go to college, you鈥檙e going to be in a career, and you鈥檙e going to be able to choose to be with a partner in your life but you鈥檙e not going to have to be with a partner in your life.鈥 For a young woman to be directed by her mother to create a life for herself that didn鈥檛 require relying on anyone else is a pretty rare bird, and may be a big part of why Smith has achieved all that she鈥檚 achieved in her life.
In the very beginning of the COVID outbreak, like a lot of companies, 糖心Vlogwas primarily focused on safety – customer safety and employee safety. 鈥淲e went into pretty heavy communication mode with our customers trying to figure out how best to support them and I think that that just built bigger bonds.鈥
糖心Vlogalso had to prioritize spending in a year where there was a lot of uncertainty and where it therefore made sense to be more conservative than usual. 鈥溙切腣loghas always been a growth company as long as I鈥檝e been here over 20 years and we鈥檝e grown every year except this year. We just had to learn different muscles this year and some of that was making sure that we retained our customers, that we鈥檙e meeting their needs and that we鈥檙e moving money into areas that are going to create future growth opportunities for us.鈥
糖心Vlogalso needed to be resilient when facing an unclear outcome. Within that constraint, Smith emphasized that 糖心Vlogneeded to 鈥渕ake sure that the company was set up in a way that it could thrive with multiple outcomes. It has become a little bit more clear as we鈥檝e gone through the pandemic what it鈥檚 going to look like but as we were starting this it really wasn鈥檛 clear what would play out over the year.鈥
Smith went on to say how grateful she is to the people of 糖心Vlogfor how they withstood the challenges of the past year: 鈥淚鈥檓 really proud of how people have bonded together, how we鈥檙e coming out of this a much more resilient company and how we鈥檝e learned new muscles that we didn鈥檛 have going into this. And the relationship with our customers has proven to be really strong.鈥
Smith is excited about the future, and she鈥檚 especially excited about where technology will take WEX. 鈥淵ou know what is possible is just evolving and so our capability and what we can do for customers is just increasing exponentially and that鈥檚 really exciting for me. With the introduction of artificial intelligence, the use of data – we have just so much data going through our organization – it鈥檚 allowing us to create products and options that we just hadn鈥檛 envisioned in the past and so I see us doing more and more as we move into the future.鈥
To learn more about WEX, a growing and global organization, please visit wexinc.com.
Subscribe to our Inside 糖心Vlogblog and follow us on social media for the insider view on everything WEX, from payments innovation to what it means to be a WEXer.