Full-Time
Global payment platform for cross-border transactions
No salary listed
Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
In Person
People at Payoneer who can refer or advise you
Payoneer provides a global payment platform that helps businesses send and receive money across borders in multiple currencies. It works by giving businesses accounts and payment tools that let them pay suppliers and get paid by customers as if they were local, instead of using costly international wire transfers. It also connects users to major online marketplaces to expand sales opportunities. Compared with traditional banks and other fintechs, Payoneer focuses on reducing transfer fees and simplifying cross-border transactions through a multi-currency account and marketplace connections. The company’s goal is to enable easy, low-cost international payments to support global business expansion.
Company Size
1,001-5,000
Company Stage
IPO
Headquarters
New York City, New York
Founded
2005
People at Payoneer who can refer or advise you
Help us improve and share your feedback! Did you find this helpful?
Health Insurance
Dental Insurance
Vision Insurance
401(k) Retirement Plan
401(k) Company Match
Paid Vacation
Paid Sick Leave
Parental Leave
Wellness Program
Flexible Work Hours
The story behind PitchNow. Hello, i'm shonit. I'm the Co-founder and Design Head at PitchNow. I studied design at National Institute of Fashion Technology (NIFT), New Delhi, and over the years I've had the opportunity to work with some incredible people and brands. I worked as a Creative Director at J. Walter Thompson, freelanced with renowned fashion designer Suket Dhir and contributed to projects that helped win the prestigious Woolmark Prize, before starting my own creative agency, Kurage, in 2017. Since then, its team at Kurage has partnered with leading brands and organizations including Titan, Razorpay, upGrad, Amity University, Payoneer, ISB, Atlas Copco, Parker Pens, Wiley, and many others. Throughout this journey, one responsibility remained constant: pitching ideas and leading creative teams. Over the last 15 years, I've participated in hundreds of pitches - some successful, some unsuccessful, and many unforgettable. Along the way, I learned something surprising: "The best work doesn't always win. The best-presented work often does." The pitch that changed everything. In 2018, I pitched for Tata Health. At that time, Kurage had just started. Pitchnow had no big clients, no impressive portfolio, and were competing against some of India's top agencies. On paper, Pitchnow shouldn't have won. So instead of telling Tata Health what Pitchnow could do, Pitchnow decided to show them. Pitchnow spent days researching the brand, building a strategy, and creating sample social media posts specifically for them. Not generic samples. Actual work designed as if Pitchnow had already won the project. And Pitchnow won. "That pitch taught me a lesson I've carried ever since: Don't just tell people your ideas. Show them." It started much earlier. My first business pitch happened in 2004 when I was in Class 8. I painted greeting cards by hand and pitched them to local gift shops. To my surprise, people loved them. Demand increased, and I even collaborated with other student artists to fulfil orders. Looking back, that experience taught me the same lesson: "People respond when they can see and experience your idea. Not just hear about it." The pattern I kept seeing. Over the years, I pitched for projects ranging from ₹5,000 during college to multi-crore opportunities while working at J. Walter Thompson and later at Kurage. After hundreds of pitches, I started noticing a pattern. The agencies and freelancers winning projects weren't always the most talented. They were often the ones who presented their ideas better. They told better stories. They created stronger first impressions. They helped clients visualise the outcome. The quality of the work mattered. But the quality of the presentation mattered too. Its first attempt failed. In 2022, Pitchnow decided to solve this problem through software. Pitchnow reached out to over 5,000 companies and analysed thousands of proposals from agencies, freelancers, consultants, and service providers across the world. Pitchnow studied proposal structures, storytelling patterns, design approaches, and even how clients interacted with proposals. The product Pitchnow built was powerful. But it was also complicated. After 1.5 years of development, Pitchnow realised people couldn't easily understand how it worked or the value it delivered. "So we shut it down. It was a difficult decision. But it was the right one." The idea never left. Even after stopping development, I couldn't stop thinking about the problem. Every pitch, proposal, and client interaction kept reinforcing the same belief: Great work deserves better presentation. For the next three years, the idea evolved in my head. It became simpler. Clearer. More focused. In September 2025, I shared the idea with my friend and now co-founder. He immediately saw the potential. A few months later, Pitchnow started building PitchNow. What is PitchNow? PitchNow helps companies, agencies, consultants, service businesses and freelancers create personalised proposal experiences in minutes instead of days. It helps transform a brief into a compelling story. A story that's beautifully presented, easy to understand, and designed to leave a strong first impression. The result isn't just another PDF. It's a responsive, interactive presentation experience that feels more like a premium website. "Whether viewed on a phone, tablet, laptop, or large screen, the experience remains seamless." More than just presentation. A great pitch isn't only about design. It's also about understanding what works. That's why PitchNow provides insights such as: * Live Tracking :Track every view in real time and know exactly when clients open, revisit, or engage with your pitch. * Engagement Score :Measure how interested your audience is with a single score based on viewing behavior and interactions. * Completion Rate :See what percentage of viewers reached the end of your pitch and stayed engaged throughout. * Unique Viewers :Know how many individual people viewed your pitch, helping you understand its true reach. * Average Time Spent :Discover how long viewers spend on your pitch and whether they're consuming it in depth. * Most Viewed Sections :Identify the slides and sections that attract the most attention from your audience. * Drop-off Points :Find exactly where viewers lose interest and leave, so you can improve future pitches. "These insights help you learn from every pitch and continuously improve how you present your ideas." Why Pitchnow is building PitchNow. Pitchnow believe great ideas deserve great presentation. Pitchnow believe talented people lose opportunities because their proposals fail to communicate the value of their work. And Pitchnow believe pitching should be faster, smarter, and more effective. Pitchnow spent years learning how winning pitches are created. PitchNow is its attempt to put those lessons into a tool that anyone can use. "We're just getting started. And we're excited to have you along for the journey."
Payoneer Global has partnered with Hong Kong-based FundPark to offer AI-driven credit lines up to $10 million for eligible cross-border e-commerce customers, aiming to better align financing with working capital cycles. The collaboration marks Payoneer's push into higher-value services beyond its core payment rails. Separately, the company filed a $79.16 million shelf registration in March 2026 for 17.4 million shares related to employee stock ownership plans. The FundPark partnership could strengthen Payoneer's move towards premium services, though it introduces fresh regulatory and credit scrutiny around embedded lending. Analysts project the company's revenue to reach $1.3 billion by 2028. The collaboration represents a strategic shift as Payoneer seeks to deepen relationships with small and medium businesses whilst facing intensifying competition in cross-border payments.
Payoneer, a financial technology company enabling cross-border payments for small and medium-sized businesses, stands out as a strong buy amongst stocks trading under $10. Trading at $4.60 per share, the company has delivered outstanding annual revenue growth of 26.3% over the past five years, reflecting significant market share gains. The company's earnings per share growth of 24.6% annually over the last two years has exceeded revenue gains, amplified by share repurchases that have enhanced shareholder returns. Founded in 2005 to address international payment challenges during e-commerce's early days, Payoneer provides services that allow businesses to send and receive global payments. Meanwhile, Sabre and The Real Brokerage face headwinds, with concerns around cash generation, margins and debt levels suggesting investors should exercise caution.
Benchmark has cut its price target on Payoneer Global Inc. to $7 from $10 whilst maintaining a Buy rating. The firm noted that investor focus on declining interest income from customer funds has overshadowed the company's strengthening fundamentals and strategic initiatives, with shares trading near multi-year lows. Payoneer reported fiscal Q4 results on 26 February, with small and medium-sized business customer revenue of $197 million, up 9% year-over-year. Spend on Payoneer cards reached $1.6 billion, rising 6% year-over-year, though growth with large e-commerce sellers slowed to 15% due to tariff-related headwinds and softness in Latin America. The financial technology company provides cross-border payment solutions enabling SMBs to transact globally.
Payoneer reported fourth-quarter revenue of $274.8 million, missing analyst estimates of $281.6 million despite a 5% year-on-year increase. The fintech company's shares dropped sharply following the results. CEO John Caplan attributed growth to the company's shift towards larger, more complex customers and deeper business-to-business penetration. B2B revenue rose 27% year-over-year and now represents 30% of revenue excluding interest. Management emphasised improving average revenue per user through prioritising higher-value clients over volume. The company issued 2026 EBITDA guidance of $280 million at the midpoint, below analyst estimates of $283.9 million. CFO Bea Ordonez acknowledged some softening in small and medium business volumes, particularly from China, but said guidance accounts for various macro scenarios. Market capitalisation stands at $1.65 billion.