The Engine platform is built for speed and scale. Modular, API-based and cloud-native, it empowers financial services organisations to launch digital banking propositions fast—or modernise existing systems seamlessly.
Seizing on the opportunity, Starling created a separate company with its own leadership and board. This brought focus, autonomy and the ability to move fast. The new company, Engine by Starling, now had a singular vision—a 'North Star’—which created clarity of purpose, allowing the company to move with confidence and drive progress at every stage. PwC committed to a strategic alliance and by combining their ingenuity, banking expertise and leading-edge technology, it was clear Engine could enable the world’s most innovative banks.
The new company built its team purposefully—prioritising tech expertise from the start. “We didn’t just make bankers run a tech company, we let people do what they were best at. We also strengthened governance at the board level, hiring more people with tech backgrounds,” explains Sam Everington, Engine by Starling’s CEO. The result? A company driven by innovation.
Like other tech companies, embracing a culture of change and iteration is critical to its evolution. “Other banks might make two or three platform changes a year,” explains Steve Davies, Banking and Capital Markets at PwC UK. “The Engine team is used to doing 30 to 40 a day.” With data-driven insights—and security built into design and development as default—teams break challenges down to smaller problems they can solve rapidly. “This creates a flywheel in the organisation where curiosity leads to action,” says Davies. “If something doesn’t work, you can dial it back. If it works, you keep going. This is very different from how traditional banks operate.”
The teams have taken the same iterative approach to collaboration as they have to innovation. From securing clients to advising on compliance, even embedding PwC professionals in local markets, the partnership runs on trust built over a decade. “Over time, you create different types of investment—business, personal and friendships. These connections allow you to think differently and challenge your own organisation,” says Davies. “PwC and Engine have a strong relationship with mutual success. There’s a high degree of trust.”
Engine has set its sights on global expansion, launching in multiple markets and supporting clients worldwide. PwC understands the product, the business and the industry. “Their awareness of competitive drivers and regulatory pressures is invaluable,” says Everington. PwC’s industry expertise helped attract clients and break into new markets faster. “You can’t have that without people who have been in front of the industry for decades,” says Everington.