The payments industry is undergoing structural change at a pace that challenges even the most informed observers to keep their understanding current. New technologies, evolving regulatory frameworks, the continued digitization of business processes, and the changing expectations of both merchants and consumers are all reshaping what payments infrastructure needs to do and who is best positioned to provide it. Thomas Priore’s perspective on these shifts — informed by years of operating within the industry — is among the more grounded and practically useful available.
Thomas Priore’s LinkedIn professional network reflects the ecosystem of relationships within which his thinking about payments is developed and tested. Industry conferences, peer conversations, customer relationships, and competitive intelligence all inform a perspective that is genuinely current and practically grounded — not the abstract strategic thinking of someone observing the industry from a distance but the working hypothesis of an active practitioner.
Priority Commerce’s leadership team is a key input into how Priore develops and validates his thinking about the industry’s direction. Leaders across Priority’s various business lines bring market intelligence, customer feedback, and competitive observations that inform the company’s strategic direction — creating a collective intelligence that is more comprehensive and more reliable than any single person’s view could be.
Thomas Priore’s career and strategic outlook on Priority articulates the specific opportunities he sees most clearly and the investments Priority is making to capture them. His observations about where merchant demand is growing, which payment flows remain poorly served by existing solutions, and how technology is changing the economics of payment processing are the product of years of direct engagement with exactly these questions.
Thomas Priore’s leadership philosophy connects his views about the future of payments to the organizational approach he has taken at Priority. His conviction that the most durable competitive advantages in payments are built through deep customer integration rather than commodity pricing — and that capturing those advantages requires patient investment in product quality and customer success — shapes both his strategic thinking and his organizational priorities.