| How Do Banks
Work? The Struggle to Optimize a
Motley Weave
Of Data Systems & Infrastructure
|SYNOPSIS | Bank deployment of technology
solutions is under scrutiny by many quarters. What’s
keeping financial services companies from better leveraging
their investments? Complex, fragmented processes, siloed
decision-making and short-term horizons are among the
issues identified by IBM, EDS, Microsoft and others.
Whether in research report, white paper
or survey form, a slew of recent analyses have come to
the same overall conclusion: Today’s banks work
at a disadvantage in large part because of their crazy-quilt
implementation of technology.
Are these the perennial grousings of
pundits or does the convergence point to a critical dysfunction?
Banking has suffered from “terribly fragmented core
processes” for the last two decades, according to
Virginia Garcia, senior analyst with TowerGroup, Needham,
Mass. She says the current focus reflects an “impetus”
provided by regulators who increasingly expect to see
enterprise-wide management of risk and data and processes.
The industry, Garcia says, is realizing
that it will “spend fortunes” complying with
regultory initiatives unless banks begin to leverage their
investing across business silos. And, there’s no
sugarcoating from long-time Financial Insights’
analyst Bill Bradway on the importance of getting the
technology right: “Banks that don’t do a good
job, to be blunt, become road kill. They’re taken
out of the mix.”
In such a charged environment and in
an era when other companies routinely use technology for
strategic advantage, what goes awry between the time a
financial services company recognizes a problem, identifies
a technology solution, makes a purchasing decision and
proceeds with an implementation? What can be done to address
it? Here are the views of technology providers —
those who have a stake in making that next technology
sale.
Next up: Watch for our July/August
issue, in which we convene a roundtable of bank technology
leaders.
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TIME TO SIMPLIFY
Accenture
Scott Forbes, Partner
Over the past two decades, the world’s
leading banks have invested heavily to build a foundation
for success. They have differentiated by introducing new
business models, creating new products and offering products
in new channels. Then they better targeted these new product
and service offerings using more refined customer segmentation.
However, in their continuous drive
for differentiation and speed-to-market, many banks cobbled
together solutions using a combination of off-the-shelf
products and in-house development, supplemented by process
workarounds and staff expansion. The results are rife
with duplication and inefficiencies. For many banks, this
strategy has resulted in a legacy of complexity —
products, processes, operations and technology —
leaving many banks with stagnating efficiency ratios and
inhibiting their ability to deploy new products and services
to the market, thus constraining their efforts to differentiate.
It is true that banks have managed
complexity issues for years. In the past, favorable market
conditions have enabled them to bear this cost. We are
now at the beginning of a new cycle, in which conditions
will be much more challenging. To be successful in the
new environment, banks have no choice but to address this
complexity.
The next generation of high performing
banks will need to be more differentiated than competitors
in the marketplace — yet, paradoxically more simplified
in their operating models — and outstanding at execution,
both strategically and in day-to-day operations. Banks
that are able to disentangle and simplify this patchwork
approach will be well-placed as tomorrow’s high
performers.
The auto industry has faced a similar
challenge. However, a modular platform strategy has enabled
auto companies to simplify on the inside while still being
able to differentiate on the outside. No doubt, it will
be an extremely challenging journey, for even the best
of banks.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
FOCUSING ON THE REVENUE GAINS
Carreker Corporation
Suzette Massie, President, Global Payments Consulting:
Often the greatest obstacle for banks
in leveraging their technology is the lack of an integrated
view of business objectives at the enterprise level. Many
have razor-sharp clarity at the individual line-of-business
level, but they are challenged to maximize the synergies
or balance the potential competing priorities from a technology
and business-process perspective across the enterprise.
When you see a bank succeed in this
challenge, it is usually because they have that powerful
quality of mastering both the clarity of business objectives
across their lines of business and a well-formulated,
enterprise point of view of customer servicing and business
processes that allows them to best leverage their technology.
John Carreker, President, Global
Payments Technology:
While many organizations have built
core competencies around the selection and deployment
of new technology, it is less common to find similar focus
and skill related to the ongoing use and performance of
technology. Perhaps one of the most cost-effective disciplines
a bank can adopt is to conduct periodic technology audits
to review whether its organization is fully exploiting
— from a functionality and a performance standpoint
— those assets they already own. The right partnership
with a technology vendor creates shared accountability
and interest in such an exercise.
Banks have to be sure they are using
technology as a fulfillment mechanism — and not
a substitute — for clear, innovative business thinking.
An interesting question to ask within any organization
is the extent to which technology investments can be mapped
to real market advantage. Large infrastructure initiatives
often overshadow the smaller and more differentiating
technology projects that most affect the end customers’
experience. It’s always easier to postulate a dollar
of cost savings through new technology than a dollar of
new revenue. The winners are often those who place appropriate
emphasis on the latter.
Suzette
Massie: Assessing an organization’s capacity
to absorb change gets to the heart of the culture of an
institution. We look at some very clear criteria, such
as change history, learning environment, maturity of business
processes, appetite for innovation, customer change tolerance,
level of management support, risk tolerance and other
factors, to create a profile of a bank’s change
capacity. We use the insight gained from this type of
examination, and the direction of the bank’s leadership,
to determine an appropriate pace of change for that institution
and its customers.
Can we have too much of a good thing?
Of course, there are situations of
redundancy, excess capacity and times when business needs
change and a bank may have a flavor of “too much:”
too complex, too many, too big (not appropriate for business
value delivered), or inefficient for an evolving business
process. Analytical models can help banks identify, monitor
and manage the levers in a business environment, better
predicting when they are getting to a tipping point of
“too much.”
An organization with a cultural passion
for learning and pride in innovation is often very adept
and exciting to work with on change initiatives.
In situations where organizations don’t
have clear expectations for desired results or hesitate
to invest appropriately in employee training or customer
awareness around a change, the results of an initiative
can be disappointing.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
NUMB TO THE PAIN
Teradata, A Division Of NCR
Bill Bishop, Senior Industry Consultant for Professional
Services
The issues are generally more cultural
than technical. To fully leverage technology, banks must
make technology decisions more strategically. All too
often, we see individual business silos embracing “point
solutions” for the short term that could be very
problematic if the bank tries to integrate them with the
rest of the enterprise. Unless top IT and business executives
get involved in these one-off decisions, they will never
be able to achieve their complete visions.
Organizations that understand that
customer relationships — not products and services
— drive value are taking a holistic approach to
managing information assets, and viewing technology investments
in the context of overall information strategy. The best
cultures understand that what might make financial sense
in a departmental business silo, for example, might also
be increasing the complexity of overall information management,
driving up enterprise costs and lost opportunities. These
organizations have a broad view of technology investment.
The clearest sign that a bank is ready
for more technology investment is when they have a “pain”
that they can easily articulate (e.g., queries that never
finish, large blocks of system down time). Too often,
however, banks have become numb to their pain: business
people have stopped asking important questions because
they know that IT will never be able to answer them. They
lower their expectations of what decision support analysis
could be and therefore limit the value that they can bring
to their stakeholders. This is more difficult to determine,
but very significant. And yes — a bank can absolutely
have too much technology. If the people and processes
within the bank are not capable of leveraging that technology,
it has no value.
Technology solutions providers can
help assure that “incremental value” projections
are achievable, given culture and process considerations.
This places a governor on investment and creates a reasonable
path to incremental value sooner than later, ideally with
payback in less than 18 months. Future enhancements can
be funded with expected incremental value, increasing
the chance to transform new information assets into competitive
advantage.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
OPTIMIZE THE TOUCHPOINTS
EDS
Rob Sadeckas, Director, Global Card Strategies
Financial services companies see technology
as an expense instead of as an investment, consequently
they look for ways to reduce its cost rather than increase
its effectiveness. In addition, banks’ siloed approach
to products, often accompanied by operational fiefdoms,
can inhibit the sharing of operational best practices
and technological advances and can result in functional
redundancies. Most banks have too short of a view on profit,
taking tactical approaches where bigger picture strategic
initiatives would be more appropriate. In the absence
of an overall vision, along with a roadmap for reaching
that goal, considerable resources can be diverted to evaluate
the opportunity du jour instead of building the leveraged
organization and infrastructure to exploit the opportunities
of tomorrow.
Unfortunately, some technology vendors
prey on these tendencies, enhancing their own revenue
instead of helping banks leverage what they already have.
Technology providers have the responsibility to help their
clients see beyond the morass of everyday operations to
bigger picture opportunities. Often clients consume considerable
energy and resources addressing symptoms of operational
problems, instead of targeting fundamental issues. As
a result, technology can be underutilized.
Vendors need to understand not only
the specifics of their technology, but how that technology
has been applied across a range of industries and operational
environments. This view needs to reach beyond cost, to
encompass top-line revenue-growth opportunities.
By helping financial services companies
break down their product siloes and become more market
driven, vendors will enhance the bank’s ability
to assess the customers’ appetite for new technology.
The focus needs to change from how
a technology can help deliver a specific product or service
to how a consumer can utilize the technology to take advantage
of more bank services. With such an approach, the shift
changes from fostering customer technology adoption to
adding value to technologies with which the consumer is
already familiar.
The next-generation bank customer has
been raised in an interactive environment of video games
and time-shifted entertainment incongruous with banks’
traditional linear approach to investment and payment
products. Banks have an envious advantage over other industries
in the frequency with which they communicate with their
customers. Unfortunately the effectiveness of those touch
points is not always optimal.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
MISALIGNMENT IMPEDES SUCCESS
Fincentric Corporation
David Fleming, Vice President, Products and Services
A financial institution’s ability
to better leverage technology is governed by (or is dependent
on) the alignment of business strategy, operations and
technology strategy. Having heard from many of our credit
union and community bank customers, unless all three are
clearly understood and aligned, an organization will be
challenged to see business improvements from new or existing
technology investments.
As retail banking becomes more of a
top priority for banks, alignment between business and
technology is also becoming more relevant, especially
in the area of branch renewal. The classic goal of getting
the right information to the right people at the right
time is difficult or impossible to accomplish at the branch
with many of the information systems in place today. One
important reason that institutions have been unsuccessful
generating leads at the front line is that branch employees
are often compromised by the message they are asked to
deliver, leading them to disengage from the process altogether.
Too often, these messages are stale, repetitive, generic
or not relevant for the customer by the time they reach
the point-of-service interaction.
Banks not only need to understand how
to synchronize interrelated systems but they need to be
able to collect and present information in a way that
makes individual sense for marketing, services and sales.
Accomplishing this goal allows marketing to be confident
that their messages are being delivered to the right people,
the front line to be confident that the messages they
deliver are valid and relevant, and the sales professional
receiving the leads to be confident that they are of high
quality and worth following up.
Without business and IT working together
to define what is needed of the infrastructure, systems,
storage and data, and how these components all add value
in serving the customer, misalignment between business,
operations and technology will remain the biggest barrier
to success.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
Technology Drives Integration
Fiserv, Inc.
Norm Balthasar, Senior Executive Vice, President and Chief
Operating Officer
Technology doesn’t exist for its
own sake, but to improve a financial institution’s
service to customers. Banks that fail to see the inherent
capabilities technology provides to build the necessary
bridges to those customers may not have them for very
long.
Demand for technology and the sophistication
of the solutions technology offers are increasing faster
than ever before. With this explosion, though, comes a
demand to make all the systems work together in a way
that enables a financial institution to minimize its own
challenges while simultaneously finding better ways to
serve customers.
We’ve heard repeatedly that “bleeding
edge” solutions are not the best way for an institution
to grow its technology capabilities. Systems have become
too complex and, at the same time, too interdependent
to support a variety of stand-alone technology alternatives.
The organizations able to maintain their future market
leadership will be those that take advantage of integration
technologies.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
ADOPT
A PORTFOLIO APPROACH
IBM Business Consulting Services
Daniel W. Latimore, Partner, IBM
Executive Director, Institute for Business Value
While banks are usually good at evaluating
and prioritizing business cases, few financial institutions
develop structured risk assessments or determine the possible
effectiveness or cost of risk-mitigation measures prior
to executing IT projects. Even fewer use risk assessment
to evaluate business cases and determine priorities.
A new IBM Business Consulting Services
study of IT investment in the financial services sector
reveals that almost 70% of the time banks are unable to
quantify benefits of IT investments because they lack
data and metrics. The study, which looked at 165 large
IT projects at leading European financial services companies,
found that, for a variety of reasons, one-third of projects
run over time, one-fifth run over budget and one-fifth
fall short of planned functionality.
Financial services firms are heavily
dependent on information technology, spending over $310
billion on IT globally, according to TowerGroup Inc.,
representing — for large banks — 15% to 22%
of their overall non-interest expense. Unfortunately their
investments too often fail to generate anticipated returns
— and worse, many firms do not even know which are
paying dividends and which are losing money.
Financial services CIOs need to learn
from portfolio management if they are to improve IT project
performance. For decades, financial services firms have
applied portfolio management concepts to reduce risk and
improve returns on invested assets. More recently, progressive
firms have turned to those same basic concepts to significantly
enhance the performance of their IT portfolios, particularly
important with the spotlight Basel II has put on returns
and efficiency.
IT portfolio management takes a holistic
view of IT projects across the enterprise, evaluating
proposals against the firm’s strategic objectives.
CIOs can focus on strategic business initiatives, consolidate
risks and reduce overall risks of IT projects, make more
efficient use of capital and resources, and manage risks
more transparently.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
COMPLEXITY IS CONSTRAINING
Microsoft
Warren Lewis, Managing Director, Banking Industry Financial
Services Group
Complexity of the typical bank environment
is a major constraint for organizations seeking to better
leverage technology. Siloed, legacy core application systems
developed more than 25 years ago were not planned with
cross-channel integration in mind. These applications
assumed one channel — branch offices. They also
assumed a simple product set — traditional DDA,
passbook savings and time certificates coupled with installment
loans. The industry has since layered new products, such
as MMAs, statement savings accounts and bank cards. Complexity
is added as these products are accessed and serviced through
more and more delivery channels, including call centers,
ATM, Internet and even mobile phone.
A second issue is organizational silos
within the banking organization. Most notable is in the
payments arena, where leading banks have recognized the
need to create a payment czar to look for synergy opportunities
company-wide. The same is true for banking delivery channels.
Leading banks have created strategic roles that look across
all the channels.
The real test in using technology is
that it must support business objectives and strategies
and that there must be a road map tying the technology
together. Technology should not be pursued for its own
sake. Leading banks will also build a business/economic
case for adding or upgrading technology, providing a solid
filter for supporting strategic alignment. Larger banks
may also set aside portions of their IT budget and other
resources to explore emerging technologies, allowing them
to move up the learning curve and position themselves
for accelerated adoption when the time is right. Mobile
services and proximity payments are examples of technologies
such organizations are beginning to explore today.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
THE
VALUE OF INTEGRATION
SAS
Ellen Joyner, Global Industry Strategist, Financial Services
Many institutions have searched for
the quick fix with technology, as opposed to really understanding
what processes are best supported through their currently
implemented technology. In many cases, investments are
made with promises of increased profits and sales, and
new systems are put in place without a true understanding
of how they will work with current core banking systems.
In addition, there may be little emphasis
on providing the effort and resources for the real value
of data and analytical integration to be realized. A lack
of focus on restructuring current organizational processes
and employee skill levels to support new customer-focused
business models may be at fault. Treat the technology
as if you were managing a portfolio of investments. Look
to implement an architecture that adapts to changing business
models and allows for companies to measure performance
and profitability.
Technology for the sake of keeping
up with the competition is definitely a sign that there
is too much technology, and probably also a sign that
investment returns are not being tracked or measured.
CIO and IT managers today have a real opportunity to prove
their value and deliver the results of technology investments
in the boardroom. With tightened regulatory requirements,
CEOs and CFOs have taken a necessary interest in technology
investment and whether it is helping them address compliance
needs. They need to ensure the necessary technology systems
are in place, and that these systems are intertwined with
operational processes so that integrity and confidence
in their internal controls can be assured.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
A SINGLE CUSTOMER VIEW
NCR Payment Solutions
Joe Knicely, Vice President, America’s Region
Financial services companies buy technology-based
solutions to improve customer services, generate new revenue
and lower costs. These purchases are always based upon
a value proposition with an attractive payback. The key
is how to further improve the return on investment by
leveraging existing systems within an enterprise-wide
infrastructure, minimizing redundant purchases and leveraging
technology standards.
Historically, financial services companies
have purchased technology-based solutions that addressed
an immediate need of a department or business unit within
the bank, without having an overall vision of how technology
could be used across the bank enterprise. This decision-making
process created “system silos” that make it
difficult to share data and information between systems.
Thus, when one of their customers buys multiple products,
that bank can’t see a single view of the overall
customer relationship. As a result, that bank cannot calculate
the profitability of the customer and what products to
cross sell. Additionally, because the bank can’t
see a single view of how their customers touch the bank,
it becomes difficult to offer improved banking convenience.
Proof-of-concept and pilot systems
can help prove a solution concept in a limited production
environment, without having to disrupt mission critical
production systems. Such an approach can help verify that
the technology works, is stable and supportable, delivers
the expected result from a feature function perspective
and that the business case and justification is valid.
We see the retail industry, along with
transportation and communications, using data and information
more aggressively, to better understand the relationships
they have with their customers. These industries have
done a better job of establishing a single view of their
customers, and these industries appear to apply new technology
sooner to get an edge on competition.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
Copyright
© 2005 by Banking Strategies, published by BAI.
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