I recently attended the Genpact AI conference, where the Genpact employees I spoke to were energized by the changes AI is bringing and are focused on helping clients operationalize emerging technologies at scale. The company is investing in tools to provide greater ongoing feedback from employees: an HR executive described how they use an employee feedback system combined with a benefit awards system (like an airline's rewards program) to monitor employee satisfaction and identify ways to remedy shortcomings.
In this blog, I look at Genpact’s approach to scaling AI across the enterprise.
Scaling AI across the enterprise
Genpact’s AI focus is on the “AI of Now”. It believes that for AI to have an impact, it needs to be scaled operationally across the enterprise. Unlike many competitors, Genpact did not demonstrate futuristic AI functionality but instead focused on how it helps drive adoption across enterprises, presenting examples of operational deployment of AI to six clients. To grow its client base, Genpact wants to do more work with Tier Two enterprises, which typically have a more significant portion of their operations delivered with legacy platforms and manual processes.
To drive operational adoption of AI across an enterprise, Genpact believes there are three things required:
Practical AI applications
To build its AI services, Genpact surveyed what CFOs want from their technology investments, and found their top requirements to be:
Based on this research, Genpact has embedded AI into its F&A offerings to enable CFOs to improve capital allocation and produce more reliable sales and profit forecasts with on-demand revenue and cost forecasts, fast decision-making with what-if analyses, and the ability to drive change in the trajectory of their business. Using these tools, enterprise clients can:
Genpact can develop better AI-based insights than any single client because it draws on a large pool of data from clients across multiple industries. Genpact’s business supporting F&A draws on its experience doing 500 quarterly book closes for 35k legal entities annually. The data and domain experience from this sizeable annual transaction pool enable robust predictive analysis and the ability to apply AI using keystroke-level process knowledge, thus enabling it to deliver outcomes to its clients. Similarly, Genpact has applied its considerable operational transaction experience to address supply chain and bank fraud challenges for clients.
New AI tools
At the conference, Genpact announced three proprietary tools for its AI ecosystem:
In addition, Genpact’s GenAI solution, Scout, was on the conference app. It summarized each presentation soon after it had been delivered. This was a significant aid to this conference attendee because of the speed at which the summaries were sent out after each session. Presentation slides were also available on the app soon after each session.
Conclusions
Genpact’s AI strategy is to drive operational adoption of AI within enterprises to deliver business value. Operational adoption requires both client and Genpact employees to become familiar with AI technology and how it works in practice. Success in AI deployment means work practices will change, eventually making historical operations architectures irrelevant. Successful change management will need employee buy-in, and Genpact is building continuous feedback mechanisms to keep employees on board.
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In July, I published a blog outlining the latest evolving practices in core banking platform transformation. In this new blog, I outline Capgemini's approach to addressing core banking transformation challenges with its clients.
The imperative of platform transformation
Demand for core banking platform transformation continues to proliferate to enable banks to:
However, bankers are reluctant to start transformation projects due to many key challenges, including:
Capgemini’s approach to core banking transformation
Capgemini has developed a disciplined core banking transformation methodology to address the challenges to achieving a successful transformation based on six critical success factors. It addresses each of these success factors in its engagements as follows:
Effective governance model:
A project governance model must enable project lifecycle continuity. The governance team must include all relevant stakeholders, including the IT group, LOB owners, and third-party service providers. Bringing in the right decision-makers for each microservice is critical to keeping a project on track. Retaining an active governance board will mitigate the risk of project failure over time as people change roles.
Identifying functionalities embedded in the core platform:
Most legacy systems have poor functionality documentation. Banks need to identify functionalities, dependencies, and integrations. BIAN is the standard reference for an industry-standard banking framework. This process needs to be executed with speed and accuracy. Capgemini employs its IPs: CAP360, a legacy code analyzer, and BREAD, a GenAI legacy rules extractor. These tools typically deliver a 40% cost reduction in identifying functionalities versus manual identification.
Sequencing the decomposition of functionalities:
Their dependence on ledger systems must drive the sequencing of pulling out functions into modules. Banks should begin by decoupling systems, such as customer management, where multiple functionalities converge to deliver service. The second set of functions to be decoupled are the ones not dependent on ledger systems (e.g., compliance and payments). Finally, the bank should decouple functions dependent on the ledger systems.
Prioritizing orchestration investments:
A microservices environment needs to be able to link the modules to execute business processes. Rolling out an orchestrator requires prioritizing which functionalities to orchestrate first and what customization to build into the orchestrator.
Reinventing the target operating model:
To reinvent and execute a new operating module, the bank must assign the right team to own and manage individual modules continuously. It needs to coordinate how teams work to enable collaboration across modules and align their development roadmaps.
Linking business value to the transformation journey:
Identifying, implementing, and reporting agreed-upon KPIs and SLAs enables the stakeholders to remain committed to the project and identify remedies if objectives are not met.
Case study
Capgemini recently undertook a core banking transformation project for a tier-one global financial institution offering retail, wealth, corporate, and SME banking services in 50 worldwide markets.
Challenges:
Scope of services provided:
To support the bank’s discovery phase and baseline the operations architecture, Capgemini delivered architecture components including:
Capgemini set up a Design authority covering:
Benefits:
Conclusions
In summary, most banks are pursuing a hollow-the-core strategy for core banking transformation. However, the success of that approach is dependent on bringing all relevant stakeholders to oversee the project and the ongoing evolution of operations. Rigorous prioritization of module sequencing based on business goals and process dependencies will drive value enablement; and orchestrating technology modules and operations units will deliver value to customers.
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Banks are undertaking core banking transformation projects at an accelerating pace. Typically, two-thirds of these transformation projects will fail. Most either fail to implement a new solution altogether, leaving the bank with the original legacy system, or (in the case of a successful implementation), fail to deliver the anticipated value. Some projects, such as those at TSB Bank and Cooperative Bank, cause permanent impairment to the business and become the stuff of legend.
Since the risk of failure is high, why are almost all banks undertaking core platform transformation projects today? Driving the change is a rapidly evolving industry facing multiple challenges:
To address these challenges, banks are pursuing three goals with their transformation efforts: developing low-cost access to quality resources, eliminating internal barriers to all corporate resources, and increasing operational efficiency.
Low-cost access to resources
Banks are pursuing the goal of providing low-cost access to resources by building ecosystems of vendors and partners with the help of technology service providers. To succeed, their platforms need to be able to plug in products and services from the ecosystem partners, so the banks are enabling optimum internal technology deployments by modularizing functionality within their platforms.
To do this, banks need a tech/business talent ecosystem to staff transformation projects. Finally, they need an ecosystem of third-party business partners, such as independent investment advisors, loan originators, and data vendors, to set up new businesses quickly and meet open banking requirements.
Eliminating internal barriers to corporate resources
Eliminating internal barriers to corporate resources is being achieved by rearchitecting core banking platforms into a microservices architecture, which enables the bank to change the operational structure from product silo-based to customer-centric. A customer-centric architecture allows the bank to deliver hyper-personalization of services to each customer. Critical to successfully removing internal barriers is changing how data is managed by improving data sourcing, scrubbing, and efficiency. Finally, embedding AI into a platform that can access all relevant data enables customers to shop complex offering portfolios more easily.
Increasing operational efficiency
The third goal of improving efficiency is being achieved by digitalizing all processes and documents. Banks are outsourcing more processes to convert CapEx to OpEx to align revenues and costs better. Processes are being automated with either digitalization or RPA. Where manual execution is still required, banks are implementing AI to reduce manual error, increase the span of control, and deploy consistent use of best practices.
Summary
The biggest challenge to achieving these goals is implementation risk, and the biggest challenge to successful implementation is change management. Banks mostly avoid full replacement strategies in favor of phased modernization or functionality decoupling. These strategies are easier to pursue using cloud delivery, which reduces change management risks by moving technology change management to the cloud provider, leaving business change management as an internal task.
Third-party vendors can provide best practices from other engagements in the industry, which is especially helpful to regional and local banks. These best practices are evolving rapidly as FinTech and cloud technology continue to evolve.
I will publish a market assessment on transforming core banking services in September to delve deeper into this market. It will identify how the market is evolving, what services banks are buying to support their transformation efforts, and the benefits being realized.
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Financial institutions are data-driven businesses, and because of decades of investment in technology, banks process data using heterogeneous legacy environments. Modern AI and GenAI solutions promise to enable banks to manage and analyze data more effectively. However, adopting new AI solutions is lagging far behind the market hype. In this blog, I look at how TCS is helping clients address this challenge.
The Challenge
Banks must modernize their data management practices and technology infrastructure to adapt to fast-changing regulations, business models, stakeholders, and technology offerings. The scale and complexity of bank legacy data environments are a primary inhibitor to data modernization.
Most existing AI and GenAI projects are point solutions that deliver some benefits but cannot deliver business transformation. Further, when an AI solution is implemented, the highly siloed nature of large banks makes data analysis ineffective because modern AI, ML, and GenAI require the analysis of very large data sets.
For banks to adopt AI at the pace and scale needed to drive fundamental business transformation requires support from technology services providers. Essential third-party tools needed include:
TCS’ Approach to AI Enablement
TCS has multiple offerings specific to BFSI customers and their requirements around AI. For example, it has developed Advanced Quantz & Analytics, an offering to enable clients to accelerate their AI journey, delivering services comprising:
These five services are delivered as a package to identify combined business/technology requirements and implement transformative change. However, to reduce complexity and time to operational deployment, TCS is developing use cases and templates for AI deployment.
To support the development of use cases, templates, and offering development, the Advanced Quantz & Analytics team has built four COEs:
These COEs have developed use cases that are segmented by time to deployment and business value:
TCS has developed ten categories of ML/AI models it wants to work with in BFSI, including sales, risk, financial forecast, and language models that are already fully operational, and others that are in development.
Advanced Quantz & Analytics has developed 147 use cases across eight asset classes, with credit and equity having the highest number of use cases developed to date. To operationalize use cases, clients have access to TCS’ ecosystem of 1k technology providers and 500 FinTechs in TCS’ COIN ecosystem.
TCS is working with 80 clients in BFSI to deliver AI services with the Advanced Quantz & Analytics offering. Most clients are large banks able to draw on large data sets, but many engagements require TCS to deploy synthetic data sets to enable effective ML and analysis.
Summary
AI and GenAI offer new power to enhance the value of bank data and transform many financial services business models. Identifying relevant use cases and implementing effective solutions remains challenging for the banking industry. TCS has developed an offering to support banks deploying AI and GenAI effectively and quickly. Its Advanced Quantz & Analytics offering has a roadmap for developing new use cases and toolsets to enable the offering to mature as AI technology continues to develop quickly.
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I recently attended the EY Global Analyst Summit 2024, the theme of which was Rethink! The conference sought to answer the question, “How is EY rethinking the value it delivers?” and this blog looks at how EY is rethinking its activities in support of the BFS industry sector.
EY has been growing its business rapidly, with the most recent numbers showing 15% revenue growth for the FY year ending June 31, 2023. EY is rethinking and doubling down on its transformation offerings to grow its business further and is investing in two areas (IP and offerings) to enable differentiated delivery of transformation projects.
Intellectual Property
EY is focusing its IP investments on accelerators, frameworks, and platforms, and is developing business solutions in partnership with ISVs and FinTechs. EY’s key platform offerings are:
The key benefits banking clients derive from these platforms are the ability to:
Offerings
EY has eleven categories of service offerings. The conference highlighted two offerings in the BFS industry: managed services and sustainability.
Managed services are its most recently created offering category (see my blog “EY Managed Services Driving Increased Efficiency for Clients” from June, 2022). Managed services have been growing faster than EY’s expectations and currently over 500 managed services clients are buying four or more managed services solutions from EY. Since June 2022, EY has added three new lines of managed services: customer & growth, supply chain, and technology services.
Managed Services
Managed Services recently acquired a FDL, which provided one of the clients with centralized data management taxonomies, practices, and services across its disparate businesses. EY will build the FDL capability into a high-end managed data services offering for global enterprises, enabling them to:
Global banks, which have diverse business segments and customer bases with highly diverse businesses, are expected to become a large client base for the managed data service offering.
Sustainability
EY’s sustainability practice has delivered 17k engagements for 11k clients with a dedicated Climate Change and Sustainability Services team of 4K professionals. EY has applied and learned from its internal sustainability activities and reduced the EY carbon emissions by 43% from 2019 to 2023 while growing its headcount by 40%. The practice provides ESG and Sustainability technology services across:
Sustainability for BFS services focuses on reporting and Green IT, and it will soon add three services to support banks' lending activities and sourcing decisions. Sustainability services for BFS are delivered from the managed services unit. After several years of breakneck growth, BFS represents the largest single industry segment in EY’s sustainable managed services.
BFS Industry Offerings
EY’s BFS industry cloud offering is Nexus, a platform for financial institutions looking to digitalize their operations. Launched in 2020, Nexus runs on clients’ choice of cloud provider infrastructure and comprises industry-focused products packaged to address market and client challenges. One way in which banks are using Nexus is to accelerate their adoption of modern core platforms. To develop emerging functionality for banks, EY is working with alliance and ecosystem partners to develop joint offerings, starting with a lower-cost lead generation solution.
An example of Nexus’ recently delivered large-scale banking cloud migration engagements is where a consortium of four New York-headquartered global banks set up a cloud-based processing system for syndicated loans and now processes 65% of all syndicated loans. Based on Microsoft, the platform uses blockchain technology to enable transparency down to the loan level. The platform has reduced settlement times from weeks to days.
EY has three focus areas for growth in BFS: technology modernization, risk management, and sustainable development; and it has built the tools for rapid delivery to improve processing in these three areas. EY recently acquired a FDL, enabling it to deliver the data management capabilities to populate these three focus areas with better data and analytics. The FDL capability will allow it to accelerate the growth of its current offerings for BFS.
EY is working on several initiatives to provide banks with better access to and use of their existing data:
developed a comprehensive suite of FinTech solutions to help scale acquisition strategies and service models as well as foster organic growth and engagement within financial institutions’ customer base leveraging the partnership with MoneyLion and its embedded marketplace infrastructure technology, data insights and content solutions
Summary
In summary, EY’s banking practice is doubling down on offerings that migrate platforms to the cloud, making more data accessible to a broader range of users and delivering managed services to clients. These new offerings will allow EY to reach out to markets and clients, such as mid-size firms, where it has not been active. Managed services and industry-specific transformations are the fastest-growing segments of its BFS business and promise to be less cyclical than its traditional professional services business.
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Financial institutions have complex portfolios of products presented to customers in a siloed, product-centric fashion, which makes shopping for financial products inefficient and reduces the overall customer experience. However, digital delivery promises to improve customers' shopping experience, CX, and CSAT.
Some firms in other industries have been doing this successfully, such as Disney for its theme parks. Each theme park has a complex set of offerings to choose from, and Disney uses its MagicBand to connect consumers to all their choices within the park and deliver the final experience. However, developing a customer-centric, unified shopping experience for financial services remains an industry challenge. In the early 2000s, Citibank tried to address these issues with its “Financial Supermarket” concept, But by 2008, the Citibank experiment famously failed.
Capgemini’s client-centricity framework
Capgemini and Salesforce are working together to enable enterprises to deliver customer-centric, unified, and optimized consumer experiences for financial services, similar to the Disney MagicBand concept. Capgemini has built a client-centricity framework to identify customer drivers and enterprise enablers that will support reengineered customer engagement, and in turn, drive revenue growth and improve customer satisfaction. Critical components of Capgemini’s client-centricity framework include:
Effective organizations can analyze customer drivers in real-time and prioritize offerings and fulfillment to meet a customer’s needs.
Salesforce technology
Salesforce provides the solutions and platforms to integrate and deliver enablement for clients. Key Salesforce offerings used in the partnership include:
These solutions provide functionality to enhance data quality and integrity, provide contextual suggestions, and customize AI actions to specific customers.
By combining these two offerings, Capgemini’s client-centricity offer and Salesforce’s Sales and Experience Cloud offerings, financial institutions can deliver hyper-personalized customer experiences based on their individual preferences. The AI embedded in these platforms enables advisors and customers to find available financial products that are relevant. Current engagements are delivering these capabilities to banks. Here is a recent example:
Client example: large U.S. bank
Challenge
A leading retail bank could not deliver the seamless customer experience it wanted. Specific challenges included:
Scope of Services
Benefits
As this case demonstrates, customers no longer have to “stumble upon” products that meet their needs by accessing multiple product silos; the platform can sift through an ocean of data to narrow down offerings and present a few highly relevant suggestions for final consideration. This should make dealing with a bank less stressful and more satisfying.
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NelsonHall recently attended the Infosys U.S. Analyst Day in Dallas, the theme of which was “Being AI First”. It demonstrated clear progress since last year’s conference in Infosys’ thinking and approach to the critical steps for effective implementation and operational deployment of AI.
Key components of AI-led operational transformation
Infosys and its clients attending the conference identified three essential components to enabling an effective AI-led operations transformation:
To drive the first component of stakeholder interaction, Infosys pursues a hub-first strategy for innovation. Hubs are operational centers of expertise where Infosys and its clients work on client projects to develop novel POCs and operational deployments. Clients prefer to be involved in innovating their operations and have relevant input to shape and drive the innovation process. This enables a co-creation process that allows enterprises to focus on innovation at a higher success rate. Infosys values the feedback, domain expertise, and deep knowledge of an institution’s differentiating factors that clients provide in a hub environment.
To drive innovation in a tightly coupled co-creation environment, Infosys has built tech and innovation hubs worldwide. In the U.S., it had committed to building four hubs in 2018, but it has set up six because of client demand. The six hubs are based in Providence, RI; Richardson, TX; Hartford, CT; Raliegh, NC; Indianapolis, IN; and Phoenix, AZ.
The ideation from hubs needs to be realized with AI functionality and delivered with operational flexibility. To enable that synthesis, Infosys has coupled two of its platforms, Topaz (an AI-first offering that helps enterprises create value from generative AI technologies) and Cobalt (a set of services, solutions and platforms for enterprises to accelerate their cloud journey), to speed up ideation and the operationalization of successful POCs. This enables innovation at both speed and scale.
To continue growing its capabilities, Infosys is investing in AI to support operational transformation. Infosys’ significant investments in AI-led transformation are:
Infosys’ AI-first strategy for financial services
Infosys has built its most comprehensive domain-specific AI capabilities for the financial services industry. Financial services is the largest industry segment for Infosys (~30% of revenues), and North America is the largest single market (~60% of total revenues).
Infosys’ AI-first strategy for financial services focuses on nine areas it uses to help banks improve their business performance. The focus areas are:
Client use case
Infosys provided a use case of a credit union. The credit union has been committed to giving back to its employees and members, and had to identify how changing technology and member preferences could be fulfilled and achieved with new delivery techniques and offers. Data is the core of the financial services industry, And the credit union segmented its data into three areas:
Infosys identified 200 use cases to manage the data and drive better customer value. Cases were ideated, POCed, and operationalized in a disciplined waterfall where unpromising use cases were dropped. The primary driver of use cases that make it to full operational deployment is customer data rather than product data. The client started the initiative with employees and leveraged Infosys’ tools and support to enable it to develop offerings and delivery methodologies that appeal to a younger generation with differing priorities and needs than the older generation.
Summary
Intelligent automation and data transformation POCs and projects have gained traction over the past year, propelled by the GenAI opportunity and hype. Only some of the many POCs and MVPs have translated into operational transformation at scale. Infosys’ approach to using AI to drive operational change uses client co-creation to build differentiating operational change, data hygiene techniques to enable effective analysis, and rigorous segmentation of data, projects, and processes to set role-based responsibilities. This approach allows for change to happen quickly and at scale.
Infosys provided examples of how it delivers these services in the financial sector, including regional and local banks. These banks represent a larger addressable market for IT services vendors than tier-one banks because they have older legacy systems and will be less likely to retain as high a level of internal operations as the tier-one banks in the long run.
The challenge for vendors is to identify compelling value propositions for clients. Infosys has addressed this challenge with its localization initiatives that drive the co-creation of differentiated operational offerings at scale. Data drives the financial services industry, and Infosys’ activities with a credit union, described above, outline how a data transformation program can be handled.
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ESG services are an emerging set of tracking and reporting capabilities for enterprises. Emerging technologies do not mature in a straight line but cycle through peaks and valleys of development and adoption as they mature. In the past year, ESG services have passed from the euphoria stage of market adoption to the valley stage as the hype has been confronted by the real-world challenges of failure to meet expectations and outright fraud in some cases.
I am currently conducting a market assessment of how ESG services are transforming the banking sector, and here are some early findings.
ESG in Banking: early findings
The financial services industry is an early adopter of ESG reporting due to regulations that set implementation deadlines, and because of the data-heavy nature of the business.
Adoption is currently immature but is growing rapidly. Financial institutions are applying 60% of their efforts to environmental services, 30% to social services, and 10% to governance services. Social and governance initiatives are growing faster than environmental initiatives.
Currently, 70% of banks’ ESG initiatives are internal business activities, 20% investing and lending, and 10% supply chain activities (banks have small supply chains relative to manufacturing, wholesale, and retail).
Also, 80% of ESG activities have been focused on reporting, primarily for regulatory purposes. The remaining 20% of activities have focused on mitigating adverse ESG outcomes. As financial institutions are enabling better reporting, they are now accelerating their mitigation efforts.
Adoption is highest in Europe because its regulations are stricter than in other geographies, with earlier implementation deadlines. North America has the second highest level of ESG adoption. Regulations for ESG adoption in North America and Europe generally follow the same principles, with Europe implementing its regulatory deadlines earlier and with higher remediation hurdles. The rest of the world lags behind these two markets in adoption and has far less consistency in applying principles.
The adoption of ESG services in banking is concentrated in the following processes:
Areas of emerging adoption include:
Many ESG engagements are enhancing banks’ data management capabilities to assess and report on emissions. Below are two examples.
Case 1: British multinational bank and Capgemini
Case 2: Large capital markets firm and Infosys
In December, I will be publishing a market assessment of ESG activities in banking, “Transforming the Banking Industry with ESG Services” which will delve deeper into how this global initiative is developing, what banks are doing to address these challenges, and how technology services vendors are supporting this transformation. Though this is a transformation that is still in its early stages, banking is one of the industries making the change quicker due to the regulatory deadlines it faces and its high use of IT services in all its business lines.
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NelsonHall has just completed the research for a market assessment and forecast report on Transforming Intelligent Automation Services in Banking. We found that banks have accelerated the adoption of IA services in operations over the past two years, a shift that has been driven by:
By transitioning operational delivery from manual to digital processing, financial institutions can drive:
IA adoption pattern
Tier-one banks have been the primary adopters, with every tier-one bank having an active IA program. Regional banks and industry services providers are increasing their commitment to IA projects. Only 30% of regional banks had IA programs three years ago; today, 75% of these banks have active IA programs. Local banks are where regional banks were three years ago, with 30% having active IA programs. Capital markets firms are late adopters but are beginning to adopt IA services to serve high-net-worth customers and meet reduced settlement deadlines.
The pace of lower-tier banks starting IA programs is accelerating, and three years from now we expect all financial institutions to be fully committed to IA in their business. The growth in clients and project scope will drive growth rates of IA revenues to 16.5% per year for the next five years to 2028. Managed services for IA operations will grow 17% over the forecast period. Growth has been fastest in mature markets, but now the emerging and APAC markets are growing faster than mature ones.
Financial institutions are focusing their efforts on the following:
How vendors are enabling IA initiatives
Vendors are helping clients accelerate their IA initiatives by delivering enablement in four areas:
Outlook
IA services in BFS are continuing to evolve new offerings and use cases. Developments include:
Increasingly, business value from IA projects is less about cost savings and more about business agility. The ability to bring products to market faster and provide operational support for rapidly changing offerings is more important than cost savings on sunsetting offerings.
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Capgemini has partnered with Microsoft to develop and market a dynamic hyper-personalization offering for the financial services industry. This blog explores how hyper-personalization capabilities can be adapted to the unique needs of the financial services industry.
Background
Enterprises want to increase the personalization of their offerings to customers to increase CSAT and sales success. However, effective personalization is an immature art. Enterprises have been using machine learning (ML) to drive the personalization of sales and marketing offerings to their customers. Still, the challenge of ML here is that the user can only generate incomplete information due to the iterative nature of the trials and limited contextual data. The ML bot can only observe the response to a chosen action but doesn't know the answer for other possible actions (i.e., it cannot analyze hypotheses, it can only analyze historical activities).
One method of increasing the effectiveness of personalization initiatives is using contextual-based ML techniques to improve recommendations. ‘Contextual bandits’ is a technique that reinforces the learning algorithm by using contextual information about the environment to make real-time decisions and using rewards at each step. Microsoft has embedded this technique in its Azure Personalizer solution, which enables enterprises to improve their personalization efforts to achieve better CSAT and sales closure.
The Challenge
Financial services is a lagging adopter of hyper-personalization capabilities. Early adopters are consumer industries, including CPG, consumer electronics, and media. Financial services lag in adoption due to the following:
These characteristics of the banking environment have made traditional AI and ML techniques a poor predictor of consumer behavior. If banks can apply additional parameters and data to understand consumer behavior better, they can develop improved personalized offers. The challenge in achieving this level of analysis is that the banks need to:
Capgemini’s Approach
Capgemini and Microsoft have developed an offering to address these challenges. The contributions from the two companies are:
Financial institutions have had difficulty effectively implementing the infrastructure to drive hyper-personalization initiatives. Capgemini works with Microsoft and clients to drive this forward across multiple silos and LOBs. Critical to Capgemini’s activities is the ability to build systems that:
Critically, the offering should be able to offer customers the best existing product and suggest new products for development. Suggesting product development is especially important for industry transitions, including the deployment of new regulations and changes in customer buying trends (for example, due to demographic differences). The offering also works with SMB customers, not just consumers.
This offering fills a need for financial institutions to help create personalized offerings for customers, especially from new demographic groups. Financial institutions use AI to analyze past data within silos to develop customized offerings but have not yet been able to create forward-looking offerings in response to changing conditions. This offering promises to enable banks to dynamically test and evolve their offerings quickly to meet a changing market.
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In the financial services industry, there was an initial expectation that demand for intelligent automation (IA) would fall off as clients changed platforms and moved to a microservices architecture. Instead, the application of IA in financial services has grown rapidly. The initial evidence from my current study shows that despite challenges deploying the technology effectively, the ability to bring decision making to the line-of-business user at a low cost of implementation makes a compelling value proposition.
Despite its ability to accelerate accurate, transparent process execution, implementing IA effectively is challenging. Key challenges include:
Despite these challenges, IA activities have taken off because:
Over the past several years, as automation services have matured, banks have begun narrowing the number of processes they are spending resources on automating. Processes where IA is increasingly applied are:
IA adoption will continue to grow faster than overall technology adoption in the financial services industry because banks need to move fast to deal with rapidly declining margins and the need to change their business models. Automation vendors are remaining relevant in this developing market by investing heavily in building more AI functionality. Vendors who are struggling are the ones who have failed to embed robust new AI functionality in their offerings. Ultimately, intelligent automation is less about process automation and more about helping banks orchestrate their labor forces and business partners to deliver service to customers.
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NelsonHall recently completed a market assessment and forecast report on Transforming Financial Services with Cloud, SaaS, and BPaaS Services. It reveals that the financial services industry is responding to the industrialization of cloud services from hyperscalers and IT services vendors by transforming its platforms to microservices architectures and then moving them to the cloud. Data management across markets, businesses, and entities has moved to center stage to drive compliance and customer management.
The operational transformation challenge
Tier 1 banks are looking for increasing operational agility with migration to cloud and as-a-service delivery. Smaller banks require productized solutions and SaaS/BPaaS services. All banks are increasing their data management and AI purchases. In the future, banks will move towards SaaS and BPaaS to reduce labor costs and increase the configurability of their businesses. Operational delivery will become agile to support reducing time to market and accommodate volume fluctuations.
However, the external environment has put up barriers to transformation. The key barriers impeding banks’ transformation efforts include:
Financial institutions must adapt transformation strategies
To transform their businesses, financial institutions will have to:
Services vendors are supporting clients with different services for each environment:
Summary
In summary, high competition and regulatory change is driving banks to focus on changing their business models and product mix. The change to shorter product cycles and lower margins means banks changing their operational focus from cost efficiency for fundamentally static businesses to agility for continuously changing businesses. Cloud, SaaS, and BPaaS infrastructure will drive accelerating change in banks’ product offerings, customer base, and market presence. The financial industry is at the start of a long-term transformation of its business model.
Find out more about NelsonHall’s Transforming Financial Services with Cloud, SaaS, and BPaaS Services market assessment and forecast report here or contact Guy Saunders.
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2022 has been a very strong year for IT services firms delivering cloud, digital, and AI services to the financial services industry. 2023 looks to be a very different year for these vendors as they are finding it difficult to hire skilled resources, find clients able to fund new large projects, and partner in strategic growth areas. Successful BFS technology consultants will need to focus limited resources in a few key growth areas to have a successful business in 2023. One strategic area for growth will be implementing transaction processing AI and data management tools.
To date, banks have focused their AI efforts on entity or account analytics. Typically, these tools provide customer service (e.g., customer onboarding and next-best recommendations) and compliance support (e.g., AML/KYC). We believe in 2023 banks will turn their compliance and customer analytics focus from entity analytics to transaction analytics. Financial institutions are driven by evolving regulations, which today are emerging faster from Europe than other geographies. Europe has several new regulations which are driving a change in focus to transaction monitoring. These include:
These regulations will drive securities exchanges, payments networks, banks, and capital markets firms to deploy cloud orchestration and AI FinTech tools to improve security and reduce operational risk. Already financial institutions are starting projects to address these challenges. Examples include:
Implementing these transaction-oriented FinTech solutions is more complex than account-based solutions because transaction-oriented solutions require orchestration and transparency across the entire network infrastructure. These projects will be driven by the market exchanges and tier one institutions, but will require cooperation from all market participants.
The result will be a more robust financial infrastructure with smaller participants benefiting from the move to an open banking environment for transaction processing. The promise of safe digital payments in a decentralized environment will not be achievable without these investments in securing the industry infrastructure. The industry and regulators are committed to delivering on the promise, so the implementation work will start in 2023.
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Industry background
Financial services are very centralized, with exchanges, central banks, and custodians delivering platform-based services to any user who wants to make a financial transaction or own a financial asset/liability. Decentralized finance, DeFi, is a financial system built on distributed ledger technology (DLT or blockchain) that allows a user to transact and own without an intermediary or centralized principal.
DeFi is in its early days, so the exact outline of such a system and the benefits achievable is not yet certain, but increasingly investors, including incumbent financial institutions, are building DeFi POCs and operations. Key DeFi applications being developed include decentralized:
Interest from financial institutions is growing rapidly, with over 80% of central banks considering the establishment of digital currencies and over 7k cryptocurrencies now in existence. The key question is: how can financial institutions explore and execute a strategy for building a DeFi set of offerings without diverting large sums from their existing business and at the same time reinventing the wheel?
Capgemini’s framework and approach
To address this emerging opportunity with its clients, Capgemini has developed a set of assets and capabilities. Key components of Capgemini’s DeFi capabilities include:
Both the opportunity and the challenges for DeFi are very large. To make an impact on commercializing this emerging technology, Capgemini has decided to focus its efforts in two areas:
Conclusions
The financial services industry currently operates on a highly centralized operating model. The model works well, but the centralized model has high cost and complexity. Cost and complexity effectively limit access to the industry to customers, vendors, and products that already have large financial resources. DeFi operates on a decentralized model using DLT technology to deliver service without intermediaries or centralized principals. DeFi offers the promise of lower cost and greater access for transacting and owning digital assets.
The scale and speed of the transition to a DeFi business model are very high, which requires vendors and banks looking to succeed to focus on a few opportunities and specialize in building a competitive advantage. At the same time, any initiative needs to be plugged into an ecosystem of FinTech vendors to provide infrastructure and context to each bank’s initiatives.
Capgemini has built, and is growing, an ecosystem of FinTech vendors for the DeFi opportunity, and has chosen to focus on two opportunities in the DeFi space (orchestrator for CBDC products and digital asset custody).
These mutually reinforcing opportunities position Capgemini to provide infrastructure services (both implementation and management) for individual banks’ initiatives. These offerings will allow banks to focus their efforts on business model issues and the creation of differentiated offerings for their markets. By reducing time-to-market for new DeFi offerings, banks should be able to create new businesses and attract new customers who have never participated in the financial services industry previously.
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In NelsonHall’s newly published market assessment, Digital Banking Services: Transforming the Financial Services Industry, we found that financial institutions are changing their approach to digital services: from a focus on digital channels and CX to a focus on rapid solution development, cloud migration, data management, and STP.
The goal for financial institutions today is to be able to rapidly iterate new business models in an open banking environment. The pace of industry change is increasing, while labor-based operations are slowing financial institutions’ abilities to respond. The pandemic has accelerated the pace and scope of change as all business functions have had to move to remote delivery.
The state of digital services in banking
For the past year, financial institutions have been:
Over the next year, financial institutions will focus on:
However, the external environment has put up barriers to transformation. The key barriers impeding the efforts of financial institutions include:
Rising to the challenge
To address these challenges successfully, financial institutions need to focus on two activities: strategy and execution.
Key factors in strategy include:
Key factors in execution include:
In summary, financial institutions are changing their goals from improving process efficiency for static businesses to increasing operational agility to continuously changing business models and operations. The operational changes being made will drive business model change. And these operational changes will drive accelerating change in banks’ product offerings, customer base, and market presence.
Find out more about NelsonHall’s “Digital Banking Services: Transforming the Financial Services Industry” market assessment and forecast report here or contact Guy Saunders.
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In 2022, the financial industry will continue to focus on building out its cloud and digital services infrastructure. This will be a deepening of capabilities for banks that have started their transformation, and the start of the journey for institutions that have not yet initiated their transformation. The growth rate of digital transformation is very high at ~20%.
Since most technology services vendors now derive 40% to 60% of their revenues from digital transformation services, this high growth rate will build on a large revenue base. However, there are two areas that have small revenues but much higher anticipated growth rates. We predict that these areas will start to make an impact in 2022, and be the growth engine for IT services in the financial industry in three to five years. They are:
Our discussions with bank executives indicate that these are high priorities, though they also highlight a lack of consensus, with a wide range of perceptions. However, it is clear that execution will need third-party vendors to support and provide rapid, effective, and scaled services.
Industrializing Open Banking Delivery
Open banking has been a regulatory initiative for five years, but is only now moving to the execution stage in a few markets. Advanced markets moving ahead today include the Nordics and Benelux. These smaller markets make experimentation more feasible for a bank to launch a full-scale open banking initiative, and it is also easier to reengineer operations on the fly based on customer feedback. And, in smaller markets, it is easier for the financial institution to design an offering for a new customer demographic and vet partners to deliver a quality customer experience.
Delivering successful customer experiences in the initial open banking initiatives will drive customer awareness and willingness to adopt new offerings. Currently some Nordic banks are pursuing initiatives (e.g. in small business markets) which, if successful, will enable them to capture very large market shares of new customer demographics. The key is these markets are all domestic. It is rare that a bank in a mature market can pursue a domestic market opportunity as large as its existing markets.
Scaling Neo Bank Operations
Startup digital banks (neo banks) focus on their business model and the design and creation of new banking products. Ongoing operational delivery is not considered to be a core competency. Neo banks have been around for five plus years, but many have failed and just a few, such as Marcus, have grown to considerable size. None to date have become a tier one bank or financial services provider. Each market has seen different types of startup financial institutions opened. In the U.S., payments vendors have predominated; in Europe, digital banks have been the predominant form of startup.
The financial institutions (i.e. banks, payments processors, lenders such as Marcus, Revolut, Stripe, or Square) that have grown since founding must now scale up operationally to drive home their digital advantage before competitors match their digital value proposition. Scaling their business does not just mean scaling transaction processing, it requires scaling control, compliance, and security. Third-party BPS vendors are required to support this transition to large-scale, multi-product, multi-market operational delivery. Vendors that can provide combined domain-specific ITS and BPS services are rare. In 2021, BPS services grew slowly as clients focused on ITS for digital transformation. In 2022, BPS services focused on supporting neo bank growth will provide most of the growth in banking BPS revenues.
Summary
Financial institutions have been experimenting with new business models and customer methods. In 2022, these initiatives will need to scale the business, not just the transactions (which hyperscalers have been doing). Delivering domain-relevant operations at high scale will become an emerging focus of the digital financial industry for the next five years and drive large revenues for vendors who can deliver these comprehensive services.
]]>On December 15, 2021, Kyndryl and Viewpointe announced a cloud migration, modernization and management contract. The engagement provides insight for BFS executives into how banking services operations vendors are moving to the cloud to simplify operational delivery and enable business model change to expand and improve their business.
Current state
Viewpointe provides content management services for its owners, leading U.S. banks that include Bank of America, Truist, U.S. Bank, and Wells Fargo.
Viewpointe also delivers services for banks that are not part of its ownership structure. It delivers its services from two data centers (operating as primary and backup) in the U.S. It employs a proprietary platform to deliver services, which are heavily customized for each client. The primary content stored and managed by Viewpointe is mortgage/loan and checks/payment documents. Banks and their customers can search, access, and exchange content. Viewpointe develops and maintains the software platform. Kyndryl has been providing infrastructure orchestration and management services to Viewpointe since its inception in 2000.
Each client requires customization of the content management software to deliver a differentiated customer experience for each bank client. This has meant that each solution instance and sub-environment is unique and monolithic, on top of fixed infrastructure.
The engagement
Viewpointe wants to transform its application portfolio into a microservices delivered platform where:
To achieve these goals, Viewpointe and Kyndryl have agreed to an engagement with steps including:
The journey will take three years, including:
The engagement is expected to result in cost savings of 20% to 30%.
Conclusions and benefits
Cloud migration has been effective for highly seasonal or cyclical businesses, where volumes spike and the client only pays for capacity as it is used. Static workloads typically cost more in a cloud environment. This engagement highlights a use case where cloud delivery is more cost-effective than internal delivery. Features that must be present to make the case for cloud include:
Ultimately, the case for the cloud is that it allows Viewpointe to accelerate new product launches and standardize its operational delivery, while still enabling its customers to customize their platform instance.
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Digital startup banks are built on FinTech functionality to deliver financial services in an omnichannel environment. There are two types of FinTechs: B2B businesses that have a proprietary platform to deliver service to clients, and B2C businesses that provide clients with an all-digital banking experience.
WNS: expanded focus on B2C FinTechs
While WNS supports B2B and B2C, it has seen more traction in the latter, and has expanded its services to support the B2C FinTechs. The key market segments include:
Because the B2C FinTechs work with consumers, they require support for compliance and customer support, and these processes require human interaction to succeed and grow. Only 10% of FinTechs survive, but successful firms require massive scaling to meet customer service requirements. The good news is digital banks have lower exception rates (typically a 3% exception rate, versus 10% from a typical tier one bank) because their core processes are all digital.
However, many of these startup digital banks have faced operational challenges. Traditional banks are retaining customers because they offer the entire range of banking services, at scale, which encourages customers to maintain their business with them. FinTech banks that have faced challenges include Tesco Bank which has sold off its mortgage business and is closing its clients' demand-deposit accounts. Similarly, M&S Bank, a JV of M&S Stores and HSBC, has closed its in-store branches and is also closing its customers’ demand-deposit accounts. The lesson is that full product-line operational delivery at scale economics is critical to success.
WNS services for startup FinTechs
WNS has pursued the startup B2C FinTech market with a three-pronged set of services:
WNS engagements with FinTechs add processes over time, and the typical progression of services includes:
WNS can enhance its clients’ capabilities with functionality from its own set of tools or its ecosystem of FinTech solution providers which delivers emerging functionality in four key areas:
By using this rollout strategy and set of offerings, WNS has been able to scale individual engagements by 2X to 10X in one year. Overall, WNS has been able to grow its digital startup bank business this past twelve months by 40% y/y. Clients using these services have experienced a 30% reduction in TAT, 95% improvement in CX, and 30% reduction in application processing times.
Conclusions
Digital startup financial institutions are looking to bring new business models to market quickly. Third-party services vendors need to provide STP and a comprehensive set of services to support these emerging BFS services providers. WNS has built a set of operational services which enable startup banks to scale fast and continuously deliver new functionality to customers. This enables digital startups to attract and retain customers by delivering differentiated value. In contrast, tier one banks look for vendors to deliver siloed functionality.
Startup banks need a vendor that can deliver broad operational support. Sourcing, organizing, and managing resources is a complex challenge for a bank. WNS has pulled together the relevant components and frameworks necessary to deliver a full-service operations environment. As startup banks and local banks look to grow their businesses, they will increasingly rely on third-party vendors for this type of support.
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Banks are accelerating their move to the cloud to respond to the pandemic, enable greater operational agility to reduce time to market, and develop open banking capabilities. At the same time, performance dispersion (the operational variance across institutions within the industry) has increased significantly.
Cloud delivery can change operational performance and hyperscale businesses. So, how can banks move their operations to the cloud most effectively, and what tools and frameworks are needed to best adapt cloud operations over time? Infosys has developed a set of tools and frameworks, Cobalt, to address these challenges.
Infosys’ Cobalt Offering
Cobalt, Infosys’ cloud framework offering, is designed to address the key challenges enterprises face when trying to move their operations to the cloud. These challenges include:
The Cobalt offering provides a solution across these five key areas of accelerated cloud adoption by any enterprise:
Infosys believes cloud migration requires industry-specific IP to fully take advantage of the cloud’s benefits. Infosys has created a financial services-specific Cobalt offering, FS.Live.Cloud, that includes, but is not limited to:
This packaged version of FS.Cloud.Live helps mid-size financial institutions with a cloud solution at an overall cost of 15% to 18% lower than buying public cloud services direct. In addition to the services described above, this offering will:
Large financial institutions in most cases have either developed or are developing a comprehensive cloud strategy and they can benefit from leveraging components of FS.Cloud.Live to optimize migration times by 30-40% and deliver a much lower overall TCO.
Conclusions
Financial institutions of all types are looking to migrate to the cloud with the help of third-party services and technology vendors. Sourcing, organizing, and managing resources is a complex challenge for any financial institution. Infosys has pulled together the relevant components and frameworks necessary to deliver a cloud migration project, with ongoing environment management updates, to enable regional and local banks to capitalize on the cloud opportunity. These services are useable by line-of-business executives, not just technologists, which allows the LOB to directly adapt the capabilities to align with their business objectives.
As banks migrate more of their operational footprint to a multi-cloud environment, the technology will become more robust. However, the business advantage comes from being an early mover. All financial institutions are looking for the broadest, most robust set of tools, technological and human, to enable them to transform their business models for a more agile, open banking industry. The FS.Cloud.Live platform is a good example of the type of tools banks need to start their cloud journey.
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The pandemic has accelerated the adoption of digital transformation across all industries, and in the financial sector, operational transformation has grabbed the top spot in the priority list for investment and spending. At the same time, performance dispersion (the variance across institutions within the industry) has significantly increased.
So, how can banks make their transformation initiatives effective, and what drives performance? Multiple firms, banks, and IT/operations services vendors, are now creating digital transformation frameworks to help improve the effectiveness of these efforts.
Capgemini’s TechnoVision framework
Capgemini has created its own transformation framework, TechnoVision, which identifies key business/technology levers, evaluates technologies, enables initiative prioritization, and supports disciplined creation and execution of a transformation strategy.
Strategic considerations are based on three core principles, backed by technology domains, which are:
Technology domains under consideration are Cloud, AI, Immersive, Connected, High Performance & Decentralized Technologies. The operational framework is adapted to each industry where it is employed. TechnoVision has the following key components:
The framework allows banks to move from a centrally controlled organization (hub and spoke model) to a decentralized model, coordinated by a set of operational/business standards and a single golden-source set of data. The value of the framework is that it can deliver:
Conclusions
Financial institutions of a wide variety of backgrounds and characteristics are looking to undertake digital transformation with third-party services and technology vendors. There needs to be a meeting of the minds among all stakeholders to ensure the transformation process is effective. A transformation framework helps to establish and communicate a common set of goals, understandings, and roadmaps across stakeholders.
Capgemini’s TechnoVision framework for financial services helps banks address transformation issues across the enterprise, including standards, data, and security. The framework has been used in many global and regional banks to define and accelerate the transformation journey. Other services vendors have similar frameworks, though TechnoVision is distinctive in its use of sessions with local banking executives to create localized banking roadmaps which are not reliant on a hub and spoke digitalization architecture. We expect to see Capgemini build more real-time transaction capabilities with its clients to address banking’s move away from wide settlement windows and batch processing.
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NelsonHall recently published a market assessment and forecast report on Intelligent Automation in Banking: Transforming Operations. We found that financial institutions must automate their operations if they are to compete successfully in a rapidly evolving marketplace. Currently, they operate with manual processes using a heterogeneous set of platforms, acquired over many years of M&A. However, the pace of industry change is increasing, while labor-based operations are slowing financial institutions’ abilities to respond. Cognitive, AI and RPA technologies are allowing these institutions to become more agile, cutting the cord from labor-based value-add, without having to do a rip-and-replace of their existing platforms.
The state of IA in financial services
For the past year, financial institutions have been:
Over the next year, financial institutions will focus on:
However, the external environment has put up barriers to transformation. The key barriers impeding the efforts of financial institutions include:
Rising to the challenge
To address these challenges successfully, financial institutions need to focus on two activities: vendor selection and execution.
Key factors in vendor selection include:
Key factors in execution include:
In summary, financial institutions are changing their goals in two important ways:
The operational changes being made will drive business model change. And these operational changes will drive accelerating change in banks’ product offerings, customer base, and market presence.
Find out more about NelsonHall’s Intelligent Automation in Banking: Transforming Operations market assessment and forecast report here or contact Guy Saunders.
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Banks will spend 2021 pursuing different aspects of three key initiatives that have become more important since the advent of COVID-19. The first is process automation, which has become more important but needs to increase its delivery effectiveness. The second, work-from-home (WFH) has also accelerated under COVID-19 but will need to change in 2021 to continue to be effective. The third is the application of cognitive to processing. Cognitive is an immature technology and has had teething pains with bias and ethics. Users of cognitive technologies will need to include controls to meet ethics requirements that society requires of its business community.
Process Automation
Process automation has been an accelerating trend for the past four years. Since COVID-19 struck earlier this year, the adoption rate of automation has pulled three years of anticipated adoption work into the second half of 2020. However, this acceleration has highlighted key challenges to effectiveness. They are:
These issues have become a priority for banks. Our conversations with bank executives indicate their highest priorities for RPA engagements are:
In 2021, they will focus their automation initiatives on compliance (especially the conversion of loan contracts to a post-LIBOR world), customer service, improving agent effectiveness, and KYC/AML reviews.
Work from Home
The COVID-19 world has seen a mass migration to WFH. However, CEOs and other leaders are concerned about workforce morale and training issues over the long term. Bankers we have spoken to expect WFH will remain a larger part of the financial services environment, but much smaller than it is today. Specifically, interviews we have conducted indicate banks expect 70% of workers to move back to offices and ~30% to remain in a WFH environment. Over the next year, institutions will have to work out what the shape of the new workforce deployment will be. Key issues will include:
Until the lockdowns end there will not be much movement on this issue. However, the second half of the year should see the economy open up and these issues will take center stage.
Cognitive Processing Support
Banks and technology vendors have been developing and trialing cognitive support tools for many years now. The aggressive move to digital channel environments caused by COVID-19 has both enabled the application of cognitive tools to business processes and necessitated the use of cognitive tools to deliver services. However, accelerated deployment of cognitive tools has highlighted challenges including:
The above growth areas of technology services for banks in 2021 are the result of 2020’s rapid deployment of immature technologies. Each of the three growth segments of services will, as usage matures, provide banks with increased agility to adapt to a rapidly changing business environment.
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I recently participated in a webinar panel during the Consumer Banking Association conference with Genpact and TD Bank. The panel topic was Genpact: Turning Crisis into Opportunity for Consumer Banking, and it addressed three core topics:
The COVID-19 crisis has accelerated previous trends towards digital adoption, including:
TD Bank has found that banks have moved at light speed to implement the PPP Act and financial relief offers for customers. TD Bank’s relief offer, TD Cares, was built with three concepts in mind:
The delivery of these services was developed with a “digital-first” approach, followed immediately with human interaction to support robust interaction and CSAT.
Overall, banks are trying to prioritize where they will be spending their money. When a bank looks at digitizing a process, such as onboarding or payments, where in the value chain should it start and focus their investment dollars to make the largest operational impact? The key to succeeding in delivering value is to optimize the customer experience. To date, banks have looked at improving their processes. However, customers are comparing their online experiences against their experiences form other industries, such as the consumer products or entertainment industries.
COVID-19 has forced banks to rethink how and when they engage customers. Key examples of changes made include:
The banks are not just trying to improve efficiency, they are trying to create empathetic, differentiated experiences in their customer interactions. Creating a value chain that delivers digital, empathetic, differentiated customer experiences will require a synthesis of bank operations, data management, and FinTech partner ecosystems. By integrating digital processing, bank/customer data, and new functionality from an ecosystem of vendors, banks should be able to know each customer and create a custom experience for that customer. The industry is in the early stages of creating such customized experiences, but the journey has begun. For example, a bank has been able to deliver empathetic, customized experiences by digitalizing customer contact apps across silos. This requires all stakeholders to participate to move a project ahead both thoughtfully and at speed.
Banks are not just building customer contact experiences with digital technologies. The panel identified payments as an area of rapid transformation, where customers experience the use of the product itself as a consumer experience. There are two areas within payments that are a focus for innovation today:
Again, modularizing the process with support from an ecosystem of specialized vendors is enabling payment companies to restructure the industry and improve customer experience.
The key takeaways from the webinar panel are that, because of COVID-19, banks are moving faster than ever to digitalize their businesses. The digitalization of business does not eliminate the human element but rather increases empathy and human engagement to drive a differentiated experience. Because the canvas is large, banks are challenged to focus their investments in high-impact areas. The areas where banks are finding success are in digitalizing processes that draw data and resources from across silos to deliver faster, customized experiences for customers.
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The past decade since the global financial crisis (GFC) has been good for the lending industry. Loan delinquencies in the U.S. reached their highest level after the GFC in the first quarter of 2010 at 7.4% of commercial bank loan portfolios. Since then, loan delinquencies have fallen to 1.44% of loan portfolios as of the fourth quarter of 2019. At the same time, loan portfolios have grown 26.8% larger than they were in the second quarter of 2013. During this period, banks and lenders have reduced collections staff as delinquencies have declined. Banks can support delinquency collections if portfolios maintain low default rates.
However, COVID-19 has had a major adverse impact on the economy. During this time unemployment rates have surged and GDP forecasts have plummeted.
This type of economic contraction will aggressively drive up collection activities at banks. But scaling collections activities will be challenging when all lenders will be trying to scale-up their activities at the same time, and as new regulations constraining collection methodologies are being issued.
The automation and operating framework will be critical to successfully navigating the collection environment. I recently participated in a Consumer Bankers Association hosted webinar with Genpact where they outlined their approach to improving collections services. Genpact has developed a three-part methodology for transforming their clients’ collection operations:
The challenge is large, so success requires a set of prioritized actions to make early gains possible. Examples from Genpact include:
In short, scaling the same processes, under conditions of reduced resources, increased costs, and growing transaction numbers will not work. Already vendors are addressing these challenges by employing combinations of proactive outreach, workforce training, and technology. Lenders will then be able to increase their effectiveness and scale in collections to meet the rapidly increasing scale of operational delivery required.
To find out more on this topic, view the Consumer Bankers Association hosted webinar with Genpact and NelsonHall here.
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This is an update on my last blog on the impact of COVID-19 on the financial services industry. Since then, I have interviewed many more industry executives both at banks and at operations services vendors. Industry responses are still muted, but clear signs are emerging that banks will be focused on prioritizing those activities which maintain continuity and support adaptation in an operating environment with larger volume swings.
Key transformation initiatives where banks are accelerating investments include:
Banks have reduced their activities focused on support for:
Impact on banks to date
To date, the impact on retail banks and capital markets firms has been to move workforces to a work-from-home (WFH) environment. This has not been a hard initial transition for banks in markets with mature internet infrastructure; however, banks in markets with weak public internet infrastructures, such as some Asian markets and most of Africa, have faced significant challenges moving employees to a home environment.
Even within markets, the success of moving to WFH has varied as government policies have changed. In India, the nation went into lockdown on March 24 for 21 days. This was extended to May 3 on April 14. Initially, many delivery centers struggled to move workers to a WFH environment, given a limited number of laptops per worker and poor connectivity in some regions. Over time, bank operations have been able to obtain permission for critical processes to be delivered from centers, with dormitory and hotel housing provided for workers. Non-essential processes have continued to be delivered from home. This has led to worker utilization rates at the largest delivery centers moving from an initial capacity utilization rate of 20% in late March to 60% utilization in early April, to 90% utilization rate with essential work done in centers and large numbers of WFH workers.
While operations delivery has rebounded, bank executives we have interviewed expect their businesses to aggressively deteriorate in Q2 2020. Specifically, they expect sales to decline ~25%, costs to increase ~7%, and profits to decline ~45% in Q2 2020. Fortunately, their operations supplier contracts are adequate to support a 20% decline in volumes (and a 25% increase in volumes). No one is sure how long the impact on business will continue. Based on announcements by governments and universities in the past few days, this analyst expects the COVID-19 lockdowns to continue, at some level, for at least six months. The saving grace may be that the continuing shutdowns will be at progressively lower levels of restriction.
Banks have been asked by regulators to provide BCDR plans for themselves and their suppliers. These have been supplied. Of note is that private conversations indicate banks and suppliers are setting triage plans for who and what to focus resources on if the impact of COVID-19 worsens. If that happens, expect to see suppliers retaining service to their most important clients and banks cutting back on product lines (i.e. low margin and risk products) and reducing suppliers to financially stronger vendors.
Transformation projects in production have continued as planned. However, new projects have been stopped in anticipation of restarting the process when lockdowns are lifted. However, as profit levels fall, the focus on cost-cutting will increase. Banks will have to prioritize which projects to restart as they face reduced capital to invest in transformation. Currently, many banks are looking to restart RPA projects when they resume projects. Successful RPA projects can scale processing volumes with a smaller workforce. Because scalability has become so important, banks are looking to restart initiatives that enable scaling, such as RPA and cloud migration.
Finally, bank product lines have been aggressively impacted. Lending, except for government support loan programs, has all but stopped in all countries. Payment volumes, especially cross-border payments, have plummeted by over 20%. Physical branches have been shut down for business. The fall in activities has reduced operational requirements, but at the cost of profits for banks and revenues for their services providers. While bank executives have not projected volumes beyond Q2 2020, the outlook is very weak for a turnaround during the remainder of this year. ITS and BPO vendors will have stable revenues from long-term contracts. However, these vendors will find that new contracts are few and far between. Some BPO vendors are expecting to grow their business at +20% (annual rate) by buying bank or service vendor captive operations. As bank and vendor liquidity becomes a concern to regulators and investors, there are now captive operations actively for sale. For the next year, successful BPO vendors will have an active M&A strategy in place.
Conclusions
To summarize, banks have not yet changed their operational delivery activities with third-party vendors. They have reassessed their BCDR plans. Financial institutions have begun to see very substantial drop-offs in transactional activity, and they expect this to impact their revenues and profits starting in Q2 2020. The largely anticipated drop-off in revenues and profits will drive a reassessment of their services contracts to drive lower pricing and sale of operations. There will be a consolidation of vendors and pressure on pricing. The scale and scope of the transformation in sourcing arrangements will be driven by the length of the COVID lockdown. When the lockdown abates, banks will redouble their efforts in digital transformation to prepare for any future pandemics.
My next blog post will address the impact to date of COVID-19 on services vendors to the banking industry.
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Banks have been aggressively transforming their operations to a digital delivery model. It is well known that a key driver, across all industries, is the need to attract new, primarily young, customers who prefer omnichannel interaction with vendors and demand high-quality CX in their business interactions. Less well known are two key drivers that make speedy transformation imperative. They include:
Regulations and price compression are making transformation an urgent need. However, the back-end structure of banks, monolithic 30+ year-old legacy platforms, present transformation challenges. Key challenges include:
To address these challenges, services vendors have focused on professional services for on-premises platforms for large banks and cloud-delivered platforms for startup and regional banks. Increasingly large banks are looking for hybrid cloud-delivered platforms and modules. Digital technologies have reduced the effectiveness of labor arbitrage strategies. Vendors are aggressively automating their own delivery to remain relevant. Cloud-delivered DevOps is increasingly in demand by all clients. Banks want support for analyzing transactions and entities (customers and counterparties) to drive greater analytic insight and capability development.
Over the next eighteen months, services vendors will:
Banks we have spoken with are accelerating their plans to move to digital operations, both transforming their legacy operations and starting new digital initiatives. Many “all-digital” startups at established banks have shut down as the initial use cases failed to meet their goals. The common underlying reason for failure is that digital banks do not run themselves; they require ongoing investment and attention in order to succeed. Similarly, cloud operations do not reduce the cost of delivery in the long run. Cloud operations increase flexibility, which allows banks to enter and exit markets and products with minimal cost to the business. Banks with a clear roadmap and determination to go all-in on digital will have the best chance at creating a successful digital business.
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At its 2019 Engage Client Forum last week, NIIT Technologies explained how it is adapting to a continuously changing business and technology environment to deliver digital transformation for its clients.
At its 2019 Engage Client Forum, NIIT Technologies explained how it is adapting to a continuously changing business and technology environment to deliver digital transformation for its clients.
Four key strategies
NIIT Tech identified four key strategies it is pursuing:
Banking sector focus
NIIT Tech is building proprietary IP to drive forward its digital services initiatives. Key to the banking industry is:
The client view
During the conference, I spoke with many clients about their activities with NIIT Tech, providing the following feedback:
Summary
NIIT Tech is transforming itself to capture digital transformation opportunities and is investing heavily in IP and partnerships. It has built IP using open source code, which delivers solution modules that can be deployed with 40% less cost, time, and effort.
The key to NIIT Tech’s success has been its ability to deliver services and outcomes quickly and effectively. Accordingly, NIIT Tech’s employee training and digital tools all focus on delivering functionality and high speed. As one NIIT Tech executive put it, “Data is king, speed is emperor”.
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At the 2019 Infosys Confluence North American event last week, we spoke with execs about how Infosys has been driving accelerated growth in the BFSI sector in North America. Most of Infosys’ revenues in BFSI are in Banking and Financial (BFS) services, where the recent growth been based on the following major activities:
Current areas of focus in BFS segments include:
Banking clients we spoke to said that they anticipate continuing to move to the cloud (the reduction in time-to-market making the cloud value proposition compelling even when the cost is higher) and remain committed to moving to a hybrid cloud environment. They anticipate that the next big technology disruption in their sector will be the adoption of ML, which will accelerate over the next 24 months and start to deliver robust value.
Infosys’ banking sector business has regrouped its GTM, with a clear focus on providing agility to banks so they can reduce their time-to-market with new product introductions. Infosys claims typical cost reductions of 40-50% and reduced time to market. Their increased sales growth indicates it is working well.
At the same time, Infosys has continued to invest with technology and operations acquisitions and will continue to increase its footprint in Western Europe and the U.S. One challenge will be handling volume swings when the market turns.
A major focus at Infosys’ client event was its Live Enterprise (LE) approach - we will shortly be publishing a separate blog on this.
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The BFSI industries are increasingly looking to intelligent automation (IA) to address key challenges in their business. A recent NelsonHall survey of 50 BFSI executives found that they perceive that IA is able to replace manual processing and human decision-making, allowing the bank’s operations to decouple processing volumes from headcount. Key benefits respondents expect to receive from IA include:
However, achieving these benefits has frequently been challenging because:
The complexity of these challenges requires IA vendors to create a roadmap and deliver an offering which targets a narrow range of problems. Typically, there needs to be three types of participant in the development of an IA offering:
Let’s look at how one vendor developed an IA offering, and then at an example of how it was deployed.
HCL’s EXACTO
HCL decided to create an IA offering in 2016, focusing their product on the processing of unstructured data. They began their process by partnering with a leading U.S.-based university, which had developed analytic solutions for processing radiology images. The image processing capability would be useful for processing physical paper documents used in banking contracts, procurement, and handwritten documents.
HCL launched its IA product, EXACTO, in 2017. The underlying platform is built on open source machine learning libraries. The product uses servers with GPUs to run Deep Neural network algorithms. EXACTO can integrate into an existing workflow application with a single API. It has four differentiating capabilities:
HCL claims EXACTO achieves 85% to 95% accuracy on typewritten documents and 60% to 65% accuracy on handwriting. It processes documents in three stages:
Let’s look at how EXACTO was applied to a very manual, paper-based processing environment.
Trade processing at a global bank
Trade processing is well known for using faxes across very large numbers of parties to conduct business, and frustrates attempts at process automation. The process has a T+1 reconciliation window, which drives increased costs as labor needs to be applied in volume to meet the deadline. Initial errors from manual processing are enhanced by errors introduced by manual processes in the audit trail. Typical errors include:
EXACTO was applied to the processing of faxes and paper documents. It classifies documents using a domain ontology and extracts text into a digital form which is then processed.
Benefits from the use of this IA solution include:
Summary
As described above, IA is enabling institutions to read documents and pictures faster and more accurately than humans. It is then able to process the resulting information with greater accuracy and speed. The traditional cascade of errors is mitigated, improving regulatory compliance and customer satisfaction. The key to success in this endeavor is finding the appropriate technical IP (in this case in a partnership between domain experts at HCL and image reading technology at a leading U.S.-based university) to solve complex interpretation challenges. The resulting solution can process low-value transactions at high volume and with high accuracy. This type of solution will increase the number of high-volume, low-value transactions which banks will be able to deliver profitably, expanding the range of possible products they can introduce to the marketplace.
EXACTO is trademarked by HCL.
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Blockchain has been a focus of technologists, VCs, and media pundits for several years now. However, to date, operational deployment remains minimal. Of all enterprises already working with blockchain, only a few percent have a scale operational deployment. Blockchain has seen three stages in its short history:
Activities are slowly moving from exploring the technology and what it can do to finding out where it can be profitably applied to business cases.
Achieving effective operational deployment
Businesses are finding that key steps in making effective operational deployments include:
Example of successful blockchain deployment application in Banking
So, where can blockchain be deployed effectively in an operational environment? I caught up with Capgemini recently on one of their blockchain engagements that has gained significant traction. In this case, Capgemini deployed blockchain to address KYC in the banking industry. The client is a consortium of banks that wanted to reduce the cost of its combined interbank KYC activities. Key aspects of the engagement were:
The characteristics of successful deployments
The case above highlights that successful deployments of blockchain are often characterized by:
Institutions looking to deploy blockchain trial 100 POCs on average to find ~3 use cases to operationalize. By looking at the characteristics of successful deployments, institutions will be able to focus their experimentation on projects with a much higher likelihood of being valuable in a business setting.
]]>NelsonHall recently attended the TCS Innovation Forum 2019 in New York. The forum demonstrated clear progress in TCS’ thinking and approach to Business 4.0 since last year’s conference – TCS has identified human engagement and buy-in with the principles of Business 4.0 as critical to successful implementation and value realization in business transformation. And human buy-in is applicable at multiple levels in an enterprise’s journey, not just the initial buy decision.
Successful Business 4.0 projects are different from traditional projects at three key levels:
Multiple client conversations presented at the conference highlighted how digitalization of the business has changed the approach required to solve operational challenges. Key examples given across sessions included:
TCS and several clients provided a deeper dive into their data activities in a breakout session. TCS’ data services strategy is underpinned by three offerings:
The underlying solution accelerators support the move to cloud-delivered, agile data management services. TCS sees the following shifts occurring in data management activities:
Repeatedly, clients stated that they did not find the move to cloud saved them money. However, it did make real-time and near real-time analytic computations possible, which created significant differentiation in time-dependent processes. Often these processes were customer-facing, which increased sales closure and/or increased CSAT. Effective cost control required a shift in management focus from the cost of provisioning services (old model) to cost of controlling usage (new model).
The challenge in innovating operational systems has become a challenge of changing people’s mindset to focus on the key levers that new technology offers. Therefore, emerging markets are often producing the fastest adoption of digital technology, as there is no legacy mindset to overcome. TCS works with the largest institutions to support this type of change. It is just now creating the productized offerings that will be able to support mid-market firms adopting digital technologies (business 4.0) en masse.
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NelsonHall recently attended the EY Global Analyst Summit in Boston. EY has grown its revenues at 8.5% CAAGR over the past five years, while investing heavily in technology and adapting its business model to become an IP-based services vendor rather than a provider of pure labor-based services.
Here I take a quick look at EY’s wavespace offering and how it is being used to provide value for large enterprises. EY believes that large enterprises have many good transformation ideas but fail at execution. To improve execution of transformation projects, EY uses Geoffrey Moore’s “Zones to Win” taxonomy, which defines four project types each requiring a different mix of resources to succeed. EY believes it provides three core competencies to solve the disruption challenge:
EY’s goal is to drive large ($100m plus) transformation projects. EY’s wavespace network, launched in March 2017 with 15 centers, has now developed to a network of:
Wavespace events at a center require pre-planning to pull in the right mix of:
Events run for one to three days, and EY wavespace delivers 700 events in the U.S. per year. As EY has developed its delivery model for wavespace, delivery has moved from a location-based event to an as-a-service offering independent of a physical place. This allows global organizations to develop their own customized offerings in a highly decentralized fashion.
The consulting services EY delivers are supported by:
Examples of how BFS clients are engaging with wavespace include:
EY’s vision of digital transformation is focused on effectively bringing together large ecosystems of participants to solve enterprise challenges. EY has built its wavespace center offering to coordinate bringing the right participant at the right time into a workgroup. Clients who have engaged with wavespace have typically returned with ever larger engagement remits, as the growth in the centers and engagement activity demonstrates.
EY has been wise to maintain a narrow product focus (e.g. platforms such as SAP) and narrow client focus (large enterprises). Other vendors have set up sandbox centers like EY’s wavespace, but they retain sole or dominant presence in their centers. EY has taken a bold step, aggressively opening its centers to third-party participants. EY’s business model is moving from labor-based delivery services to orchestrator of services delivery. However, wavespace’s continued success will require maintaining managerial effectiveness over third parties who are outside of traditional control mechanisms.
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I recently attended the WNS influencer conference in New Orleans, the theme of which was 'Co-create to Outperform’. WNS believes that the marketplace understands what transformation means for their businesses, but the challenge is how to achieve this vision. WNS’ view is that, for transformation to be effective, it needs to be customized for the client with their full participation in the co-creation process. The conference presented many examples of how a ‘two-in-a-box’ engagement was able to identify and implement an effective solution to a challenge which delivered both very high savings and high satisfaction.
Client feedback
WNS presented seven clients who outlined their engagements and why they chose WNS, with several key themes emerging.
All clients referenced:
Most clients referenced:
Client example: regional bank
A northeast U.S. regional bank provided an example of WNS’ engagement style and benefits delivered. The bank began its relationship 12 years ago, when it was looking to improve its operational efficiency by moving some processes offshore. Over time, the relationship has grown due to:
The example the bank presented was of an RPA implementation to capture information from legal documents. The bank had hired a consultant who identified the opportunity and built the business case. The consultant intended to implement the RPA solution, but the project failed to move forward. The bank called in WNS who took over the project and, working with the client, co-created the final automation solution, including implementation. The department previously processed these documents manually, with an annual budget of $750k. Currently, the department is processing these documents for $329k per year, a cost reduction of 56%. When the system has fully matured, the anticipated cost reduction will be 67% of the annual budget. The bank summarized the relationship benefits as: their investments into the relationship, the quality of work delivered, and the cultural fit.
The WNS approach
WNS’ approach to digital transformation for the banking space targets an underserved market, medium-sized financial institutions, to transform manual-intensive processes into automated processes. WNS works with these clients to create solutions customized to support the client’s differentiated value proposition in the market. Few vendors are willing or able to apply resources to middle market or regional engagements that create customized outputs. This allows WNS to apply its domain knowledge, which is embodied in its employees based on their industry experience, to solve operations challenges to drive outcomes relevant to industry and market-specific requirements.
WNS has been wise to maintain a narrow process focus in each industry. Execution is critical to a project’s success, especially so with RPA engagements (where, post-deployment, most RPA deployments increasingly lose effectiveness due to poor bot oversight). In addition to clients in the audience, there were prospects who are considering RPA engagements with WNS because of poorly performing RPA engagements with existing vendors.
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I recently attended the official opening of Infosys’ design center in Providence, Rhode Island. In 2017, Infosys committed to hire 10k workers in the U.S. by 2022. Part of that commitment is a plan to open six training and delivery centers across the U.S. intended to provide benefits including:
The six centers Infosys committed to build are:
A closer look at the Providence center
The Providence center was officially opened on February 12, 2019 but has been operating since summer 2018. Its initial client is a major bank. The center was initially established with a partnership between Infosys and Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), a leading school for industrial design located a few blocks from the center. RISD was ranked number one in 2015 and 2016 for graphic design, printmaking, and industrial design by QS World University Rankings. The partners are contributing:
To date, the center has hired 100 employees (ahead of plan). Half the hires are from RISD and half are from Community College of Rhode Island (CCRI).
At the opening, Infosys and CCRI announced a partnership which committed each organization to work to train and employ CCRI students in relevant design technology skills. The impetus for the partnership is that community colleges teach 50% of the college level students in the U.S., but these graduates obtain relatively few job offers relative to their numbers. By providing relevant work experience, Infosys and CCRI expect to increase the rate of job search success for these graduates. To date, Infosys has found that the CCRI students have a higher level of job performance and morale than their typical employees. The partnership uses the DEAL (Digital Economy Aspirations Lab) as its development venue, where students learn, in a corporate environment, skills that are immediately relevant to Infosys and other employers. In addition, DEAL will sponsor two joint task forces:
Conclusion
Skills to deliver digital technologies are in short supply globally. A key value of digital technologies is the ability to engage people much more effectively. Infosys has taken this challenge and built a differentiated center focused on industrial design technology implementation for its existing clients (mostly tier one global enterprises). It has built the center next door to one of the top colleges in the world for industrial design. By working with local colleges Infosys is able to ensure that skills are learned which are immediately relevant to the work required by Infosys’ client engagements. Industrial design is fundamentally a creative process, which means each worker is a unique asset. The colleges identify students who have the capability to succeed in creative work; Infosys then works with the school students to develop relevant skills. The result is a differentiated design capability created in Infosys’ workforce.
The next decade will see a rapid growth in demand for industrial design capabilities across industries, as 5G, open banking, and omni-channel delivery infrastructure becomes operational. As data and channels grow, customer engagement will become the critical differentiator for successful enterprises. Creating a workforce with advanced design capabilities at scale is necessary to capitalizing on this new environment. This center is a first step in the industry to shifting the ITS proposition to differentiated delivery.
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The banking industry cycle has turned towards austerity for 2019 as indicated by recent events, including:
These events underline conditions where the financial services industry will face slower revenue growth and will need to aggressively reduce costs to remain profitable. Because of this, we expect 2019 to be a strong year for banking outsourcing, with banking ITS and BPS markets growing as fast in 2019 as in 2018. Below I identify five key growth areas for 2019.
IT outsourcing
Banks are merging or selling unwanted branches and lines of business, and this trend will continue until the next recession. M&A will drive IT outsourcing deals, as banks look for temporary labor to integrate targets quickly to realize efficiency benefits.
Core banking platform expertise will be key to winning deals, but digital technologies will be required to support the agility needed to cost effectively reengineer the operations of both the acquiring and acquired banks. Currently, Europe is showing the highest level of activity in this area. Later in the year we expect the U.S. to accelerate. Asia will remain a laggard in this area over the next year.
Open banking
In 2019, open banking will take off, due to regulatory deadlines requiring go-lives in 2019, as banks look to monetize their assets. Open banking is the concept whereby banks open their platforms to third-parties for them to transact business with the banks’ customers and suppliers. And currently, banks are playing with business models, pricing schemes, and target customers.
The banking industry provides no direct comparable offerings to guide banks looking to monetize open banking assets. Setting up a business will require significant investment in security and vendor quality controls before the first dollar is made. Expect there to be many missteps along the way. ITS vendors working on infrastructure enablement will be the ones to make money in 2019. We expect interesting ideas to come to the fore from 2020 onwards. It will take five years for successful business models to take root and consistent earnings to start rolling in.
Automation & AI
RPA and AI implementations have been growing rapidly for the past three years and will continue to do so in 2019. Key initiatives for 2019 will be for services vendors to improve their use case development and create the ability to manage RPA bot groups.
RPA use cases do not make their cost projections over 60% of the time when deployed in POCs. Development of use case libraries and improved analysis is mitigating, but not eliminating, this challenge. Vendors are now repurposing successful use cases across clients and geographies. 2019 will need to be the year where vendors and banks consistently identify winning use cases prior to POC deployments. Vendors who succeed in this challenge will be able to deliver much higher return on engagements for their clients.
Management of deployed bots has been a significant challenge for banks and vendors. By integrating AI into controller bots, vendors can increase the uptime and effectiveness of bot teams. Where bots operate 24/7, it is more effective to automate the management than to have humans managing with shift handoffs.
Cloud delivery
Banks are finally willing to aggressively make the transition to cloud delivery. Currently, the primary venue for cloud is on-premise. However, to achieve aggressive cost takeout under conditions of rapid IT infrastructure/application change, it requires external cloud delivery from a shared environment.
Banks are grappling with redefining the internal/external operations split. In 2019, banks will articulate what needs to remain internal (high value, non-repetitive processes) and what can be delivered externally (low value/less differentiated processes). Operations will still need to integrate these two types of processes effectively. Cloud delivers high cost savings, but on a small operational footprint. Enlarging the operational footprint is the highest cost saver and will be undertaken by successful banks this year.
Transaction processing management
Banks will focus on transaction processing management. Regulations requiring real-time payments have led to new regional platforms which deliver instant payments, including NPP in Australia, RTP in the U.S., and Instant Credit Transfer scheme. Now banks need to understand and manage these high-speed transactions within their internal operations. Banks will deploy AI to achieve better, more efficient processing of transactions. The AI will need to pull and process data in real-time to stop unwanted transactions and report suspicious ones. And because the transactions are between counterparties, banks will seek third-party IT services vendors to support processing and coordinate across counterparties.
]]>The primary purpose of Wipro'ss Digital & Big Bets Analyst Relations day in Boston at the end of November was to outline its digital and automation strategy, including presenting some startup partners Wipro is working with (and has invested in through Wipro Ventures) to help drive forward this strategy. Wipro believes its key technology bets will enable it to help clients reinvent their businesses as digital businesses.
Here I take a look at Wipro’s four ‘big bet’ initiatives, with examples from the financial services industry, and provide feedback from two of Wipro’s startup partners.
The four big bets
Wipro has selected four key areas as its big bets:
Digital
Its digital big bet is around the application of technologies and methods to human interaction, especially customer contact. Wipro presented a case study of a mortgage lender whose legacy mortgage origination process was long, complex, and difficult to navigate for originators and borrowers. The result was a very low conversion rate for borrowers who started an application.
Key components of the solution were mapping processes, bringing in stakeholders to discuss challenges and preferences, designing an improved customer journey, and implementing the platform. The result was improved NPS and conversion rates.
Cloud
Cloud delivery is a foundational bet which underpins all of Wipro’s automation initiatives. Wipro presented a case study of a major financial data provider which used an inflexible legacy platform for its data services business. The platform was inflexible, costly, and operating on aging infrastructure.
Wipro was able to re-platform the legacy apps to AWS while doubling memory and servers. AWS delivery enabled improved BCDR. The result was a 64% reduction in OPEX and a one-year payback.
Cybersecurity
Here, Wipro emphasized the importance of making it simpler and easier for clients to manage their cyber risks. Currently, Wipro has ten platforms and is increasing the number of partners it works with to address this ongoing challenge. With reference to the Equifax breach, Wipro stressed that the most important feature of cybersecurity is not to perfectly secure the environment, an unattainable goal, but business continuity after a breach (with continuity requiring minimization of operational losses and trust with stakeholders). It stressed that setting client expectations, using the latest techniques, and providing customers with high levels of transparency are the key elements.
Industrial and engineering services
Here, Wipro is helping clients design products, improve them, and bring them to market. This is typically applicable to manufacturing clients, not financial clients.
The viewpoint from Wipro’s startup partners
I interviewed representatives from two startups Wipro has invested in, both of which are security vendors with large financial services client bases. They spoke to the value of the Wipro relationship and how they deliver value to clients:
Demisto
Demisto is a security orchestration, automation, and response (SOAR) provider. 25% of their clients are F500 companies, including tier one banks and payment processors. Their platform has three key elements:
Demisto said that it benefits from the Wipro partnership due to:
Tricentis
Tricentis is a vendor of automated software testing services for DevOps. They target tier one companies, including large financial institutions. Testing is provided for UI and APIs on the web and mobile systems. Tricentis uses a partnership model for testing delivery, and partner organizations generate 50% of its revenues. Wipro has partnered with Tricentis for 14 months and now has several thousand testers trained in the Tricentis toolset. Over the past year, Tricentis’ revenues have doubled due to its partnering strategy. Over the next few years, Tricentis will focus on testing SAP applications in preparation for the 2025 SAP move to HANA.
Summary
Wipro is using the cloud to help tier one clients with ponderous legacy systems to become more agile and reinvent their business models. The challenge of a cloud environment is increased risk of cyberattack. Avoiding a cloud environment partially mitigates cyber risk, but not enough to overcome the cost and agility disadvantages of a legacy environment. Investments in cybersecurity are made to better manage the cyber risk that comes with cloud delivery and, more importantly, do it in a transparent way that maintains and improves customer confidence in Wipro’s services.
On top of the cloud and cybersecurity platform, Wipro is investing in digital services to support client revenue growth. Financial institutions cannot focus solely on cost-cutting; they need to drive revenues to build a sustainable business model. Promoting positive customer engagement using digital services is driving client revenue growth. Enabling these capabilities requires emerging technology products which Wipro delivers via product investments and partnerships. The partners I met have experienced rapid revenue and customer growth because Wipro’s clients are demanding automation services, and Wipro is recommending and staffing the delivery of those solutions.
None of Wipro’s big bets are final solutions, but rather approaches with no final form. The final goal is flexibility to adapt to an everchanging environment at a significantly lower cost than previously possible (50-80% lower cost versus the previous 20-35%). While most digital competitors are pursuing the same goals, the sheer scale of partnerships, client engagements, and internally allocated resources demonstrates Wipro’s commitment, and the number of engagements executed to date validates Wipro’s initiatives so far.
]]>I recently attended the Infosys Confluence event in California to look at the vendor’s activities in banking & financial services (BFS). Here are the key takeaways.
Under its current CEO, Infosys has taken a new software-agnostic approach to digital business, which is yielding results. Infosys has proprietary platforms, including Finacle, for core banking and NIA for AI. However, Infosys’ primary clients in financial services, tier one global banks, have legacy platforms they are unwilling to replace and digital solutions they have decided to standardize on for future implementations.
For Infosys, the software-agnostic approach means they structure their services to enable plugging in any solution the client prefers, enabling it within an IT ecosystem that will meet the business objectives of the client. To achieve that goal, Infosys has developed Digital Navigation Framework, which it announced at the conference. The five components of the framework are:
Infosys has applied these principles in North America with its BFS clients who, over the past year, have reduced spending on compliance and redirected funds to digital enablement initiatives. Over the next twelve months, the banks intend to take monies from tax savings under the new tax law to drive forward more digital initiatives.
Infosys emphasizes that success in digital enablement requires prior experience working with industry legacy platforms. In the mortgage industry, 97% of loan servicing platforms are from a single vendor, which limits the level of value creation possible. But in origination, due in part to the wide variety of platforms in use, large efficiency gains are possible. In one recent engagement, Infosys enabled a legacy platform to automate most of the data management and the client was able to reduce headcount by 58%.
During the past year in North America, Infosys has added two new retail banking engagements (one a new logo and the other an existing client), both large contracts for mortgage lending services. The contracts rely on Infosys’ state mortgage licenses (currently 44 states) which allow their employees to support the client in regulated processes. Ramp-up has been rapid with over 55 FTEs added in the last twelve months.
There are, of course, challenges: I talked with one client who has been working with Infosys on several RPA POCs, where there was a challenge in integrating bots into the legacy platform to deliver targeted benefits. Successful RPA solution selection requires the client/vendor to balance tradeoffs between:
Once the solution has been selected, successful implementation requires:
All the Infosys clients I have spoken with remain confident in working through startup RPA programs, or are glad they stayed the course where they have successful RPA programs.
I will be researching RPA and AI services in BFS for my next market assessment this fall, delving deeper into adoption challenges and the opportunities these technologies provide to banks.
]]>This is the latest in a recent series of blogs on open banking, which is likely to become the biggest driver of change in the banking industry since double-entry bookkeeping swept the industry in Genoa during the 1300s. I recently talked with Virtusa’s xLabs, a digital innovation hub within Virtusa, about their approach to open banking and what their roadmap is for the future.
Open Innovation Platform
Virtusa xLabs believes a successful open banking environment will require rapid, successful, iterative innovation by banks and FinTechs. However, the inhibitors to innovation include:
Virtusa xLabs has built its Open Innovation Platform (OIP) composed of three elements to reduce the impact of the last three inhibitors (funding, partnerships, and value) and allow individual innovators to focus on addressing the first of them (feasibility). OIP is composed of vendors providing:
The OIP provides access to these resources to allow banks to convert an idea into an MVP in a few weeks rather than months. The effectiveness of the OIP relies in part on scale. Currently, the OIP’s scale of offerings include:
Virtusa xLabs supports clients using its OIP with four services:
NelsonHall perspective
FinTech has been slow to achieve its promise due to several factors. Experimentation to date has been active but ineffective, and most POCs do not meet their business case. More effective synthesis of domain expertise with technology should improve project conversion to useful operational change. And improving a bank’s ability to evaluate and select technology vendors will improve the rate of successful project generation and reduce the cost of achieving success. In addition, sharing best practices for non-differentiating processes will release industry funds to pursue disruptive opportunities, which require long development cycles and large resource commitments.
Virtusa’s OIP is creating a scale community where participants can not only find each other, but the OIP helps participants effectively search for the ‘best fit’ partner. Over time, Virtusa xLabs will need to move the focus of the OIP from accessing a wide range of technology vendors to fewer vendors with a greater domain focus on a few key geographies and business cases.
As FinTech offerings become more mature, technology vision will become less important than business execution. Currently, Virtusa seems to be developing a focus on reg tech, payments, and deposits, which are the core of retail banking. These processes require heavy customization by country and must be executed at high volume and low cost, just the type of processes that need disruption if banks want to remain effective in a digital world.
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I recently attended the TCS Business 4.0 conference in Boston to understand TCS’ latest developments in the BFSI sector. Here are the key takeaways.
BFSI represented 32.5% of TCS’ Q2 2018 revenues and generated $7.7bn in revenue over the latest twelve months. TCS reports 20% of BFSI revenues are derived from its digital offerings, with BFSI clients adopting digital technologies and services at a pace which is expected to accelerate over the next few years. TCS surveys of its own BFSI client base indicate 44% of banks intend to implement open banking capabilities in the next three years and 75% of banks expect to operationalize some form of blockchain platform by 2020.
Digital demand shift from B2C to B2B use cases
Over the last 12 months, TCS has seen a shift in BFSI client demand for digital services from B2C use cases (including digitalization of the customer experience and expanding the range/functionality of omni-channel engagement) to B2B use cases, which include:
TCS is delivering these services using its Machine First Delivery Management (MFDM) network. Increased automation through MFDM helps to increase delivery predictability by reducing error rates, but requires the rearchitecting of the workforce structure, skills, and methods to increase delivery collaboration and agility across TCS’ Global Network Delivery Management (GNDM).
Workforce training has been critical to TCS delivering an agile skilled workforce. It has trained 235k employees on agile work methodologies, 67k agile practitioners, 11k agile certified, and 380 Ninja coaches. This training has resulted in 1.5k agile engagements, 80+ transformational programs, and ~100 large-scale agile adopter clients. TCS claims 20% productivity and 100% process velocity increases where it deploys agile techniques.
A value stream approach to innovation
To support client process innovation, TCS has shifted its operations delivery approach to a value stream orientation. This engages with LOB and operations executives to simplify processes and undertake “risky” processing innovation in the context of business value streams, not operations delivery processes.
Businesses have always competed on price, quality, and speed. Today, digital processing increases the value of speed, making it the prime differentiating characteristic in financial services. This requires transforming operations by failing fast and adopting new IP and procedures as needed. In the past year, banks have changed their buying requirements in the following ways:
Case studies
TCS illustrated the benefits of agile transformation with a case study of a large European bank for whom it provided cloud DevOps, unified collaboration, and multi-shoring services across 65% of the bank’s platform landscape. It involved ~160 agile teams, and 1.5k associates. The key benefits included:
Another BFSI case study focused on business disruption. A major global asset manager (that did not have a personal advisory business) wanted to enter the wealth advisory business with a focus on the mass affluent marketplace. Key differentiators in wealth advisory are quality of advice and price. The challenge was to create a scale business while maintaining a focus on individual customers. The scope of engagement covered two key business activities with robots and advisors working together:
The wealth advisory business has been successful, as evidenced by:
Since the financial crisis, regulators have been tightening the KYC processes banks are required to undertake. Enhanced KYC requirements have been applied across many regulations, including MiFID, PSD2, and ultimate beneficial ownership requirements (U.S. CDD Rule). And, as compliance requirements have increased, banks have spent increasing amounts of time and resources on addressing operational delivery of KYC.
NelsonHall estimates the costs of KYC compliance has increased tenfold over the past decade, and by an average of 26% per year. Yet, despite efforts to standardize approaches and share overhead for KYC activities, financial institutions to date are pursuing a wide range to approaches to addressing KYC compliance. I spoke recently with TCS about its initiatives in delivering KYC services to financial institutions.
TCS’ KYC initiatives
TCS has a large KYC practice with 3K employees, which is part of a larger 6K employee customer onboarding practice. Its clients are tier one financial institutions primarily based in the U.S. APAC, Europe and the U.K. Key domains discussed include:
The broader KYC picture
Despite claims that the industry is automating and digitalizing KYC processing, industry experience clearly shows that STP or shared services remain a distant goal. Key achievable steps towards that goal include:
Vendors are moving ahead with automation and AI services to enhance KYC and reduce the cost, but the banks’ siloed structures remain an impediment to rapid change.
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I recently attended the Capgemini Financial Services Industry Conference in London, also meeting up with several banks to learn more about where they are spending their digital services money, what they are looking for from digital projects, and where the market is headed.
Bank demand for digital services has grown and matured over the past few years. In 2015 and 2016, IT services vendors expected strong growth in digital services engagements from European banks, only to have their hopes dashed. Since early 2017, demand from European banks has been strong. In fact, so far in 2018 European banks have demonstrated white-hot demand. Global banks have allocated budgets of $1bn to $2bn for digital transformation over the next two years, and are committing to spending an additional 4x or 5x that money over the ensuing five to eight years.
Rapidly scaling to meet digital demand
To meet BFSI digital goals, Capgemini believes it needs to deliver at scale globally with relevant market and domain skills. Capgemini’s BFSI group works with 70% of the top 100 global banks and BFSI accounts for ~27% of its revenues. It has~200K employees globally and 55k of those are focused on financial services, half of them based in delivery centers and around the world close to its clients’ operations. Capgemini has been rapidly growing staff to meet the demand for digital services, with ~70% of hires as lateral transfers, and it leverages an ecosystem of enterprise partners, fintechs, academia, and industry thought leaders to support this growth ambition. Of course, effective orchestration is the key enabler of a successful partner ecosystem.
Capgemini has built a reputation among its clients as a vendor who can fix troubled automation projects. Most of its engagements for enablement services, such as RPA, come to Capgemini from failed projects, estimated at one-third of all RPA engagements. RPA projects face challenges because although the POCs work well, the production environment does not match a POC’s conditions. In a production environment, robots break as systems change and data flows shift. Capgemini has been able to rectify RPA projects because of its knowledge of the legacy environments the robots are operating in. Capgemini sees RPA as a ‘band-aid’ to maintain systems until they can be transformed to digital platforms. It will maintain its RPA practice, but expand its digital platform replacement services capabilities.
BFSI platform transformation
Capgemini has focused its BFSI digital services business on platform transformation, which we estimate represents 85% of digital revenues. Client examples presented included:
Each of these engagements required a large-scale global rollout with local customization.
The broader picture
Tier one banks are changing their business models to address new industry cost structures and competitive challenges. And the change requires legacy platform renovation to deliver customer interaction capabilities at much lower cost. Hence, banks are:
Capgemini is maturing its digital BFSI business based on its engagements with several key clients, which are mostly tier one global banks. Previously, Capgemini had focused its engagements on European market requirements. Today, it has expanded its multi-decade, application-driven engagements to support global platform renovation at scale.
Opportunities for strong business growth come to ITS vendors only during periods of rapid technological change, and the digital banking revolution is such a period of change. Capgemini has recognized the opportunity, is committing the capital to building its delivery machine, and has the customer legacy platform experience to capitalize on the opportunity. It is pulling in a wide array of digital capabilities to serve a very focused set of clients, and its client case studies underline how each engagement is part of a very long-term development roadmap.
]]>Atos has made an unsolicited offer for security, SIM cards, and payment cards technology vendor Gemalto. The offer is sizeable at €4.3bn (plus Gemalto’s net debt of €938m at end of H1 2017) financed in cash. It runs until December 15.
Gemalto is another major acquisition for Atos: in its fiscal year ended June 30, 2017, Gemalto generated revenues of ~€3bn, with an EBITDA margin of 17.1%. If the acquisition goes through, Atos and Gemalto will have combined revenues of €15bn, and an operating margin of around 10%; Atos would thus achieve the double-digit margin it has been targeting for years. NelsonHall has published further details of the proposed transaction in its Daily Tracking Service.
Perfect timing by Atos
Gemalto has issued several profit warnings this year related to its Payment and SIM card businesses, which last year represented 51% of its total revenues.
SIM cards are on a secular decline with the stagnation of mobile devices, and delayed investment by telecom service providers in newer SIM technology. The decline in SIM cards revenues accelerated in H1 2017 with a ~16% decline, where Gemalto was only expecting a 5% decline. Atos has stated it will launch a strategic review of the business, if it completes the acquisition.
Growth in its Payment business (smart cards used for payment cards, and related software and services, and mobile payments) in the past had been driven by the late migration of U.S. banks to the EMV standard. After a flat year in 2016 due to market saturation in the U.S., Payment revenues are down, by an estimated 16% in CC in 2017 YTD. Atos highlights that market conditions remain favorable in the mid-term with large geographies such as India still transitioning from a cash economy to electronic payments.
Gemalto has been investing in developing its cybersecurity portfolio, acquiring SafeNet in 2015 and 3M Cogent in 2017, and its M2M business (connected devices, tokens, and related software and security) saw double digit growth in Q2 and Q3 after a flat Q1. Some of its security solutions are experiencing difficulties (notably the Authentication business is transitioning from hardware to software), while others such Data Encryption are doing well. Other units are in different dynamics: Government security and identity is doing well while the Enterprise unit is challenged.
Following several profit warnings, Gemalto’s share value has been at its lower levels since 2011, in the €30-€32 range in the past month. Investors are moving away from Gemalto, not even encouraged by the reaffirmation of the full-year 2017 guidance. There is certainly an opportunistic element in Atos’ unsolicited offer: a 42% premium at €46 a share. This is not as generous as it may seem, as Gemalto’s share was trading at this level only a few months ago, in September.
Breton has also got the backing of state-owned investment bank bpiFrance, which owns a 8.3% stake in Gemalto.
And of course there will be TLCF benefits for Atos in France.
What does this mean for the Atos portfolio?
Currently, Atos has three main hardware and software businesses:
Then comes the philosophical question: does it make sense for Atos to further expand into software and hardware? If it acquires Gemalto, Atos would add another €3bn in revenues from a variety of software and hardware assets that would represent overall ~40% of the group’s revenues. Is Atos is spreading itself too thinly across over an extensive portfolio of IT services, hardware (from quantum computing to specialized phones) and software?
And what are the implications for Worldline? Gemalto has software payment security capabilities that Worldline would be able to use for its payment services - and Worldline has been very open about its ambitions to be the European payment services consolidator.
Outside of payments, how complementary is Gemalto's security portfolio to Atos? And will Atos be able to find a potential buyer for Gemalto’s SIM card business?
Atos' profile is increasingly moving away from building a consistent IT services and payment portfolio to becoming a hardware-plus-services & solutions firm. While this may appear to be contrary to what has been the prevailing trend, Atos has demonstrable expertise in identifying promising targets at a competitive price, subsequently integrating and restructuring problematic businesses at pace, then driving profitable growth from the acquired capabilities. When Atos acquired Bull, for example, Bull was a €1.1bn firm spread thinly across servers, HPC, software, and IT services; the technology part of Bull now lies in BDS, which has become a high growth and highly profitable business. However, Unify, in particular the S&P business, which Atos had been treating as a discontinued operation, is still a work-in-progress.
Gemalto would bring a new and different set of challenges for Atos and its approach to addressing these is not yet clear. However, on balance, Gemalto brings in a set of capabilities that could prove very useful to different parts of the Atos Group.
NelsonHall has just published a comprehensive Key Vendor Assessment on Atos which looks at both Atos (excluding its hardware businesses) and Worldline. For details, please contact Guy Saunders.
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In this article, I look at Mphasis’ Blockchain initiatives and at the segments they are focusing on for further development with their financial services clients. Mphasis began its Blockchain initiatives in 2016, initiating internal experiments and POCs to understand the technology and how it can be applied to business challenges.
Mphasis is working with a global financial services company on POCs and an approach to bringing a customer identity solution to the financial services market, in order to address consumer data challenges in a global environment. The customer and Mphasis are working to address multiple issues including:
The POC took 7 weeks to demonstrate that the technology works and compliance is achievable. The solution was set up as a multi-node environment that enables the industry participants to transact, by enabling functions such as set-up and administration, search, crypto-payments, transaction administration, analytics, regulatory oversight and access.
Since then, Mphasis has built an ecosystem of Blockchain tools and best practices, and conducted multiple POCs. Clients are narrowing the range of use cases they wish to pursue further and are driving some of those into production.
Mphasis’ Blockchain services & use cases
Mphasis has a core group of 10+ engineers working on Blockchain initiatives who are based in Bangalore. Key attributes of Mphasis’ Blockchain ecosystem include:
Mphasis focuses on the Etherium and Hyperledger platforms in its Blockchain work, and expects to add a capability in Quorum soon. Key POCs to date include:
Going forward, Mphasis will focus on:
Conclusions
To date, most Blockchain services vendors have been focused on enabling small groups of direct stakeholders to use Blockchain to eliminate the need for third-party support. Mphasis has focused instead on enabling stakeholders to bring in third-parties as customers, and use Blockchain as a highly secure, reliable self-service tool. This should allow data holders, the sponsors of these initiatives, to monetize their investments in customer data and documents. This will allow Mphasis eventually to transition its Blockchain services towards operations support and cybersecurity. By supporting its clients’ efforts to drive revenue growth, Mphasis is able to support compelling use cases for employing this technology.
]]>In this blog, I look at Capgemini’s Blockchain initiatives and what segments they are focusing on for further development with their financial services clients.
Initially, Blockchain engagements were focused on:
Recently, financial institutions have been narrowing the range of use cases and vendors they are willing to consider. They are looking to drive forward one or more use cases to full production, and their focus with Blockchain services vendors is to develop a selective roadmap for operational deployment of a few high priority engagements.
Capgemini’s Blockchain services & use cases
Capgemini has been pursuing Blockchain for two and a half years, and it has a group of 25+ engineers working on Blockchain initiatives, with seven engagements currently in play. Capgemini’s Blockchain practice believes successful initiatives require a combination of business domain and technology expertise, and it focuses on five areas:
Currently, Capgemini works with four key technology stacks:
Capgemini believes it is differentiating to understand the current state environment within a given client (both business processes and technology processes). Further, that understanding is required to be able to effectively reimagine processes using any advanced technology, especially Blockchain.
Ultimately, Capgemini wants to act as a universal integrator, partnering with technology providers to support clients redesigning their business with Blockchain centric services that also leverage complementary capabilities like AI or machine learning. Capgemini is aiming to serve as the Transformation Partner for their clients, where Distributed Ledger Technology is the transaction framework to deploy next generation, collaborative operating models. Working with key partners, they will continue to evolve core technical competencies in Blockchain to its clients, such as:
Conclusions
To date, most Blockchain services vendors have been:
Capgemini is pursuing a third path of building on its extensive work with client legacy systems, and coupling that domain knowledge of the client with its own ability to coordinate multiple technology vendors to create faster, more effective business restructuring around Blockchain capabilities.
Ultimately, as Blockchain technology matures, Capgemini will transition to providing Blockchain infrastructure services focused on security and technology platform outsourcing. While the technology is still at a very early stage, adoption is increasingly looking to be done primarily by tier-one institutions. The technology will mature rapidly, and infrastructure providers will be harvesting most of the revenues being created for vendors in Blockchain.
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NelsonHall recently attended Capgemini’s financial services analyst conference in Boston, where the company discussed its activities and roadmap for the industry, which is focused on digital services. Here I look at how digital services are now driving Capgemini’s financial services business, with client examples.
Capgemini’s shift to digital financial services
Capgemini formed its financial services unit in 2007 and has grown its financial services business 7-fold from 2007 to 2017, increasing its share of Capgemini’s overall revenue from ~7% to ~28%. In 2014, the financial services unit started its own business transformation to focus on digital services for clients. Today, digital services for global financial institutions represent ~50% of its financial industry business and is growing five times faster than its legacy business. Capgemini’s financial services unit has a client base that is geographically diversified, with ~90% of clients evenly split between the U.S. and Europe, and the rest predominantly in APAC.
Per Capgemini, and consistent with our research, financial institutions are anticipating severe cost compression over the next five years. For example, some capital markets firms expect 20% cost compression. These firms need to aggressively take out cost and have announced cost takeout programs (e.g. BNY Mellon and State Street) which are now several years old and still ongoing. However, the cost compression will not come in a predictable, straight line fashion. The capital markets industry prices its services based on assets under management (AUM). When the market declines, revenues fall due to declining asset values and redemptions. Capgemini is adapting its pricing mechanisms for hosted and outsourced services to follow the AUM-based revenue streams of its clients. This exposes Capgemini to greater revenue volatility, but should create greater client stickiness by supporting client margins regardless of volumes.
Client examples
The most compelling aspect of the conference was the client presentations. Each of the clients represented has substantially changed its business model to expand its lines of business beyond traditional boundaries. Previously the cost of expanding into new lines of business, with new customer bases and new markets, was cost prohibitive. Now, using digital delivery to lower the cost of entry, financial institutions are creating many new lines of business. Below are two examples of the client activities presented at the conference:
In addition, new regulations are driving traditional ITS business, as compliance implementation deadlines continue to drive system modernization. Capgemini has a large payment ITS practice where it is currently working on PSD 2 compliance for European clients. PSD 2 allows any bank customer to use third-party service providers instead of the bank, and requires banks to provide APIs so those third-party providers can access the bank’s platform.
In summary
Banking is changing from a closed-platform industry to an open-platform industry. Digital services are both driving and enabling this change. Capgemini’s client legacy banks are transforming their businesses to adapt to open their platforms to allow customers to customize functionality and products they want to consume. Competitors and partners are gaining access to the bank’s platform to deliver services to the bank’s customers. Creating, managing, and curating APIs is the first step in this evolution. The next step is developing cognitive capabilities to manage the process well.
Finally, the banking industry is being forced to adapt business practices and models from other industries, such as pricing models, to successfully launch new products into the market. Rapid experimentation, coupled with the ability to identify and retain best practices, will be key to banks successfully managing their transition into digital institutions.
]]>Most Blockchain use cases have focused on reducing the need for (and cost of) infrastructure. And in Virtusa’s case, the vendor has focused on engagements where it can combine Blockchain technology with other emerging technologies such as QR codes, IoT, and encryption algorithms to deliver enhanced security and cost savings for environments lacking adequate supporting infrastructure. Here I take a look at Virtusa’s Blockchain initiatives.
Virtusa’s Blockchain services & use cases
Virtusa has been pursuing Blockchain for 3 years, and it has a group of 20+ engineers working on Blockchain initiatives, with 35 additional engineers in training in Hyderabad, who will be fully deployed by Q4 2017. Virtusa provides consulting and pilot services including:
To date, Virtusa has worked on ~100 use cases with clients, of which ~50 have been moved into pilots and remain active engagements. Of the active use cases, ~40 are in the financial services industry. Currently, Virtusa is working on three key use cases to develop them into operational deployments. The top three business patterns that establish strong use cases are:
Virtusa is moving all three of these use cases into production with its clients over the next ten months. It believes that its most differentiated offering is the permission-based sharing of information, due to its access to very low-cost, strong encryption technology. All three of these engagements are based in APAC/Middle East markets. Deployment of operational Blockchain environments in the mature markets of the U.S. and Europe are less likely in the short run due to strong existing infrastructure and the need to establish industry standards. However, changes in the mature markets, such as Brexit in Europe, and the recent announcement of support in production e.g. Hyperledger fabric version 1 are likely to drive adoption because those changes will either require costly new infrastructure or a group of partners sharing a Blockchain environment.
Conclusions
The case for Blockchain operations is developing fastest where institutions operate with little infrastructure (physical or institutional) and services vendors can combine multiple technologies beyond Blockchain itself, to deliver the functionality of a mature marketplace without the industry-wide investment required to create a mature marketplace. This favors business cases where banks operate in an emerging market or where a new bank product is getting deployed which does not have competitors in the market today.
By developing a set of use cases for Blockchain in banking, Virtusa can support clients who differentiate themselves by unique product offerings. Virtusa can help those clients reduce their time to market, which will provide the longest time in market with a product which has no close competitive offerings. By adapting the mix of technology products it combines with Blockchain technologies, Virtusa will also benefit from time in market with few or no close competitive service offerings.
]]>Many Blockchain services vendors have observed that up to 75% of proofs of concept for Blockchain fail to meet their goals. Analysis of drivers for such widespread failure indicates that the initial use case was flawed because it was constructed to justify experimentation rather than solve business challenges. However, TCS has focused its Blockchain efforts on developing uses cases that can drive successful adoption and, more importantly, define the ecosystem for successfully meeting a use case’s key performance criteria. In this latest blog on current Blockchain activities in the financial services industry, I look at TCS’ approach to Blockchain in banking.
TCS’ Blockchain initiatives
TCS has been pursuing Blockchain for 3 years, and it has a group of 100+ engineers working on Blockchain initiatives across all industries. In banking, TCS’ Blockchain group is based in Chennai. TCS’ primary goal is to develop effective Blockchain use cases for the banking industry, and to date has successfully developed 150+ uses cases across all industries.
The use cases for banks segment into key areas of interest for banks:
The largest demand for Blockchain services so far is for KYC/AML services. The key drivers for these areas of interest are processes where one of the following conditions apply:
The processes are primarily from closed loop transactions.
TCS offers consulting, ITS, and process audit services for Blockchain activities. In financial services, TCS has blockchain initiatives in retail banking, investment banking, capital markets, commercial lending. While TCS has not completed the implementation of blockchain project in operations delivery, it has done several POCs for customers in payments, securities settlement, trade finance, "know your customer" and supply chain finance. It is currently involved in a live Blockchain operations environment for a large global bank for Blockchain support of payments), providing audit support for the project. This allows TCS to enhance its understanding of what works and doesn’t work in a Blockchain environment, of which there are few, and none of scale, at present.
TCS works with major Blockchain technology vendors including Ericsson-Guardtime, IBM, Microsoft, and associations (e.g., MIT Media Lab Digital Currency Initiative) as well as through its COIN partners. It has a proprietary Blockchain solution, which it deploys as required in its POCs, but does not sell as a standalone solution.
Conclusions
Global financial institutions are heavily experimenting with Blockchain to understand how and where to use it in their business – or even better, how to use it to change their business model. However, our research shows 70% to 80% of Blockchain POCs fail to meet their initial business case. The biggest challenge in Blockchain is understanding what makes a good business case, and getting stakeholders to cooperate on adoption. The technology, despite its arcane and novel characteristics, is not the primary impediment to adoption.
TCS is focusing its Blockchain efforts on developing a granular understanding of how Blockchain works, and when it succeeds in a business environment. This approach will create efficiency in Blockchain adoption for financial institutions because they will waste less effort on “a solution in search of a problem” and spend more resources applying the right solution to business challenges. TCS is not there yet, but headed in the right direction.
]]>IPSoft's Amelia
NelsonHall recently attended the IPSoft analyst event in New York, with a view to understanding the extent to which the company’s shift into customer service has succeeded. It immediately became clear that the company is accelerating its major shift in focus of recent years from autonomics to cognitive agents. While IPSoft began in autonomics in support of IT infrastructure management, and many Amelia implementations are still in support of IT service activities, IPSoft now clearly has its sights on the major prize in the customer service (and sales) world, positioning its Amelia cognitive agent as “The Most Human AI” with much greater range of emotional, contextual, and process “intelligence” than the perceived competition in the form of chatbots.
Key Role for AI is Human Augmentation Not Human Replacement
IPSoft was at pains to point out that AI was the future and that human augmentation was a major trend that would separate the winners from the losers in the corporate world. In demonstrating the point that AI was the future, Nick Bostrom from the Future of Humanity Institute at Oxford University discussed the result of a survey of ~300 AI experts to identify the point at which high-level machine intelligence, (the point at which unaided machines can accomplish any task better and more cheaply than human workers) would be achieved. This survey concluded that there was a 50% probability that this will be achieved within 50-years and a 25% probability that it will happen within 20-25 years.
On a more conciliatory basis, Dr. Michael Chui suggested that AI was essential to maintaining living standards and that the key role for AI for the foreseeable future was human augmentation rather than human replacement.
According to McKinsey Global Institute (MGI), “about half the activities people are paid almost $15tn in wages to do in the global economy have the potential to be automated by adapting currently demonstrated technology. While less than 5% of all occupations can be automated entirely, about 60% of all occupations have at least 30% of constituent activities that could be automated. More occupations will change than can be automated away.”
McKinsey argues that automation is essential to maintain GDP growth and standards of living, estimating that of the 3.5% per annum GDP growth achieved on average over the past 50 years, half was derived from productivity growth and half from growth in employment. Assuming that growth in employment will largely cease as populations age over the next 50 years, then an increase/approximate doubling in automation-driven productivity growth will be required to maintain the historical levels of GDP growth.
Providing Empathetic Conversations Rather than Transactions
The guiding principles behind Amelia are to provide conversations rather than transactions, to understand customer intent, and to deliver a to-the-point and empathetic response. Overall, IPSoft is looking to position Amelia as a cognitive agent at the intersection of systems of engagement, systems of record, and data platforms, incorporating:
For example, it is possible to upload documents and SOPs in support of automated training and Amelia will advise on the best machine learning algorithms to be used. Using supervised learning, Amelia submits what it has learned to the SME for approval but only uses this new knowledge once approved by the SME to ensure high levels of compliance. Amelia also learns from escalations to agents and automated consolidation of these new learnings will be built into the next Amelia release.
IPSoft is continuing to develop an even greater range of algorithms by partnering with universities. These algorithms remain usable across all organizations with the introduction of customer data to these algorithms leading to the development of client-specific customer service models.
Easier to Teach Amelia Banking Processes than a New Language
An excellent example of the use of Amelia was discussed by a Nordic bank. The bank initially applied Amelia to its internal service desk, starting with a pilot in support of 600 employees in 2016 covering activities such as unlocking accounts and password guidance, before rolling out to 15,000 employees in Spring 2017. This was followed by the application of Amelia to customer service with a silent launch taking place in December 2016 and Amelia being rolled out in support of branch office information, booking meetings, banking terms, products and services, mobile bank IDs, and account opening. The bank had considered using offshore personnel but chose Amelia based on its potential ability to roll-out in a new country in a month and its 24x7 availability. Amelia is currently used by ~300 customers per day over chat.
The bank was open about its use of AI with its customers on its website, indicating that its new chat stream was based on the use of “digital employees with artificial intelligence”. The bank found that while customers, in general, seemed pleased to interact via chat, less expectedly, use of AI led to totally new customer behaviors, both good and bad, with some people who hated the idea of use of robots acting much more aggressively. On the other hand, Amelia was highly successful with individuals who were reluctant to phone the bank or visit a bank branch.
Key lessons learnt by the bank included:
Amelia is now successfully handling ~90% of requests, though ~30% of these are intentionally routed to a live agent for example for deeper mortgage discussions.
Amelia Avatar Remains Key to IPSoft Branding
While the blonde, blue-eyed nature of the Amelia avatar is likely to be highly acceptable in Sweden, this stereotype could potentially be less acceptable elsewhere and the tradition within contact centers is to try to match the nature of the agent with that of the customer. While Amelia is clearly designed to be highly empathetic in terms of language, it may be more discordant in terms of appearance.
However, the appearance of the Amelia avatar remains key to IPSoft’s branding. While IPSoft is redesigning the Amelia avatar to capture greater hand and arm movements for greater empathy, and some adaptation of clothing and hairstyle are permitted to reflect brand value, IPSoft is not currently prepared to allow fundamental changes to gender or skin color, or to allow multiple avatars to be used to develop empathy with individual customers. This might need to change as IPSoft becomes more confident of its brand and the market for cognitive agents matures.
Partnering with Consultancies to Develop Horizontal & Vertical IP
At present, Amelia is largely vanilla in flavor and the bulk of implementations are being conducted by IPSoft itself. IPSoft estimates that Amelia has been used in 50 instances, covering ~60% of customer requests with ~90% accuracy and, overall, IPSoft estimates that it takes 6-months to assist an organization to build an Amelia competence in-house, 9-days to go-live, and 6-9 months to scale up from an initial implementation.
Accordingly, it is key to the future of IPSoft that Amelia can develop a wide range of semi-productized horizontal and vertical use cases and that partners can be trained and leveraged to handle the bulk of implementations.
At present, IPSoft estimates that its revenues are 70:30 services:product, with product revenues growing faster than services revenues. While IPSoft is currently carrying out the majority (~60%) of Amelia implementations itself, it is increasingly looking to partner with the major consultancies such as Accenture, Deloittes, PwC, and KPMG to build baseline Amelia products around horizontals and industry-specific processes, for example, working with Deloittes in HR. In addition, IPSoft has partnered with NTT in Japan, with NTT offering a Japanese-language, cloud-based virtual assistant, COTOHA.
IPSoft’s pricing mechanisms consist of:
While Amelia is available in both cloud and onsite, IPSoft perceives that the major opportunities for its partners lie in highly integrated implementations behind the client firewall.
In conclusion, IPSoft is now making considerable investments in developing Amelia with the aim of becoming the leading cognitive agent for customer service and the high emphasis on “conversations and empathic responses” differentiates the software from more transactionally-focused cognitive software.
Nonetheless, it is early days for Amelia. The company is beginning to increase its emphasis on third-party partnerships which will be key to scaling adoption of the software. However, these are currently focused around the major consultancies. This is fine while cognitive agents are in the first throes of adoption but downstream IPSoft is likely to need the support of, and partnerships with the major contact center outsourcers who currently control around a third of customer service spend and who are influential in assisting organizations in their digital customer service transformations.
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I recently attended the Avaloq client conference in Zurich. The conference was well attended, with ~400 attendees. Avaloq is on a roll, adding clients across offerings and markets for the past several years. Here I outline how they are doing it and what their next steps are.
Background
Avaloq is a privately held vendor of technology-based solutions and services to the financial services industry. It was founded to provide a comprehensive core banking platform, the Avaloq Banking Suite, to banks and wealth managers. Avaloq uses its own banking platform with all its clients, and its banking suite has strong wealth management functionality, which has been extended over the past few years to deliver mass market wealth management and retail banking functionality.
BPS delivery capability was added in 2011, when Avaloq expanded its services into BPS by acquiring a 51% stake in B-Source, a BPS provider founded in 1995. In 2016, Avaloq acquired 100% ownership in B-Source. In addition to its own modules and APIs, Avaloq also has partnerships with ~60 external software vendors to extend the scope of its platform’s capabilities.
Unlike most software vendors, Avaloq has made a strategic decision to move into operations delivery. Avaloq perceives the market is moving towards combined technology/operations delivery because of mounting cost pressures, which limit or eliminate the ability to provide internal IT staff or software delivery or maintenance. Unlike in previous decades, when client banks’ platforms reach the point of requiring a major overhaul, most cannot apply the resources to modernize the platform. Even for banks with those resources available, the business case does not justify an internally-led modernization.
Technology Strategy
Avaloq’s core platform is a proprietary wealth management banking platform which it is modernizing and adding retail banking functionality to. Key components of its development roadmap include:
To deliver platform modernization for its client base, Avaloq has a staff of 450 developers in 3 development centers in Europe and Asia.
Avaloq has already deployed modules for clients via As-a-Service delivery for:
The goal-based wealth management module will go live at year end 2017. Also in 2017, Avaloq will launch new software functionalities including:
In addition, Avaloq is experimenting with technologies including:
Go-to-Market Strategy
Avaloq has focused its go-to-market strategy on selling a combined technology and operations offering. This has been informed by Avaloq’s experience with running operations for banks in its BPO centers. These banks provide Avaloq with best practices and business cases across a wide variety of customer segments and requirements. The ARIZON JV builds on this model and will be running the back-office operations of the 270 banks of the Raiffeisen Group in Switzerland, (Raiffeisen is the 3rd largest banking group in the Swiss market).
Critical to meeting the client project requirements is understanding and refining the business case for transition. Avaloq focuses on understanding and developing the business case for a client’s proposed project. Third party vendors can source an array of services to meet platform modernization projects, a task that banks often find distracting from their ongoing business. The combination of understanding the clients’ requirements and delivery of modular functionality with operations execution has allowed Avaloq to sell to the wealth management divisions of tier one banks.
Avaloq’s current markets include 25 countries in continental Europe and Asia. The target markets for future entry include the U.S. and APAC.
Avaloq will not enter a new market unless it has a scale entry opportunity. In practice this means it will only enter a new market when an existing global client decides it wants to enter a new market using Avaloq software. Thus, based on conversations with clients about their intentions, Avaloq anticipates entering the North American marketplace in the next 24 months and several more APAC marketplaces in the next 12 months.
Conclusions
Avaloq is focused on developing and delivering a combined technology and operations offering. The most frequent buyers of their offerings are wealth managers facing a major systems upgrade. They have developed their domain expertize with their own executives who have worked for industry participants, including clients; and they have developed solutions which are used by local Swiss wealth management banks as well as tier one banks and international banks and wealth managers.
They have broadened this capacity with a development roadmap for their offerings that includes:
Avaloq is targeting a fast-growing niche of the financial services market, wealth management, with a combined technology and operations set of offerings. Its large partner ecosystem allows it to provide a wide range of enhancements which clients can implement in unique configurations to create highly differentiated wealth management businesses. This capability has attracted tier one banks to buy a wide range of services form Avaloq, unlike the typical tier one buying strategy of buying unitary services to implement into the bank’s overall operations program. Because of this, Avaloq is well positioned to build a business that services all tiers of wealth managers in multiple geographies. That would be a unique business in BPS for the financial industry.
]]>This is the second in a series of blogs on current activities, use cases, POCs, and pilots with Blockchain in the financial services industry. In this one, I look at some of what Wipro is doing to support banks and financial services companies in deploying Blockchain solutions.
Blockchain technology & services
Wipro has been active for the past three years in offering Blockchain consulting and development. During that time, it has worked primarily with Ethereum, and Hyperledger, to develop its Blockchain solutions. Wipro has decided to be agnostic about technology partners because of the rapid pace of development and innovations in Blockchain technology, but it does have partnerships for cloud-delivered services on Blockchain. Current partnerships for cloud-delivered Blockchain services include:
In Blockchain, Wipro provides the following sets of services:
Use cases & POCs
Wipro has developed use cases and POCs across industries. In banking and financial services (excluding its insurance use cases), Wipro has focused its efforts on five critical use cases to date:
Each of these use cases has active POCs deployed on Ethereum and Hyperledger. Blockchain POCs could potentially use additional technologies. For example, skip trace could be deployed in concert with Wipro HOLMES Artificial Intelligence Platform, to engage predictive analytics on where the skipped person may have gone to.
Business executives at clients are the primary buyers of Blockchain engagements. They are concerned with POCs which provide flexibility, quick deployment, and scalability. To facilitate achieving these goals, Wipro has been engaged in the following initiatives:
Also, Wipro actively promotes and expands its Blockchain partnerships to broaden its capabilities in this rapidly developing ecosystem.
Summary
The key to successful business use of Blockchain technology is the size of the network using the Blockchain. Network size is impacted by adoption, which is in turn impacted by cost incurred and potential value received. Successful technology services vendors must work on building that ecosystem with their clients for it to be successful. Technology services vendors will be able to have the biggest impact on cost reduction by reducing the ideation and buildout costs. However, insight into how technology interacts with business operations will provide precision into how value will be delivered. Value delivered is even more compelling for prospective network participants than cost issues in their decision process.
It will take several years for large-scale adoption of successful Blockchain ecosystems to be operational. The primary driver of successful adoption will be the development of large, effective ecosystems of participants. Technology services vendors have a large part to play in identifying a realistic roadmap and support the realization of that journey.
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