Published by Gbaf News
Posted on October 28, 2016

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Published by Gbaf News
Posted on October 28, 2016

By Dominic Vincent Ligot
The world’s financial infrastructure is collapsing. So they say.
It’s a theme that is oft-repeated. You only have to log on or open your newspaper and stories about problems in the banking world come thick and fast. Fraud, the spats about Brexit, looming financial disasters and misdeeds – it all comes rolling out, spiced up with rumour and gossip, colouring the public idea of the role of banks.
Hardly a surprise then, that despite the industry’s admirable growth and the central roll it has played in society for hundreds of years, the public regards the banking community with suspicion. Issues like security breaches, poor customer service and lack of service evolution all figure heavily in the public mind, while those who work within banking look to the stars and do their best to allay such concerns.
Rebuilding confidence
To win back customer confidence and forge a successful path in the face of unparalleled digital disruption, individual banks (and the whole industry) need to look hard at their long-established business models and operational practices. A few banks have already started out on the digital transformation journey – embracing new technologies and tapping into existing data resources to create improved products and services. Big Data and analytics are the key to all this, but their full potential still remains largely unrealised. Banks now need to take practical steps towards creating data-driven business opportunities from the areas where the public has the wrong impression.
Payments data
Start with the most under-appreciated dataset. Payments reveal a great deal about each user – how much they’ve paid, what they paid for, who was paid, the banks involved, transaction time and location, and so on. In fact, a customer’s payment profile says much more about her, or him, than any social media metric or record. Payments data is highly accessible and can pinpoint lifestyles, detect which companies make up a supply chain, and plot spending trends by time or place. At the same time, although customer data is not as dynamic as payments data, in banking systems it can be attached to other profiles such as payments and credit history to enhance analytics and create successful “Next-Best-Offers”.
Fintech sensibilities
Should banks be worried about the Fintech boom? Not necessarily. Banks have both the resources and the ability to retain their position in a way that start-ups really don’t. They just need to adopt a bit of Fintech thinking. Banks can try some of these simple and practical things in the short term that could make a significant difference:
Okay, these five things won’t turnaround troubled relationships on their own but they could be the first, tentative, steps towards reconciliation.
And once the ‘relevance’ and ‘confidence’ fences have been mended and an enterprise-wide digital transformation strategy embedded, banks can get back to developing meaningful, long-term, data-driven customer relationships instead of settling for a diminishing series of ad hoc, one-night stands.
By Dominic Vincent Ligot
The world’s financial infrastructure is collapsing. So they say.
It’s a theme that is oft-repeated. You only have to log on or open your newspaper and stories about problems in the banking world come thick and fast. Fraud, the spats about Brexit, looming financial disasters and misdeeds – it all comes rolling out, spiced up with rumour and gossip, colouring the public idea of the role of banks.
Hardly a surprise then, that despite the industry’s admirable growth and the central roll it has played in society for hundreds of years, the public regards the banking community with suspicion. Issues like security breaches, poor customer service and lack of service evolution all figure heavily in the public mind, while those who work within banking look to the stars and do their best to allay such concerns.
Rebuilding confidence
To win back customer confidence and forge a successful path in the face of unparalleled digital disruption, individual banks (and the whole industry) need to look hard at their long-established business models and operational practices. A few banks have already started out on the digital transformation journey – embracing new technologies and tapping into existing data resources to create improved products and services. Big Data and analytics are the key to all this, but their full potential still remains largely unrealised. Banks now need to take practical steps towards creating data-driven business opportunities from the areas where the public has the wrong impression.
Payments data
Start with the most under-appreciated dataset. Payments reveal a great deal about each user – how much they’ve paid, what they paid for, who was paid, the banks involved, transaction time and location, and so on. In fact, a customer’s payment profile says much more about her, or him, than any social media metric or record. Payments data is highly accessible and can pinpoint lifestyles, detect which companies make up a supply chain, and plot spending trends by time or place. At the same time, although customer data is not as dynamic as payments data, in banking systems it can be attached to other profiles such as payments and credit history to enhance analytics and create successful “Next-Best-Offers”.
Fintech sensibilities
Should banks be worried about the Fintech boom? Not necessarily. Banks have both the resources and the ability to retain their position in a way that start-ups really don’t. They just need to adopt a bit of Fintech thinking. Banks can try some of these simple and practical things in the short term that could make a significant difference:
Okay, these five things won’t turnaround troubled relationships on their own but they could be the first, tentative, steps towards reconciliation.
And once the ‘relevance’ and ‘confidence’ fences have been mended and an enterprise-wide digital transformation strategy embedded, banks can get back to developing meaningful, long-term, data-driven customer relationships instead of settling for a diminishing series of ad hoc, one-night stands.