Delivering Service Transformation for Banking

Similar documents
White Paper. What Cloud Vendors Don t Want You to Know About Pricing and Contract Terms

DEVELOPING A BANK S SCORECARD

At the Heart of Surety Solutions

THE PROMISE SERVICE IT S HERE AND NOW

CLAconnect.com/creditunions. Impact the Future of Credit Unions

Extended Enterprise Risk Management

Software license forensics. An investigative approach to publisher licensing reviews

Your Business. The Cloud. Business Cloud.

Business Process Services: A Value-Based Approach to Process Improvement and Delivery

Upgrading ATM Software for a Financial Solutions Provider

CFO meets M&A: Value creation in the digital age The Dbriefs Driving Enterprise Value series

Product and Pricing Engines (PPE): Strategic Uses for Compliance, Competitiveness and Profit

ENERGY AND COMMODITIES ETRM SYSTEMS: BUILD, BUY OR SUBSCRIBE TO SAAS

BEYOND CONTRACT RENEGOTIATION Keys to Managing the Sourcing Continuum

Billing Strategies for. Innovative Business Models

Customer Relationship Management Solutions for Vehicle Captive Finance. An Oracle White Paper October 2003

Enterprise Content Management and Business Process Management

Accelerate your SaaS journey. App, market, and partner considerations for independent software vendors

EMV in the U.S. Liability shift; what does this mean for the U.S.?

Experts in the News. Implementing Treasury Banking Solutions Factors and Considerations

Vendor Management Challenges and Expectations An Open Discussion April 13, 2017

Data Governance. Data Discovery.

Third Party Risk Management ( TPRM ) Transformation

represents a likely source of cost savings, improved business performance and stronger customer-facing capabilities.

Enterprise Risk Management: Developing a Model for Organizational Success. White Paper

Mergers and Acquisitions in the Biotechnology Industry


FUSION PHOENIX INTERNATIONAL OVERVIEW

Today s CFO: Changing the game plan for tomorrow

Taking the Lead in Revenue Cycle Transformation

pg. pg. pg. pg. pg. pg. The Differences and Value of Various BPO Models Introduction Case Study Traditional Procurement Outsourcing In Conclusion

Field Service Transformation. KPIs For The Blended Workforce In The Gig Economy

Make money, save money and manage risk

Transforming the office of the CFO

Cash Management: A SourceHOV White Paper

Improved Risk Management via Data Quality Improvement

Australia and New Zealand Testing Board. Testing as a Service. Carol Cornelius ANZTB Capital Quality Consulting

Experience the commitment. CGI Exploration2Revenue TM Business Suite. Optimize your upstream back office

Considerations when Choosing a Managed IT Services Provider. ebook

Viewpoint Transition to the cloud

Corporate Brochure. Elevate Your Flexible Workforce Management and Services Procurement

OPTIMISING INFORMATION WORKFLOW MANAGEMENT (IWM) IN BANKING

Latin America Mergers & Acquisitions Study Integration and divestiture best practices throughout the region

Solutions. Cash & Logistics Intelligent and Integrated Solutions to Optimize Currency Levels, Reduce Expenses and Improve Control

Infosys Limited welcomes you to the

The Integrated Support and Assurance Process (ISAP): detailed guidance on assuring novel and complex contracts

The velocity of change

The Future of Sourcing Begins Now

2017 Oracle EBS Cloud Roadmap

adp.ca Outsourcing: Today s Approach to Doing More with Less Your guide to getting the most from your HR outsourcing experience

QUICK FACTS. Delivering a Managed Services Solution to Satisfy Exponential Business Growth TEKSYSTEMS GLOBAL SERVICES CUSTOMER SUCCESS STORIES

Environmental and social sustainability services

Payment Acceptance Solutions

Data Classification Taking control of your data By Thiruvadinathan Happiest Minds, Infrastructure Management and Security Services

Madison Consulting Group. An Introduction to Our Compliance and Regulatory Consulting Services

HCM Project Planning SUN October 1, 2017

Test Environment Management. Full Lifecycle Delivery and Support

Planning to win. Deal Advisory / Australia. Driving value growth through competitive, flexible funding and supportive financing relationships.

The Path to Clinical Enterprise Maturity DEVELOPING A CLINICALLY INTEGRATED NETWORK

Will IT be one of the biggest hot topics for the private equity and real estate industry in the years to come?

private equity we do a great deal

ERP IMPLEMENTATION RISK

MedSC 2014 Spring Meeting. Managing Field and Consignment Inventory. June 4, 2014

Outsourcing transparency evolution

ICT Integration in Mergers & Acquisitions

Risk Advisory Services Developing your organisation s governance for competitive advantage

4/26. Analytics Strategy

Product. A Flexible Design Engine Helps You Keep Pace With Market Demands

Sponsor/CRO Partnership Optimization

Cloud Computing Opportunities & Challenges

Striking the Balance Between Risk and Reward

Centralizing Your Energy Supply Spend

Moving from ISO 9001:2008 to ISO 9001:2015 Transition Guide

Thomson Reuters: Anti-Money Laundering Survey Insights

Blending Talent and Spend Management:

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY MANAGEMENT ENTERPRISE ESCROW BEST PRACTICES REPORT

DevOps Guide: How to Use APM to Enhance Performance Testing

OPTIMIZING PROCESS AND RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

Bank Merger Marketing Best Practices

Understanding and Mitigating IT Project Risks BY MIKE BAILEY AND MIKE RIFFEL

Agile Master Data Management

Retail Banking Insights

Infrastructure services delivery planning for M&A: An ounce of prevention Part of the heart of M&A series on M&A technology topics

The Future of Retail Banking

WHO WE ARE. Development / Build-to-Suit. Acquisitions. Sale-Leaseback Program

Make money, save money and manage risk. The benefits of well-designed environment, health, safety and sustainability programs

ENTERPRISE RISK SERVICES Managing Risk, Driving Results

01 Introduction. Commercial Strategy 3

The Verifone Best Practice Guide to e-commerce

Software as a Service: The View from SME Finance

Digital asset management, media asset management, and content management: From confusion to clarity

Governance Guideline SEPTEMBER 2013 BC CREDIT UNIONS.

PAREXEL PARTNER PROGRAM. Broaden your reach with a partner you can trust

BEST PRACTICES IN AP AUTOMATION

Back to School for Business Services how to get it right?

Perspective: TCS Supply Chain Center of Excellence An Update

Session 2B Application of Robotic Process Automation on Actuarial Function. Pu Sheng, FSA

Kseniia Jones Senior Manager Global Risk Advisory Deloitte UK

QUICK FACTS. Implementing Business Intelligence and Retail Signal Solutions for Sony PlayStation TEKSYSTEMS GLOBAL SERVICES CUSTOMER SUCCESS STORIES

OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT MODULE

Transcription:

WHITE PAPER Delivering Service Transformation for Banking Making the most of your service provider partnership Contents 2 Strategic objectives and goals 2 Scope definition 3 Viable business case 3 Due diligence 3 Change management and governance 4 Balancing cost and risk 4 Risk management and compliance 4 Service level agreements 4 Leveraging technology 5 Flexible pricing models 5 About the author Delivering technology or business services to the banking industry has its unique challenges and drivers for success. Even though the banking Industry moved to outsourced service delivery models decades back, only a few service providers have been able to establish strong and lasting relationships with banking clients. Why the lack of strong partners in this growing and profitable business? Firstly, it can partly be attributed to a complex operational environment due to hectic mergers and acquisitions. The technology systems and business processes underpinning banks operations have evolved in the same fashion multiple legacy systems cobbled together from different sources continue to operate at a less-than-ideal capacity. Banks and their service providers have invested significant resources to create transformation models for their IT and business process services, sometimes with questionable returns. Secondly, external factors have also played a key role. Regulatory and cost pressures have increased, which means banks and service providers have had to develop solid governance and internal audit capabilities to mitigate risks. Changing consumer demands in an increasingly social and mobile enabled environment have forced banking executives to prioritize quick fixes over strategic transformation. Thirdly, banks are expecting ever-more complex services and long-term value from their providers. In order to be competitive in the business process services marketplace, providers now need to bring deeper industry expertise and solution offerings specifically tied to improved business outcomes be it customer experience, operational efficiencies, or improved responsiveness.

White Paper / 2 Too often, transformation engagements fail to deliver expected results because project teams overlook key design aspects of outsourced delivery models. We would like to highlight some of the key design principles that our clients have found useful as they look to improve critical business operations. Keep in mind that the relevance of each of these principles may differ depending on the services a provider delivers, type of business (retail or wholesale banking), or its product line (loans, deposits, credit cards, commercial finance). Strategic objectives and goals The lack of clarity on what a transformation initiative seeks to achieve is more commonplace than we would expect. A bank may set one or more goals, including immediate and long-term cost savings, improved service quality, customer experience transformation, risk mitigation or flexible delivery models. Banks and providers need to collaborate to establish and agree on short, medium and long term priorities for transformation programs, depending on the key business imperatives facing the bank. For example, budgetary pressures may enforce a focus on cost savings, or customer experience may be a top priority. Aggressive expansion plans may require a focus on flexibility and risk management. It is important to communicate the goals at all levels to establish a strategic and tactical alignment at the onset of a transformation initiative. Scope definition Banks must create a clear scope definition before outsourcing a transformation initiative. They must decide what s core and strategic to their business to get the best value from engaging a service provider. The approach could be top-down or bottom-up, but a deeper analysis and evaluation of scope and business priorities is crucial. For example, for a business process transformation initiative, some of the relevant questions to ask are: How integrated is a process to our core business, internal stakeholders and clients? Does transforming or outsourcing the process pose risk to our business, and how can we mitigate the risk? Is the customer experience going to be affected? How will we manage the change for our end customers? Is the business process too complex to change? Can technology changes help in reducing complexity instead? Do we need specialized skills to run the operation, and are those skills core to our business? It is helpful to pose some of these questions upfront, and the bank must be willing to invest in detailed planning and analysis. Experienced service providers and advisory firms will have well-established methodologies to assist banks in this process.

White Paper / 3 Viable business case A key milestone in the decision making process, the business case for service transformation needs to be realistic. A business case that misses key elements of costs that banks will incur can cause significant financial issues later. Some suggested aspects to be considered are: Project Management Office (PMO) Governance and change management Regulatory compliance, audits, and operational risk management Transition/migration support Service taxes Human resource costs: retention plans, incentives, etc. IT changes and maintenance Contract administration Accounting for all anticipated costs is only one aspect of business case development. We also recommend investing time to create scenarios that include upsides related to transformation increased revenues, improved customer experience resulting in lesser customer attrition, better resource optimization, etc. This will help business leaders provide their executives, board members and regulators an accurate financial picture and garner support for transformation initiatives. A key milestone in the decision making process, the business case for service transformation needs to be realistic. Due diligence Banks today face unprecedented scrutiny from their shareholders, employees, and regulators. Regulatory agencies will have the ability to watch your governance system for flaws. It s paramount to have a stringent due diligence process to manage the risk associated with using external providers for critical business services. Assembling a team of experts to conduct this due diligence process is highly recommended. The process can be time consuming and resource intensive, involving detailed site visits, reviewing policies and practices of providers, compliance checks and audits, technology and security reviews, and other elements. For best preparation, create a structured project plan with clearly defined requirements, data requests and timelines, and share this plan with service providers to avoid delays and confusion in the contracting process. Change management and governance Governance and change management are critical aspects of managing transformation initiatives. After all, transformational change is all about people, processes and technology. The goal is to establish a governance model that interlocks seamlessly between banks and their service providers to cover strategic and tactical actions. This model is best supported by a designated Project Management Office (PMO) that can help resolve and act on issues in a timely manner. Change management, similarly, needs to be a multi-functional initiative. It starts with creating alignment within the various functions at the bank through a well-defined communication plan. Departments that are directly affected need to be involved and their concerns addressed well in advance of the initiative. End customer impact needs to be assessed as well. Define an execution plan to migrate customers to different processes and technology as the bank undergoes transformation. Lastly, establish a change management process that can address evolving business needs over time. The contract should specifically outline how the bank will manage operational and process changes with service providers.

White Paper / 4 Balancing cost and risk Service level agreements Transitioning services to a provider can be an overwhelming experience. Sponsoring executives worry about investments required, risk of disruption in services, and post-transition stabilization. Designing a phased approach to transition services mitigates risk, but entails significant upfront costs. Creating a balance between risk and savings, therefore, becomes an important decision point. Designing the SLA framework is integral to the contract management process. However, this can be challenging for banks, especially for the mid-tier banks that are new to outsourcing. Defining target performance becomes a challenge without established baseline performance. Without established performance standards and accurate measurement methods for business processes and IT, how do you know what service levels define a best-in-class customer experience? A solid contractual framework that reduces a bank s upfront costs can also help take the edge off transition costs and risks. It can include pricing clauses such as milestone-based fee payments and delay penalties, or other customizations. However, what s most helpful is detailed and collaborative planning, a clear segregation of responsibilities during transition, and understanding of the support required from the bank by service providers. This upfront planning effort can be resource intensive, but is time well spent to avoid fire-fighting and cost overruns during the transition phase. Risk management and compliance Banks have comprehensive compliance requirements (for example, FFIEC, PCI, SSAE16 in the U.S.) that service providers need to support. Also, operational risk related to transaction processing (such as loan and credit card processing) becomes crucial in an outsourced, possibly international service environment. Service providers need adequate process and quality controls, along with technology solutions, to mitigate these risks. Lastly, business continuity and disaster planning is essential to manage mission-critical business operations. Clearly define service recovery timelines and contingency plans in your contract. Costs associated with implementing and monitoring risk management practices need to be incorporated in the business case. Providers now also offer sophisticated reporting and performance analytics solutions for business process and technology services. Providers can use innovative service level management constructs (such as bonus and penalty mechanisms) to improve quality over the term of the engagement. Leveraging technology The business process services marketplace today offers a variety of innovative technology solutions automation of processes, fraud and risk mitigation, and operations analytics to name a few. Advancements in deployment models like SaaS and BPaaS in cloud-based environments make a strong case for banks to use technology innovation to drive their transformation objectives. On the other hand, technology changes also pose risks related to data residency and governance that the banks technology teams need to thoroughly evaluate. Where we have seen banks succeed in deploying innovative technology solutions, the business and technology teams have been closely aligned on the transformation goals, with a strong CEO support and buy-in.

White Paper / 5 Flexible pricing models Last but not least, banks should look at pricing constructs that enable a variable cost structure for their operations. Traditionally, services contracts have been built on inputbased pricing, such as Time and Material models. However, the banking industry is increasingly demanding outputbased constructs (per-transaction pricing, for instance) from its service providers. Without adequate measurement and tracking systems, or established benchmarks, output-based pricing models can seem risky. With close collaboration between banks and their service providers, banks can establish a services pricing model that suits their needs. Exploring service transformation bene ts through outsourcing can be a challenging project for a bank s business leaders. But, the returns through such initiatives can move the bank towards a more attractive business model. Critical to success is a collaborative partnership with a service provider that can support the bank s progress with its transformation. Concentrix, an industry leader, can give you the support and expertise you need. About the author Siddhartha Sharad leads Concentrix solution o erings for the Banking Industry in Americas. As a subject matter expert for banking, he has over 15 years of experience helping clients design and implement transformation based outsourcing programs for their business operations. Concentrix Corporation 44201 Nobel Drive Fremont, CA 94538 USA ABOUT CONCENTRIX Concentrix, a wholly-owned subsidiary of SYNNEX Corporation (NYSE: SNX), is a leading business services company. We focus on customer engagement and improving business outcomes for over 450 technology-infused, omni-channel customer experience management, solutions in 40+ languages from 125+ delivery centers. We serve technology; consumer electronics; media and communications; retail and e-commerce; travel and transportation; and energy and public sector clients. 2017 Concentrix Corporation. All rights reserved. Please recycle. For more information To learn more, please contact us at inquiry@concentrix.com or visit