online gambling singapore online gambling singapore online slot malaysia online slot malaysia mega888 malaysia slot gacor live casino malaysia online betting malaysia mega888 mega888 mega888 mega888 mega888 mega888 mega888 mega888 mega888 The Evolution of Digital Banking Post COVID-19

摘要: In this contributed article, Karen Krivaa, VP of Marketing at GigaSpaces Technologies, discusses how Open Banking will become more of a necessity now and the need for efficient data architecture to help drive the adoption. In the current COVID-19 climate, this notion brings the Digital Banking (with need for Open Banking) idea back into the limelight.。

 

Customers have become even more dependent on online and mobile apps as quarantines and social distancing practices mandated during the Coronavirus are driving increased digital engagements. It’s only a matter of time before the demand for more advanced services will become a standard request for all financial services customers. This will move the open banking trend forward in the US, despite the fact that unlike Europe and in Canada, open banking regulations don’t seem to be on the radar in the near future. Applying a broad-based standard to enforce APIs and data sharing for over 10,000 financial institutions is technically and logistically challenging.

Fear of Infection Drives Digital Banking

The Coronavirus has resulted in the massive closing of branch banks. New York City based Citigroup temporarily closed 100 branches and JP Morgan Chase, the largest bank in the country, announced plans to close about 1,000 branches. Those branches that are open will have reduced hours for receiving customers.

Approximately one-third of retail banking customers plan to increase their use of online and mobile banking services post COVID-19 as more services, such as loan and mortgage requests and payments, are becoming virtual and digital on-boarding is available for new accounts. Mobile payment applications are shooting up in popularity as people are reluctant to touch cash or credit cards. These numbers are expected to rise as the pandemic continues to spread, and especially if there is a second wave resulting in another round of restrictions and closures.

However, there is more to digital banking than replacing services that were previously provided in branch banks. Open banking can power new innovative digital services to give banks a competitive advantage by using standard APIs to capture data from customers’ accounts. For example, with access to a comprehensive view of a customer’s data, banks can allow payments from accounts held elsewhere. Digital personal advisors powered by machine learning based applications can analyze all of the savings and investment accounts and customer’s personal goals to recommend optimal opportunities. Financial firms can also use data provided to identify the most relevant service for a customer, the most competitive service pricing, and the most advantageous terms and conditions for investments, loans and mortgages based on advanced risk models and market offerings. Just think how easy it could be to convince customers to move to your bank by showing them how you can improve their earnings or reduce their expenses.

These services are also not limited to B2C. The Bank of America has recently unveiled digital tools designed for small enterprises that help streamline transactions and generate cash-flow projections along with easy connectivity with financial consultants for quick advice.

Towards a More Efficient System Architecture

As more and more people and businesses rely on digital apps for their banking services, the number of online transactions continue to grow; putting a strain on existing IT computing resources. The massive increase in the number of queries is resulting in bottlenecks that can degrade the performance of applications and affect customer service levels. When customers wait too long to complete a transaction or receive approval for a loan, or if they understand that they can receive better conditions from another bank, they are more likely to switch. Thus, banks are faced with the need to scale up their expensive legacy infrastructure to provide the expected user quality of experience, or to find modern solutions that can elastically scale to manage this data at the required speeds, with an optimized TCO.

In many cases large financial services organizations are limited by tangled and archaic systems that are too complex to optimally manage, process and analyze their huge amounts of data from different sources. This was revealed recently in a BIAN survey where over 60 percent of respondents expressed concerns that banks will struggle to open up their APIs because of the “current state of banks’ core architecture.”

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