The platform is now: Corporate banking and the ecosystems of the future

By Falk Rieker and Oliver Bussmann

 

In a previous post we pointed out that corporate banks were in danger of falling behind the technology curve. We also said that banks needed to respond through full-scale digitalization.

In this post we’d like to take a deeper look at the principles we think should guide this transformation.

Give them it all

 

We strongly believe the future will be one of platforms and ecosystems in which large networks of providers contribute to the collective value chain. Banks, however, have traditionally taken the opposite approach, serving most if not all of their value chain themselves.

This will not be sustainable in the coming world of regulatory mandated open banking, nor in a technology environment where banks but also third-party providers and clients can already easily consume financial services on broad-based platforms (think SAP Cloud, AWS, Google Cloud or Microsoft Azure).

We’ve seen other industries, like manufacturing, successfully implement multi-provider value chains. We think banks must focus on putting the infrastructure in place to build such value chains in financial services too – for example, by taking advantage of the burgeoning third-party Fintech offering.

In doing so, they must be careful to position themselves as platform owners. This is very important. Today banks own the customer relationship. If they don’t take the initiative to secure their place as the central players in the new ecosystems, they run the risk of losing that ownership, which would be disastrous.

One way we think banks can keep customers close is by extending their offering.

This can be within financial services, for example by providing insurance, accounting and tax services, or data analytics. Or, it can be by moving beyond financial services: banks offering supply chain finance, for example, could collaborate with partners to offer warehousing and logistics support too.

In this way banks can become a one-stop shop for corporate clients in the same way platforms like Amazon have become for consumers. This may sound farfetched. But with today’s technology, it is hardly impossible. We see no reason why banks shouldn’t explore broadening their business model beyond traditional banking.

The good news is, when it comes to building such ecosystems, incumbent banks have a significant advantage: their reams of customer data. To capitalize they will need to up their game when it comes to exploiting it for useful insight.

We have often asked ourselves why it is that in the enterprise world we can’t ask a question and get an immediate answer the same way we do every day in our private lives with Google?

The secret is being proactive – and predictive. Companies like Facebook and Google don’t just have data on their customers; they have real-time intelligence on what they are asking about. This lets them provide answers more quickly and precisely, and keeps them on the pulse of user needs. Banks must develop the capabilities to do the same.

Yes, the future is now

 

All of this calls for relentless innovation. Banks must digitalize, build the open infrastructures we have alluded to above, and master the new technologies like blockchain, machine learning, and artificial intelligence that will allow them to put the pieces together into a meaningful whole.

The need is all the more urgent considering that many other industries have already completed this process.

As a result, not only will corporate customers increasingly ask for the type of real-time, on-demand banking services that retail customers receive – they will also have the systems in place to consume them. Those banks that can meet this demand, for example by integrating their offerings directly into their customers’ ERP systems, will have a distinct advantage.

Last but not least, banks must be able to adjust to new business models as market dynamics change.

Take the sharing economy. In the past, people bought their own cars, motorbikes or boats. In the future, people will prefer not to own but to pay per use. We will see similar developments in the enterprise.

Banks as service providers could do well in such a world, but they will need things like advanced analytics to predict usage patterns and so be ready with the right products at the right time.

By mastering platform and ecosystem thinking, we think banks will be able to maintain their positions and even grow their businesses.

For its part, SAP has already reacted to these realities – building both an infrastructure layer (the SAP Cloud Platform) and a digital innovation system, (SAP Leonardo), both of which provide the foundations upon which to grow ecosystems.

We are convinced that the future belongs to platforms and network-based ecosystems. If they can seize the day, corporate banks have an opportunity to play a leading role in them.

If you are interested in learning more about the future of corporate banking, please join the discuss and meet Oliver Bussmann and Falk Rieker at the Sibos in Toronto on October 16th.

Bussmann Advisory helps C-suite executives, entrepreneurs and decision makers stay ahead of the digital disruption curve. With a client base covering top-tier banks, leading blockchain startups, global consultancies and other firms facing disruption, as well as strong connections in the global FinTech community, the Bussmann Advisory team is close to the pulse of the rapid changes facing industry. It provides thought leadership and advisory services above all in digital transformation, innovation orchestration, and business model re-creation.

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Wave of change: Why corporate banks must become part of the digital enterprise

By Falk Rieker and Oliver Bussmann

 

A great wave of change has been breaking over the financial services industry for some time now. When it finally recedes, we can expect a fundamentally transformed market infrastructure to be left behind in its wake.

Driven by unprecedented speed and adoption of new technologies and business models, and accelerated by game-changing regulatory directives like PSD2 and GDPR, this new world of banking will be one of open architectures and broad, integrated ecosystems.

Banks need to act now to be ready for these changes, or risk being caught in the swell. Unfortunately, while some areas of banking are adjusting, others have not been keeping pace with the new currents of digital transformation.

This is certainly the case with corporate banking.

Many corporate banks are saddled with outdated legacy technology that is expensive to maintain, limiting what they can offer. Services tend to be splintered across multiple channels, making for a disjointed customer experience. Wildly different technologies and formats stand in the way of convenience and interoperability.

Under these conditions, it is understandable if corporate banking clients feel underserved, especially compared with what is available in other industries – or even in retail banking.

This is bad for the clients. It is also dangerous for the banks.

 

Out in the cold

 

We see two main areas of concern.

  • Digitalization has made it easier for non-banks to enter financial services. While the Fintech threat has not been as severe in corporate banking as in other areas, there are companies looking to disrupt corporate banking on any number of fronts. If banks don’t up their game, clients may increasingly look to non-traditional alternatives.
  • Digitalization is also changing how businesses operate. Enterprises and whole industries are digitizing along the full value-chain, moving towards large-scale, interoperable ecosystems. Those banks that cannot or will not become integral parts of these new digital ecosystems may find themselves out in the cold.

To avoid this fate, we strongly believe corporate banks must pursue full-scale digital transformation.

Among other things, we believe they should:

  • Think ecosystem. Corporate banks should start thinking in terms of platforms and ecosystems, just like their clients do. Today digital leaders are often platform leaders, and in future we will see industry-specific value chain platforms become the norm in many parts of the economy. Banks will want to be ready to serve such platforms.
  • Exploit the strengths of incumbency. As incumbents, corporate banks have many strengths. Chief among these is the wealth of data they have about customer needs, preferences, and behaviors. This data can be the oxygen to breathe life into their transformation efforts – but only if banks can liberate the information from the silos in which it currently resides. Corporate banks also have strong personal relationships with their clients, of the kind most Fintechs dream of. These relationships are likely to remain important even in a digital world. Banks should work hard to maintain them.
  • Innovate relentlessly. Corporate banks need to innovate to lower risks and costs across the whole organization. There is no end to opportunities, from improving the end-to-end client journey, enabling radical automation and process streamlining, and more efficiently managing capital — to using advanced analytics to increase share of wallet — or big data to pursue pricing excellence.
  • Be ready for next-generation business models. Most importantly, we think banks must prepare for next-generation business models. In Industry 4.0, technology will connect buildings, vehicles, sensors, and machines which will significantly increase productivity. At the same time, the Internet of Things will generate new types of clients and processes as our machines become autonomous agents: self-driving trucks, for example, which thanks to smart contracts can enter into their own agreements and spend and receive their own money. Banks must be ready to service these clients, and this way of working, too.

 

Riding the wave

 

This brave new world will open any number of possibilities for those banks that can adapt.

In a world of trillions of nanosecond micropayments and smart contracts, we think banks will increasingly be seen as trusted providers and fraud risk managers, for instance. This could generate new service opportunities and revenue streams, particularly for banks that have developed industry-specific capabilities.

We think digitalization will also allow banks to move from a one-to-one model based on traditional products to a one-to-many approach featuring new digital products and services. That’s good for clients but also banks – as many of these new digital services can be offered at scale while still being easily customized.

There are a host of other possibilities we might name.

While corporate banks may have been hiding their heads in the sand up to now, we think they can no longer avoid the wave of digital disruption.

Those that dive into the water now should be able to ride this wave to new heights. Those that don’t may very well sink.

 

Attending the Sibos conference in Toronto? Join Falk and Oliver for a discussion on the Next Generation of Corporate Banking on Monday, October 16 @11:30 AM

 

Bussmann Advisory helps C-suite executives and decision makers in global enterprises stay ahead of the digital disruption curve. With a client base covering top-tier banks, global consultancies and other firms facing disruption, as well as strong connections in the global Fintech community, the Bussmann Advisory team is close to the pulse of the rapid changes facing industry. It provides thought leadership and advisory services above all in digital transformation, innovation orchestration, and business model re-creation.

 

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