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Banks Stake Out Similar Growth Strategies, But Fall Short of Customer Focused Ambitions By Nancy Feig May 14, 2007 at 09:42 AM ET New SAP study finds that banks aren't meeting their own IT expectations By Nancy Feig Nearly eight out of every 10 retail banks surveyed are pursuing similar growth strategies, critically limiting their ability to achieve competitive differentiation, according to a new global survey. Banks are falling short of ambitious aims to power these strategies through keen customer insight and see a shift toward standard platforms and service-oriented architecture (SOA) as part of the solution, according to the “Global Retail Banking Benchmark” survey, conducted by the Paris-based European Financial Management & Marketing Association (EFMA) and SAP AG (Walldorf, Germany). The study of 366 bankers from 180 retail banks across 44 countries suggests that one key to success for retail banks lies in outpacing peers in business intelligence and business agility through better application of flexible and scalable IT systems. The findings of the annual survey, now in its fourth year, were presented at the EFMA conference, held recently in Lisbon, Portugal. "Banks are well-advised to take a closer look at why they have not met their expectations of the last surveys," said Patrick Desmarès, secretary general of EFMA. "With eight out of 10 banks pursuing the same strategy driven by customer insight, gaining competitive edge will mean being able to follow through on initiatives to improve customer information systems. These annual studies create discussion and debate across the industry and across borders, and it is great to see the study's impact growing every year." The study's results indicate that bank executives still seek to tap the value of gathering, analyzing and retrieving relevant data on customers and customer segments. However, in comparison to results of prior surveys, banks are still far from where they anticipated they would be today: • When surveyed in 2003, 57 percent of retail banks expected to be performing regular and consistent analysis of customer data by 2007; only 20 percent now make the mark. • The current study revealed that a mere 14 percent of banks claimed that they are making full use of customer segmentation strategies, an increase from only 7 percent in 2004. To underpin business intelligence initiatives, a majority of banks surveyed will continue to use both in-house systems and standard software, as the latest study shows. However, the proportion of those using primarily standard software will increase from 11 percent to 27 percent over the next three years. Survey results revealed: • The percentage of participants viewing their current IT infrastructure as a strategic disadvantage grew to 46 percent this year, from 36 percent in 2004. • In the first year of the survey, nearly all banks expected to have some automation of front-line tools. However, in this year’s survey, only 60 percent of banks reported gains in partial automation. The rest reported either irregular automation or none at all. • Nearly 80 percent of banks see a shift towards standard platforms, driven by developments in service-oriented architecture and increased regulation. Topics » Weblog Main | » View Entries By Topic | » View Entries By Date This is a public forum. CMP Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. CMP Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers. Community standards in the message center do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this forum becomes the property of CMP Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in CMP Media's Terms of Service. Important Note: The Message Center is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business. |
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