Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 01 | Page 70

INDUSTRY WATCH Charles Habak, Principal at Booz Allen Hamilton MENA. • Digital banking brings in a much lower cost play • Allows you to interact with customers in ways never been done before • Customers who were less appealing to a bank in the past are now suddenly interesting • There is no choice but to partner with Fintech companies • Key is to balance partnership by leveraging strengths • It is not who is providing what, it is knowing the bank at the end will meet their needs • Whether it means doing it directly or partnering with other firms becomes almost irrelevant to the customer • The bank becomes the single trusted entity • The bank continues to own and maintain the relationship • Where there is success is where technology is added as additional layer on infrastructure • Once business defines exactly what they want to capture, technology follows • What is really coming is new framework of regulations that truly enables digital banking How does the digital banking journey unfold? It is the business managers rather than IT managers who first need to decide on the new business models for digital banking before deploying technology to help, indicates Habak. “We have often witnessed success when technology is deployed as an additional layer on the infrastructure that is already existent. Once a business defines exactly what segments they want to capture and what services they want to offer, technology follows.” Since partnerships are such an important part of digital banking, IT 70 INTELLIGENTCIO managers inside banks need to assess the technology models for partnerships as well. However, the most important role of technology remains providing agility and flexibility for the business, while aggregating, simplifying and streamlining the customer experience. On the regulatory side, central banks and other authorities remain challenged. Services that were once provided by banks are being provided by players outside the realm of banking regulations. While regulators understand the age of digital banking is here and have the right intentions of enabling the market, they have to protect the consumer and protect the financial systems. “What is really coming to the table is the ability to provide a new framework of regulations that truly enables digital banking and digital payments,” says Habak. One of the challenges for digital banking regulations, is how do you make sure the person who is registering is the person you believe they are, in the absence of physical presence. Another requirement is to regulate the partnerships between Fintech companies and banks. The stage has been set where digital banking is no longer going to be just nice to have, but a key requisite of being able to compete. www.intelligentcio.com