Intelligent CIO Europe Issue 02 | Page 64

CASE STUDY C redit Agricole Group is a leading retail bank and the largest asset manager in Europe. With more than 50 million customers, 7,000 branches across 54 countries, a market cap of €23+ billion and a diverse range of products and services including retail, asset management and insurance, its mission to grow its business requires agile and secure IT infrastructure. With ever-growing customer demand, credit card services are a key driver of the bank’s success. To keep dynamic growth and a competitive advantage, however, Credit Agricole Group has to meet strict regulatory compliance and industry standards. Secure archiving of structured credit card or payment transaction data is a must. A new business need is to securely archive unstructured data, such as digitally signed documents from retail banking business processes. This is critical to its challenge. 64 INTELLIGENTCIO Business challenges In 2010, the European Union introduced regulations governing the management and retention of Single European Payment Area (SEPA) financial transactions, an initiative designed to standardise the framework for making and processing electronic payments across Europe. Failure by credit card issuers (and other businesses) to meet SEPA regulations could result in prosecution and heavy fines. Credit card issuers, including Credit Agricole Group, also have to be certified as meeting PCI-DSS (Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards) requirements. This global range of standards works to ensure the safety and security of cardholder data no matter where it is held across the globe. Card issuers unable to meet PCI-DSS can be subject to penalties and costs, could be stripped of their certification and lose the right to issue credit cards. To meet strict compliance, it was paramount for Credit Agricole Group to securely and regularly archive credit card transaction data for as long as 10 years, while facilitating quick and easy data retrieval. The Group was already considering a replacement of its legacy archiving solution. However, because of looming SEPA deadlines, that search became vitally important. “We required an enterprise-level, electronic archiving solution to securely store billions of transactions every year while meeting all regulatory and certification requirements, which could be deployed quickly to meet SEPA deadlines and which would enable thousands of internal users across the bank’s footprint to quickly find and retrieve specific structured or unstructured data assets,” said Gregoire Lundi, in charge of Service Offerings for www.intelligentcio.com