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THE ROAD TO
PROFESSIONAL
COMPETENCE
IN FINANCE
19RAF1/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association
E-COMMERCE AND
ELECTRONIC BANKING,
MANAGERIAL VIEWPOINTS
 Ruanda Academy for Finance
 QTR 1, 2021
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Mr. Hubert VAN DE VYVER
International Trainer who regularly provides seminars on e-
banking, electronic finance and multichannel banking within the
programs elaborated by BBA and RAF
o Professionally active in the marketing department and in the electronic
banking department of the BNP - Fortis Group in Luxemburg, after
some years in the Private Banking department of the Kredietbank
Group in Luxembourg.
o Also ebanking expert for the Belgian Bank Academy and Redcliffe
Training (UK), giving worldwide trainings about Management
Information Systems in Banking.
Your trainer
–2
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 World Wide Web
 Global village
 International products and services
 Unbanked clients
 Available anywhere
E-commerce and electronic banking
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 Local banking
 Human interface
 Cash transactions
 Special locations
 Personal advice
E-commerce and electronic banking
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E-commerce and electronic banking
Offered products
Electronic/mobile products and services
e.g. banking software, financial information,
mortgages
(simple products in a complex category)
 Physical products and services with
electronic/mobile support
e.g. Bond lending, bearable certificates of
deposit, credit cards
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E-commerce and electronic banking is:
 transactions 24 h a day, 7 days a week
 access through browser (no software) on
PC or mobile (or SMS)
 acceptable level of security
 new ways of banking and commerce
 elements of logistics / bricks
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Advantages for the shop/bank
 An outlet/branch at each (potential) customer with
computer or phone
Tailored products and services
Customers do more for themselves (satisfaction)
Fewer resources (shop/bank)
Cover local needs
Provide public relations and business benefits for
the shop/bank
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Pitfalls for the shop/bank
(1)
No human interface
Slow or unstable connections
Imprecise laws
Client’s acceptance
AML and terrorism financing
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Pitfalls for the shop/bank
(2)
Cost of development and maintenance of website,
mobile apps and transactional tools
Lower customer switching costs
Some products digitally non deliverable
High step in costs for starters (marketing,
promotion, computing)
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Pitfalls for the bank
(3)
Entry barriers
Reputation to attract clients
(higher rates)
Fund raising to pool risk
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Which products and services
need to be handled through a shop or
branch
will be treated by phone (mobile phone)
are offered through the Internet or by e-mail
could be handled using a Call Centre
?
Test
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– A lot of products and services are still handled
through physical shops and branches but most are
already offered through the Internet or over
mobile tools.
– New/existing product ranges (easy products in
complex product ranges) are coming up, like
 mortgages
 all types of insurances
 phone subscriptions
 ordering of goods
Test: conclusion
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Overview of the seminar
1. Introduction
2. Situation of e-commerce and e-banking
3. Strategic choices and new trends
4. E-money: new payment methods ?
5. Practical e-commerce and e-banking
6. Prudential approach in e-commerce and
electronic banking
7. The client and the marketplace
8. Hold back the invisible enemy
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Overview of the seminar
9. Upcoming technology
10. Training
11. Operations
12. Corporate e-commerce and electronic banking
13. General summary
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Overview of the seminar
Objective
Both E-commerce and electronic banking (e-banking) have
nowadays worldwide usual apps both for individuals and
corporate users. Buying Christmas presents, order a quick
meal and pay with Safari banking, sounds familiar? Even
money is turning out to be used more electronically, just
remember PayPal. Social media also develop payments
techniques. But let’s not forget about e-banking! A lot of
product developments will offer new technologies and broaden
the range electronic products and services.
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Overview of the seminar
This can generate a lot of questions:
- What are the best practises and the strategic choices to
make?
- What are the risks of these new developments and how to
tackle them?
- What type of new legislation is created?
- Who are the clients in developing countries, in Europe and
worldwide?
– What are the commercial and technical challenges?
- What about the security of e-commerce and e-banking?
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 the characteristics of the traditional brick and mortar
(B&M) shopper contrast with those of the online shopper
 the similarities and differences between the virtual and the
real-world customer.
 what new communications techniques are uniquely
available in the world of e-commerce.
 Ecommerce From the Customer’s Point of View | Blog Diary Online
from Ernest Wolf (wordpress.com)
E-commerce : the customer’s viewpoint
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 Supply Chain and Logistics Process in E-commerce
Industry
 Optimized Inventory Management, a Must-have for Supply
Chain Management in E-commerce
 Supply Chain Management in E-commerce
 Importance of Supply Chain Management in E-commerce Industry
(oodles.io)
E-commerce: the system supplier’s viewpoint
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THE ULTIMATE ECOMMERCE CHECKLIST FOR
NEW STORE OWNERS
 Ecommerce Checklist for New Store Owners
 The Final Steps
 The Ultimate Ecommerce Checklist for New Store Owners
(oberlo.com)
E-commerce: the shop’s viewpoint
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1. E-banking
1. a Branch network
1. b Internet banking
1. c Mobile banking
1. d New channels
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0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%
Internet
Phone
Branch
Frequency per channel
More than once a week
Once a week
Once a month
Once per trimester
Once per semester
Once a year
Never
1. Introduction
Source: Banking Technology
magazine
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o Branch network
• Branches
- Reduce and upgrade
- More equipment inside
- New services
• ATM’s
- Security and recognition
- Outside branches, new places
1. Introduction
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1. Introduction
ATM’s
Advantages
let the customer execute the time consuming and
low value added operations like cash management,
bill payments
reduce the mail cost of sending bank statements
promotional tool: useful to push products, advises
etc
Drawbacks (and problems)
huge investment in machinery, update of
programs, investment and transformation cost of
buildings (branches)
difficult for non-technological clients or technology
adverse ones
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o Internet Banking
• New generation of clients
• Bare necessity
• Huge success
• Towards ebanking 3.0
o Services offered
• Payment
• Credits
• Insurance etc.
1. Introduction
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• Mobile Banking - Specific services on the mobile
channel
• Payment via cellular phone
• Small transactions
• Alerts for orders
• SMS (payments/alerts)
1. Introduction
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o Mobile Banking – action in developing
countries
• Africa
- Hospital payment in Tanzania
- Five years ago hype, now significant sales
- Orange: 6 million in six African countries
- Vodafone: 13 million users in Kenya, 6 mio in
Tanzania
1. Introduction
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o Mobile Banking – action in developing
countries
• Latin America
- Telefonica: 55 million users (2009)
- 35 % bank accounts, 19 % bank cards, 90 % mobile
phone
• Asia
- Policemen payment in Afghanistan
- Starting in Philippines 2001 / sms payment
- Pakistan: 500.000 users
1. Introduction
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o Point of sale (POS)
• cards
• terminals
• network
1. Introduction
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1. Introduction
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1. Introduction
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Summary part one
Many different banking channels
and shop outlets
-Specialise each other
-Combine them all
-Correspond to the clients’ needs
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2. Situation of e-commerce and electronic banking
2. a Some figures
2. b Practical cases and examples
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2. Situation of e-commerce and electronic banking
2. a Some figures
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2. Situation of e-commerce and electronic banking
2. b Practical cases and examples
One of the best ways to learn how to grow your eCommerce
business is to model those who have done it.
The problem?
Without the right connections, it’s hard to get the insider
information on how these e-commerce sites became so
successful.
The Best Ecommerce Case Studies (63+ Success Examples)
(referralcandy.com)
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2. Situation of e-banking
Definition
e-banking or electronic banking is the use
of electronic methods to deliver traditional
banking services using any kind of
payment media.
Source: Six Puzzles in Electronic Money and Banking
Connel Fullenkamp and Saleh M Nsouli
International Monetary Fund (IMF)
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Why Consumers buy Financial Products Online
–Self-Direction Explains Which
Markets Lead Online Finance
–Some products are too complicated for even
the self-directed to buy online without any online
or off-line advice
Frequently purchased or simple products are
moving online: shares, savings accounts, credit
cards…..
…. But infrequent and complex products need
more than self-direction: mortgage, life
insurance, pension fund … most buyers are
unfamiliar and need to speak to someone before
buying or get online: their position, be able to
analyse it, get advice and tools to support
decision-making and transaction
Source: BGL Bnp Paribas
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Why Consumers buy Financial Products Online
Self-Directed Consumers account
for half of all online finance
buyers, despite being only one-
fith of all consumers
Online experience and confidence
in security drive WHEN they buy
The reason for the difference in behavior lies in
consumers’ attitude to finance, not technology.
Online financial buyers are confident both in
technology AND their own financial decision-making
Self-direction: motivation and confidence to research
and take financial decisions without the help of an
advisor
Financial Self-Direction determines who buys online
Source: BGL Bnp Paribas
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Summary of part two
Two topics discussed :
- Some figures
- Practical cases and examples
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Case study
What would you need to start a new e-
shop or an electronic bank from
scratch ?
 In terms of budget
 In terms of material
 In terms of legal actions
Choose
your case
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3. Strategic choices and challenges
3.a. Driving electronic and mobile banking to
profitability
3.b. Powering multibrand and multichannel
distribution
3.c. Banking and shopping for the poor
3.d. Why should banks organise electronic
banking?
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What are the reasons why not going into mobile banking in this moment
and what are the plans from your perception?
what is your understanding of mobile banking (getting information only
or transactions execution, investment found management, etc.)?
Which concept do you prefer (full inhouse solution, outsourced solution,
or combination with telco operator)?
Case study (1/2): Mobile banking
What population do you intent to target with mobile
banking (whole retail, VIP clients, unbanked clients,
...)?
Why is mobile banking important for the bank (new
revenue, new clients, competition...)?
How do you see business case, or even better, how do
you calculate ROI of a mobile banking project?
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What are the reasons why not going into e-commercein this moment and
what are the plans from your perception?
what is your understanding of e-commerce (from customer’s view, shop’s
owners’ view, supplier’s view, etc.)?
Which concept do you prefer (full inhouse solution, outsourced solution,
or combination with different operators)?
Case study (2/2): e-commerce
What population do you intent to target with e-
commerce (whole retail, VIP clients, poor clients, ...)?
Why are e-shops important for the shopkeepers (new
revenue, new clients, competition...)?
How do you see business case, or even better, how do
you calculate ROI of an e-shop project?
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3.a. Driving online banking to profitability
Stand alone vs. Web enabled
Huge promotion budget and other costs
Moderate returns
Requirements to retain clients
Get paid for services (normal pricing)
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3.b. Powering multi-brand and multi-channel
distribution
Multiple brands
Multiple consumer segments
Multichannel world
Changing customer ’s experience
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3.c. Banking and shopping for the poor
Iinclusion of unbanked and unshopped clients
–primarily using mobile money to send and receive
domestic remittances
–purchase airtime and make purchases remotely
–recommend mobile money to friends and family
–feel their money is safe in a mobile wallet.
–find it has value
–potential customers know about services, believe they
won’t be hard to use, and are already actively managing
their money.
–help combat customer churn (switching to other
providers).
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3.c. Banking for the poor
Untapped potential for shops and banks ?
Negative
– companies assume people with low incomes spend little
–Spending goes to basic needs
–Illiteracy, corruptions, lack of networks limit possibilities
–Positive
–Agregate buying power of the poor community is actualy
quite large e.g. Grameen Telecom ‘svillage phones
–Cheap to market and distribute to the poor
–Very big concentration of population and increase of
income over the years
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3.c. Banking for the poor
Microfinance and mobile banking
cost of the small transactions involved in
microfinance—savings accounts, money transfers,
and loans to the poor—
Cell phones can cut the cost of such transactions,
making widespread microfinance more efficient.
Mobile banking was potentially six times cheaper for
routine banking transactions. (CGAP study)
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Summary of part three
New services are driven by fast emerging industry
trends and accompanying customer pressures (e.g.
paper focus).
The quickly moving, demanding factors of these
initiatives contributed to banks’ and shopkeepers
ongoing extension of its application and platform
infrastructure with new developments, new answers
to clients’ requirements …
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Case study
The Rowe Cos and Merrill Lynch: The ROI Process in
Business/IT Planning
What is the business value of the ROI methodology required for project
planning by Merril Lynch?
Ebanking strategy
What happens, according to Randall Pearson, if a bank does
not offer the following services:
a. Portfolio Management
b. Mobile banking solutions
c. Mobile payments
Do you agree, why ? Do you disagree, why ?
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4. New payment methods
4 a. E-money offer
4 b. Situation
4 c. SMS payment
4 d. Peer to peer payment
4 e. Friend to family payment
4 f. Value chain of payments
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4a. E-money offer
Definition
Electronic money, or e-money, is any electronic
payment media – any material, device, or system
that conducts payment via the transfer of
electromagnetically stored information
Source: Six Puzzles in Electronic Money and Banking
Connel Fullenkamp and Saleh M Nsouli
International Monetary Fund
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Payment needs Electronic payment
instrument
1. Micro payments Card-based e-money
2. Retail POS payments Card-based e-money
at POS
3. Buddy Banking e-money, peer-to peer
4. Bill payments ATM, Internet banking,
e-money
5. Electronic commerce e-money
4a. E-money offer
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Pay Pal (Demo)
http://www.paypal.com/en_US/m/demo/demo_consumer
/demo_consumer.html
4a. E-money offer
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Pay Pal (Data)
– More than 65 million users
–Present in 45 countries
–6 different currencies (euro, yen, dollar, ..)
–Fraud rate of 0,26 % on international transactions
–Commissions of 2,2 % to 3,4 % (basis points) on
transactions
–Payment protection (till 500 usd, 250 gbp) for sale
on ebay
–More than 1500 employees at Paypal
Source: Pay Pal.com
4a. E-money offer
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o Paypal and Facebook credits
o http://www.facebook.com/credits/
4a. E-money offer
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E-money: slow take off
* Merchants * Regulatory framework
* Cost * Number of people
* Security * High investments
* Compatibility * Multifunctional
4b. Situation
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4b. Situation
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4b. Situation
Country Number
of
issuers
Number of
cards issued
Average value
of transaction
(USD)
Canada 1 77 358 1.50
France 11 1.110.000 3.70
Germany 3500 62 million 1.95
Russia 1 47 30.33
Hong
Kong
60 9.000.000 1
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o E-money in Ukraine
New electronic money regulations came into force on 5 August 2008
o only authorise banks to issue e-money. All other businesses issuing e-
money in Ukraine have one year to either cease their activities or enter
into an e-money distribution agreement with a bank.
o do not cover plastic card payment systems (such as Visa or
MasterCard) or online payment services (such as PayPal or
Portmone).
4b. Situation
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o E-money in Ukraine (continued)
o prohibit anyone other than banks (and businesses who have entered
into an e-money distribution agreement with a bank) from receiving e-
money in exchange for monetary and non-monetary funds.
o require all e-money to be in Ukraine's national currency (hryvnia),
except for money loaded onto pre-pay payment cards.
o include anti-money-laundering provisions limiting all e-money
transactions and amounts stored on electronic devices (such as a
plastic card or computer memory) to 5,000 hryvnias.
o require all banks issuing e-money to submit their rules governing e-
money systems to the National Bank of Ukraine for approval within 6
months.
4b. Situation
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o E-money in Ukraine
4b. Situation
http://www.mts.com.ua/eng/mob_pay_portmone.php
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Drawbacks (and problems)
when lost, the money
and credits can not
totally be recuperated
improve confidence of
use (one does not see
how much stands on his
electronic purse)
Advantages
reduce the use of coins
improvements with non
financial credits
integration in the
existing cards (credit,
debit, shops’ fidelity ...)
promotional support
request from younger
consumers
Electronic purse
4b. Situation
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Tunz (mobile payments)
Banking & payment services
– services to mobile operators and financial
institutions
–- a number of solutions for mobile payment services
under own brand name.
E-Money as a service
– created in 2007,
– approved e-money issuer
–subject to the control of the Belgian Authorities
–benefitting from the European Passport allowing to
operate within the European Union.
4c. SMS payment
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Luup Mobile payments
- Capitalize on the rapidly growing international money transfer market.
- Attract new segments such as the unbanked, migrant workers and the youth
market.
- Boost revenue per customer and increase transactions by providing a new
channel to existing customers.
- Separate brand from the competition by offering modern, customer-focused
services.
- Offers financial institutions expertise in developing, operating and marketing
mobile payment services.
- Global payment network with endless possibilities
- Customers pay, send and receive money from their mobile phone.
– Demo: http://www.luupdemo.com/getstarted.html
– Collaboration with Deutsche Bank :
http://www.db.com/presse/en/content/press_releases_2009_4396.htm
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4c. SMS payment
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4d. Peer to peer payment
Situation and definition
– p2p lending marketplaces
(e.g. Prosper, Zopa, Lending Club, Smava) –
participants driven mainly by economic motives
– social lending services enabling micro financing
(e.g. Kiva, MyC4) – participants driven mainly by
social motives
– other concepts (e.g. Virginmoney “We manage
loans between family and friends“)
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4d. Peer to peer payment
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Fees:
– borrowers:1% of the funded loans
– lenders: 0.5% annual loan-servicing
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PROSPER - PAYMENT PROCESSING.
1. Borrowers and lenders
 get information on standard interest rates and default rates
associated with the various credit rating levels
 make judgments about reasonable payments and risk levels.
2. When the listing ends,
 bids with the lowest rates combined to produce a single loan
( repaid over three years).
 payments drawn from the borrower's bank account and sent
to the various lenders' accounts.
.
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4d. Peer to peer payment
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Source:
P2P-
banking.com
4d. Peer to peer payment
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Virgin Money
 facilitator of friends and family p2p loans in the
US
 does not do the matchmaking between
borrowers and lenders,
 supports the process between persons that
already had offline relations
 number on loan volume generated was 390
million US$.
 acquired predecessor Circlelending in 2007
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4e. Family to friend payment
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Three objectives
◦ Mass
personalisation
◦ Dematerialisation of
cards and terminals
◦ Insure a good level
of security
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Process
◦ 1. products of the payments
chain
◦ 2. Roles in the payments
chain
◦ 3. Costs of the chain
◦ 4. Movements in the chain
Standards
Protocols
Actors
4f. The value chain of payments
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Summary of part four
New payment methods:
How do you want to pay tomorrow from
person to person, on the POS, for e-
commerce etc ?
What are the challenges for the monetary
policy ?
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Case study
Situation:
You are visited by Western Union which offers
you their international payment methods
through the classical cash and clearing system
You are also visited by PayPal which offers you
their national and international payment
methods through the Internet.
What will you suggest the Management Team
of your bank ? Why ?
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5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking
How to set up?
How to improve and survive?
More ...
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5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking
Start a new channel
•Type of license
•Specialised
•Back Office
•Front Office
•Shop
•Technical development
•In house
•Outsourced
•Hotline, call centre
•general
•specialised
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5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking
Improve services and products
- Plan improvements (at least twice a year)
such as new products, other services, add-
ins
- Relooking of web/mobile site every 3 years
- Integrate offline product promotions
- Acquire new clients
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5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking
Survive on the market
- Promotion (on-line and off-line)
- New ways of collaboration and partnerships
- Look at what others and competitors do
- Improve the profitability (costs, commis-
sions …)
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5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking
 Eight secrets for successful e-service
1. Make sure your channels listen
2. Give customers what they want
3. Make response mechanisms easy to find and
use
4. The 80/20 rule
5. Get “pushy”
6. Respond fast
7. Track religiously
8. Automate, automate, automate
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5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking
 Benefits of responsive service websites
1. Reduced cost of customer service
2. Faster customer service and increased satisfaction
3. Increased customer “bonding”
4. Increased traffic and page hits per visit
5. Increased mindshare
6. 24x7 response
7. Freeing up staff EQ - Quiz
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Summary of part five
Practical e-commerce and electronic banking :
start a new channel
improve and survive
responsive service websites
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Case study
Fidelity Investment and others: Evaluating usability in Website design.
Is a usability lab like Fidelity ’s necessary, or are there other alternatives for testing
usability in website design? Which is the better approach? Why?
Ebanking usability
a. What are the factors influencing usability according to
these experts ? Make a list
b. Do you agree, why ? Do you disagree, why ?
c. Which improvements would you apply to your ebanking
channel according to this usability discussion?
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6. Risk, laws and legislation
6.a. Risk management
6.b. Fourteen principles for a sound risk
management
6.c. Cross border issues
6.d. Risk policy
6.e. Laws and legislation
6.f. International standards
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6.a. Risk Management
Trends and issues impacting
bank risk profiles :
e.g. new financial products,
speed in transactions,
expertise in technology
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Identification of risks
Cross Border issues
2 Basic principles
Beginning of E-banking standards ?
(Technology/ Security)
6.a. Risk Management
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6.a. Risk Management
Types of risk (1)
 Strategic and business risk
 Operational risk
 Technology Infrastructure
 Security
 Data integrity
 System availability
 Internal control / Audit
 Outsourcing
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6.a. Risk Management
Types of risk (2)
 Reputational risk
 Legal risk
 Other traditional risks
Credit
Liquidity
Market
Foreign exchange
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6.a. Risk Management
Credit
Liquidity
Source: BIS
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6.b. Fourteen principles
A) Board and management oversight
Effective oversight of e-banking activities
Establishment of a comprehensive control
process
Comprehensive due diligence and
management oversight process for
outsourcing relationships and other third
party dependencies
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6.b. Fourteen principles
B) Security controls
Autentication of e-banking customers
Non-repudiation and accountability for e-
banking transactions
Appropriate measures to ensure
segregation of duties
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6.b. Fourteen principles
B) Security controls
Proper autorisation controls within e-
banking systems, databases and
applications
Data integrity of e-banking transactions
records and information
Establishment of clear audit trails for e-
banking transactions
Confidentiality of key bank information
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6.b. Fourteen principles
C) Legal and Reputational risk
management
Appropriate disclosures for e-banking
services
Privacy of customer information
Capacity, business continuity and
contingency planning to ensure
availability of e-banking systems and
services
Incident response planning
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Types of bank/customer E-Banking Relationships
Licensed Home Abroad
Type of
bank
Onshore Offshore Onshore Offshore
Brick and Click A B C D
Virtual E F G H
6.c. Cross border issues
Source: Bank for International Settlements
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6.c. Cross border issues
Technology expanding the virtual
geographical reach of banks and
customers
No need of physical expansion
Interconnected networks
-> countries not licensed or supervised
Banking and non-banking activities
Different jurisdictions
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6.c. Cross border issues
Existing regulation, laws, controls etc
apply to e-banking
Bank mostly refrain from cross border
activities in e-banking
-> Addition of e-banking to existing
Brick and Mortar
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6.d. Risk Policy
Assess risks
Control risks
Monitor risks
Integrate in overall
risk management
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6.e. Legislation
Introduction
 European directives
 American example
 Other countries (Lebanon, Hong Kong)
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Europe
Directive on prospectuses
Dates: 2003 (Updates in 2004,2006 and 2007)
Refce: directive 2003/71/CE
Objectives:
create a single passport for issuers offering
securities to the public
available on the website or in electronic
format
6.e. Legislation
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Europe
Personal Data protection Bill
Dates: 1995 (Updated in 2003)
Refce: Directive 95/46/EC
Objectives:
Free movement of personal data
Rules for the state, companies and
individuals
Appropriate level of protection
6.e. Legislation
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Europe
Filing via electronic means
Dates: 1968 (Yearly Updates 2006 -> 2009)
Refce: Directive 68/51/EC
Objectives:
 File acts via electronic means
 Useful for bank statements
6.e. Legislation
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Europe
Directive on e-money institutions
Dates: 2000 (Updated in 2006 and 2009)
Refce: Directive 2000/46/EC
Objectives:
Promote consumer confidence in the use of
e-money
Establish regulatory framework for
electronic money institutions
6.e. Legislation
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Europe
Electronic signature act
Dates: 1999 (Updated in 2007 and 2008)
Refce: Directive 1999/93/EC
Objective: Legal framework and technical
conditions for electronic signature
6.e. Legislation
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Europe
Directive on traffic data retention
Dates: 2002 (No Updates)
Refce: Directive 2002/58/EC
Revision of Directive 97/66/EC
Allow traffic data retention for limited
time (billing purposes)
6.e. Legislation
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Europe
Distance marketing of consumer financial
services
Dates: 2002 (Updates in 2005 and 2007)
Refce: Directive 2002/65/EC
Mutual recognition of the banking licence and
prudential supervision
6.e. Legislation
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USA
E-sign act
Date: 1999
Issuer: SEC (Securities exchange
commission)
Objectives:
Retaining electronic records required by
regulation, statute or law
Rules of autentication, filing and timing
terms
6.e. Legislation
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Lebanon
Electronic banking and financial
transactions
Circular n° 1810, 30th march 2000
Objective: modernize, regulate and
organize electronic banking sector
6.e. Legislation
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Hong Kong
Authorization of virtual banks
Banking Ordinance, section 16(10)
Date : May 05, 2000
Objective: define, authorize and organize
virtual banks, in order to conduct banking
business in Hong Kong
6.e. Legislation
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International
Convention on cybercrime
Date: 23th November of 2001
Objective:
International response and coordination to
challenge cybercrime and cyberterrorism
6.e. Legislation
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Basel committee on banking supervision
www.bis.org
www.iosco.org / www.ias.org
Cobit 4.0
www.isaca.org
ISO 17799
www.iso.org
OCTAVE
www.cert.org
6.f. International standards
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COSO – Enterprise Risk Management
www.coso.org
PCI Data Security Standard
www.mastercard.com
Financial Action Task Force
www.fatf-gafi.org
Corporate governance codes
www.ecgi.org
6.f. International standards
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6.g. Balance between risk and userfriendliness
o Acceptable risk
• Legal protection improves
• Not 100% risk free
• Risks in e-bkg reduces, risk in m-bkg to be reduced
• Part of the risk identification process
• Sometimes according to governance-defined goals
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6.g. Balance between risk and userfriendliness
o The Y generation
• Born with technology
• Some experience with small amounts
• New vision about shopping habits
• Easy technological switch (e-bkg, m-bkg)
• Lower risk perception
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Summary of part six
•Risk management
•Fourteen principles
•Cross border issues
•Risk policy
•European directives, US and elsewhere
•International standards
•Acceptable risk and userfriendliness
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7. The client and the marketplace
7.a. Segmentation
7.b. Marketing and commercial trends
7.c. Action in developing countries
7.d. Convert members into clients
7.e. CRM in e-commerce and electronic
banking
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7. The client and the marketplace
7.f. New model of competition
7.g.Using SMS as promotional tools
7.h. The screens network as communication
channel
7.i. Buying life insurances on Internet
7.j. Free tracking tools
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7b. Marketing and commercial trends
Europeans use
online banking to
quite different
degrees.
Source: Deutsche Bank
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7b. Marketing and commercial trends
What we learn from the differences in
Europe
Europeans do not discriminate between online
banking and e-commerce.
Share of online bankers does not decrease with
age.
Education drives online-banking adoption.
Financial incentives can convince some to go
online.
Source: Deutsche Bank
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7b. Marketing and commercial trends
Ebanking 3.0 - American examples
Mint.com (link: www.mint.com)
400.000 users
21 billion usd transactions
Demo: https://wwws.mint.com/
Xero.com
More accounting possibilities
Rudder.com
Email alerts with complete report
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–connects to more than 8,000 US
financial institutions.
– account information updated
daily.
– automatically categorizes all
purchases, showing how much is
spent on gas, groceries, parking,
rent, restaurants, DVD rentals and
more, with amazing precision.
– automatically analyzes and
graphs investment performance,
– highlighting the fees paid in each
of the accounts.
–- advanced alerting system sends
you email or SMS messages (your
choice) on any unusual activity, low
balances, fees and upcoming bills
–constantly searches through
thousands of offers from hundreds
of providers to find the best deals on
everything from bank accounts to
credit cards; brokerage accounts;
and more
– suggestions are unique— as
they’re based on individual spending
patterns.
Mint.com - features
7b. Marketing and commercial trends
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- A dashboard with real-time
view of business at a glance with a
snapshot of all transactions.
- Easy bank reconciliation
keeping accounts accurate and up
to date. Automatic bank feeds get
transactions into Xero without
effort.
- Manage the individuals and
organisations to do business with
and have them easily appear in
invoices and transactions.
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– Single view of where the money is
coming from and when. Create,
send, receive and report on invoices
all from one place.
–View and manage how much
money is owde, what¹s overdue and
what's waiting payment.
– Easily enter and manage personal
expenditure.
– Generate and view interactive
reports in real-time, anytime.
Xero.com – features
7b. Marketing and commercial trends
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7b. Marketing and commercial trends
Ebanking 3.0 European example
Optissima
France
Demo
http://www.optissima.com/caracteristiques
Different features
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–My
budget
–My
expenses
–My
operations
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–Optimisation
– Opti-list
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7b. Marketing and commercial trends
Ebanking 3. 0 - Conclusion
For the Y generation
Challenges for the banking world
Improve advices and services for clients
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7b. Marketing and commercial trends
Power to the user
Blog for feedback
Surveys on website
Inform on the web -> call client / visit
advisor (branch) -> confirm order by
phone (mobile/call center)
Web call back (bank phones client on
demand)
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7b. Marketing and commercial trends
e-commerce and e-banking
Electronic bills
Electronic bank payment
Integration with electronic
shopping malls
Aggregators
Insurance / investments /
accounts
Fidelity cards (shops) / frequent
flyers
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o Africa
o The immense potential in e-Banking in Africa warrants
serious attention from all industry stakeholders. Ethical and
legal issues should be factored in the development of any
related ICT strategy, which regulatory authorities (e.g.
Central banks), should be very familiar with so that the
landscape can be a condusive one to support sustainable
growth in all other socio-economic sectors.
The Future of e-Banking in Africa, CBA
7c. Action in developing countries
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o Africa
• The United Bank for Africa (UBA) Ghana Limited has
taken electronic banking to another dimension by
launching, “Wise Alert” allowing customers to receive
SMS notifications on their mobile phones or through their
e-mail addresses, or both, when transactions occur on
their accounts.
• http://www.modernghana.com/news/133123/1/united-
bank-for-africa-steps-up-electronic-banking.html
7c. Action in developing countries
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o India
• Indian banks : the retail banking in a big way.
• Internet Banking in the nascent stage of development (only 50
banks are offering varied kind of Internet banking services).
• Internet sites offer only the most basic services. 55% are so called
'entry level' sites, offering little more than company information and
basic marketing materials.
• Only 8% offer 'advanced transactions' such as online funds transfer,
transactions & cash management services.
• Foreign & Private banks much advanced in terms of the number of
sites & level of development.
Study by Dr Mishra is Professor at IIM Lucknow.
7c. Action in developing countries
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o India:
o Most Popular Banking Service on Mobile
o Checking account balances most popular banking service used by
urban Indians (40 million users ) checking last three transactions, (28
million) and status of cheques (21 million users.)
Usage Unique Users (In millions)
Used mobile banking 43.70
Checking account balance 39.97
View last three transactions 28.15
Status of cheques 21.06
Payment reminders 20.92
Request a cheque book 19.11
Study mobile banking in india, by Vital Analytics
7c. Action in developing countries
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o Brazil
• Today, the majority of the top Brazilian banks offer advanced e-
banking services
• 25 million Internet banking users.(2008)
• Government actively supports electronic services - and security
• Common services :
- Real-time money transfer;
- Bill pay;
- Tax payment;
- Social security payments.
- ATM usage, (biometrical security as authentication method).
7c. Action in developing countries
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o Brazil
• Today, the majority of the top Brazilian banks are
offering online banking via mobile phones
• Mobile Payment and Authentication with M-CodeOne in
Brazil (vidéo)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFLvhzt81PU
7c. Action in developing countries
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7d. Convert members into clients
Visitors -> members -> clients
Online customer conversion rate
2.5 % in 2005
3.8 % in 2007
Average customer acquisition cost
20.45 Eur / client
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Summary of part seven
Segmentation
Marketing and commercial trends
Profile of a client
Convert members into clients
New model of competition
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Case study: Electronic statements
1. Which of the 11 arguments used in this article are relevant
to your bank? Why?
2. Which arguments in "Other opinions" are not relevant to
your bank? Why?
3. What arguments could one give in favour of paper
statements ?
Case study
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8. How to hold back the invisible enemy
8.a. Threats
8.b. Attacks
8.c. Safeguards
8.d. Security policy
8.e. Anti-Money Laundering
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8.a. Threats
Fundamental threats (1)
Disclosure
Tampering
Denial of service
Repudiation
Illegitimate use
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8.a. Threats
Enabling threats (2)
Masquerade
Trojan Horse
Virus
Control bypass
Authorisation violation
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8.a. Threats
Underlying threats (3)
Eavesdropping
Scavenging
Indiscretion
Admin. error
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8.a. Threats
Phishing/ whaling
e-mail
website
trust/urgency
CNP transactions
stolen card
stolen card details
operate at distance
Others
Botnet Skimming
Malware Spoofing
Spyware Ransomware
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8.a. Threats
Solutions directory on the antiphishing.org website listing the types of
anti-phishing solutions available today on the market.
Sponsor Solutions
Prevent cousin domains
Detect and analyze attacks
Takedown
Fraud analysis
Forensic services
Application gateways
Consumer toolbars
Email authentication
Email filtering
Web filtering
Hardware-based 2-factor
authentication
Software-based Strong
Authentication
Mutual authentication
Law enforcement enablement
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8.b. Attacks
Threats into action
=
Attacks
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8.c. Safeguards
Authentication
(two/three factors)
Access control
Confidentiality
Integrity
Accountability
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8.c. Safeguards
Physical
Personnel
Media
Emanations
Administration
Lifecycle
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8.d. Security policy
Why is security weak ?
Organizations unaware of risks
Organizations unprepared to act
Countless contacts to corporate networks
(ext. - int.)
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8.d. Security policy
Why is security weak ?
Too few experienced employees in security
technology
Lack of time to establish stronger security
Complexity of technology
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8.d. Security policy
New security features
 pictures on login page
 user tracks suspicious sites
 special questions for users
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8.e. Anti-money laundering (AML)
Management needs to recognize electronic
banking as a potentially high-risk area and
develop adequate policies, procedures, and
processes for customer identification and
monitoring for specific areas of banking.
 Risk Factors
 Lack of face to face contact
 Cash withdrawals with no bank staff
 Distance opening of accounts
Source: http://www.ffiec.gov
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8.e. Anti-money laundering (AML)
 Risk Mitigation
 Evaluate
 Assess
 Transaction Testing
 Customer identification
 Credit reference agency search
 Personal rating agencies
 Controls and Audits on STP
Source: http://www.ffiec.gov
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8.e. Anti-money laundering (AML)
Tools
Manuals for AML risk management
http://bit.ly/b6ApzW (fifec)
http://bit.ly/bZLPLV (fatf)
GIFTS Software
 single source provider of anti-money
laundering solutions
KYC solutions
http://www.giftssoft.com
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Summary of part eight
Security is a key issue for clients’
confidence, for banking operations
and for the future of electronic
banking
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Case study
MTV networks and First Citizen Bank: Defending against Hacker and Virus
attacks.
1. What are the business benefits and limitations of an intrusion-detection system like that
installed at First Citizens ?
2. What security defenses should small business have to protect their websites and internal
systems? Explain your choices.
Ebanking Security
What recommendations do the experts give for:
• Data security
• Login/ password security
• Security to access applications
• Identity protection
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9. Upcoming technology
9 a. E-mail centralisation
9 b. Controlled chat (direct talk)
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9. Upcoming technology
E-mail centralisation
Advantages
better follow up of e-mails
less overlap of contacts
cost saving and improved efficiency
Drawbacks (and problems)
investment in equipment
resistance of users
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–Addresses the operational problems introduced by the growing size of e-
mail and electronic messaging data (records management, legal discovery,
supervision and monitoring for non-compliance)
–Includes rules-based retention and retrieval mechanisms to assure that the
required e-mail is retained for the period specified by law
–Adds for fast retrieval of both specific e-mails and subject, timeframe
bound, or author-based batched queries
–Reduces storage costs with advanced compression technology and tiered
storage schematics
–Assists in the management of mailboxes, increases server performance,
enables faster backup and restore
–Assists in the automation of workflow steps and associated e-mail and
electronic messaging content to processes, cases and line-of-business
systems
FileNet Email Manager (IBM)
9. Upcoming technology
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9. Upcoming technology
Controlled chat (direct talk)
Advantages
no physical meeting: that can be either more frequent, either
with both participants on a better time scheme
frequent contact: as soon as the client is connected and the
adviser is available, a contact can be established
promotional tool: useful to push products, advises etc
Drawbacks (and problems)
security to be improved: direct talk can use an unprotected
channel of communication
can be perceived as invasive: to be treated carefully by the
bank
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Summary of part nine
New technologies are coming up,
sometimes from outside the
banking environment, but all will
change the way electronic and
mobile banking will look like in the
future
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10. Training
10 a. Technical staff
10 b. Commercial staff
10 c. Staff in Auditing and Controlling
10 d. Back Office staff
10 e. The client
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167
10. Training
Technical staff
From security experts to computing
professionals, the update and improvement of
their knowledge through training is very
essential, since the technological standards
change quite frequently, every month new
techniques are discovered, new security
breaches have to be covered.
Training with external experts about many
items have to be considered:
networks and internet
security (physical, networks, access codes)
programs and software
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10. Training
Sales force and branch staff
Selling financial products (either non-physical or
physical, like credit cards) in electronic banking
is influenced by:
new legislation (distance selling, protection
of personal data etc)
new techniques of communication on the
marketplace
new relations between the client and the
(electronic) bank
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10. Training
Staff in auditing and controlling
To reduce the risks and improve the prudential
approach in electronic banking, specific training for
auditing and controlling experts is required. The
content should integrate:
new legislation (distance selling, protection of
personal data etc)
new administrative methods and back office
procedures
new security techniques
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10. Training
Back office staff
For the back office staff, the new techniques of
transactions (mainly the straight through processing)
changes a lot the job of the back office staff. The new
hours of operations (later at night for access to a lot of
stock exchanges) changes also.
Required trainings:
new methods of operations’ checking
new methods of financial operations
improved security
new electronic supports and documents
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171
10. Training
The client
Even the client is an important participant to be
trained. It’s more a general approach to
electronic banking: advantages and pitfalls, how
to do simple operations like transfers or standing
orders, how to invest for private clients, how to
act as a electronic banking professional’s clients
(industry’s financial officers)...
e.g. WeProsper.org
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Summary of part ten
Training is essential , in order to
 Maintain security
 Be up to date technically and
technologically
 Educate and acquire clients
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11.Operations
11 a. Cost of operation
11 b. Front Office vs. Back Office
11 c. Brick & Click
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11.Operations
Costs of operation
Human (branch) : 1 EUR
Paper transaction: 0.75 EUR
Self banking: 0,50 EUR
PC transaction: 0.25 EUR
Internet transaction: 0.10 EUR
Source: Gartner Group
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11.Operations
Front Office vs. Back Office
Collaborate with “brick” back office
integrated back office (automation, on line
orders on stock exchanges)
Call centre < - > CRM
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11.Operations
Brick and click
Click
virtual bank
Brick
Confidence
transaction during lunch time
human relation
image building
cash deposit
opening an account
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Summary part eleven
Key elements to operate a sound
e-bank :
 Transactions
 Back Office
 Brick & Click
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12. Corporate electronic banking
12.a. Foreign exchange
12.b. Corporate portals
12.c. BTB banking over the web
12.d. Marketplaces for industrial clients and
the electronic bank
12.e. Automatic clearing houses
12.f. Direct access to quotes and
Stock Exchanges
12.g. Direct access to financial information
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o Basic services
• Web-based Cash Management platform
• Web Based Cash Management file transfer
• Foreign Exchange Spot/Forward and swap execution, an
FX Derivative pricing capability and access to extensive
proprietary research.
• Internet based trade services
o Additional online services
• Credit & Relative Value Analysis
• Corporate & Institutional account enquiries
12. Corporate electronic banking
Foreign exchange
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Examples of corporate banking services :
ANZ
http://www.anz.com/corporate/productsservices/transactionservices
Nordea
https://www.nordea.com/en/our-services/banktobankbusiness/
Automatic clearing houses
http://www.depositaccounts.com/blog/how-ach-transfers-work.html
http://www.finweb.com/banking-credit/learn-the-basics-of-ach-debit-programs.html
e-marketplaces
http://www.epiqtech.com/e-marketplaces.htm
Fedline Web
https://www.frbservices.org/fedline-solutions/index.html
12. Corporate electronic banking
Foreign exchange
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12. Corporate electronic banking
Corporate portals
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o Services on corporate portals
• cash management,
• trade finance
• securities services functions
o Requirements and evolutions
• local regulations: resilience, security, data integrity and
adherence to local requirements
• evolved from direct host-to-host connections for single
purpose transactions to multi-functional internet portals
o E.g. Straight2Bank of Standard Chartered Bank
12. Corporate electronic banking
Corporate portals
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o New needs (Corporate Portals 2.0)
• information sharing
• interoperability
• user-centered design and collaboration
• lack the visual, easy to use and customizable
dashboards
12. Corporate electronic banking
Corporate portals
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Money can be transferred from one bank account to another,
without using a check or debit card. Large numbers of transactions
are processed
every day through the
Automated Clearing House
system. Every bank now uses
this system for a large number
of their transactions.
12. Corporate electronic banking
Automatic clearing houses
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Services
• balance reporting
• payroll direct deposits
• vendor disbursements
• book transfers and wire transfers.
• ACH capabilities
• federal tax payments.
.
12. Corporate electronic banking
BTB banking over the web
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Technology
• a way to speed up the time it takes corporate suppliers
and buyers to send and receive payments
• aims to help banks make better financing decisions by
giving them closer insight to their customers' business
relationships.
12. Corporate electronic banking
BTB banking over the web
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1. European Central Bank (ECB)
No e-banking with commercial banks, only exchange of
information via Internet
2. U.S. Federal Reserve (FedLine Web®)
web technology to access critical payment services
Services offered
Account Services, Check Services, FedCash® Services,
FedACH®Services, Fedwire® Funds Service, Fedwire
Securities Service and National Settlement Service.
12. Corporate electronic banking
Central bank and commercial banks
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o Location on the Internet where companies can obtain or
disseminate information, engage in transactions, or work
together in some way
o Two basic functions:
• 1) they allow companies to obtain new suppliers or
buyers for company products
• 2) developing streamlined trading networks that make
negotiating, settlement, and delivery more efficient.
12. Corporate electronic banking
e-marketplace
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o Services
• forward or reverse auctions
• vendor catalogues
• fixed price ordering
• trading exchange functionality
• bulliten boards / wanted ads
• RFQ, RFI, or RFP capability.
• http://www.epiqtech.com/e-marketplaces.htm
12. Corporate electronic banking
e-marketplace
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Summary of part twelve
Direct access to information, quotes,
investment advice and economical
data, « a click away ».
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13. General Summary
13.a. Others and summary
13.b. More and questions
13 c. Topics handled in this seminar
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13.a. Others and Summary
Significant work in evaluating trends in e-
finance from international Forums and
organisations
The World Bank: www.worldbank.org
FIBV: International stock exchange
federation ww.fibv.org
BIS: Bank of International Settlements
www.bis.org
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13.a. Others and Summary
IAIS: International association of insurance
supervisors wwww.iaisweb.org
OECD: Organisation for economical cooperation
and development www.oecd.org
APEC: European finance ministers
www.apec.org
ENISA: European Network Information Security
Agency www.enisa.europa.eu
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13.b. More and questions
Website:
http://ebanking2000.wordpress.com
E-mail address :
hubvv@outlook.com
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13.c. Topics handled in the seminar
1. Introduction
2. Situation of e-commerce and e-banking
3. Strategic choices and new trends
4. E-money: new payment methods ?
5. Practical e-commerce and e-banking
6. Prudential approach in e-commerce and
electronic banking
7. The client and the marketplace
8. Hold back the invisible enemy
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13.c. Topics handled in the seminar
9. Upcoming technology
10. Training
11. Operations
12. Corporate e-commerce and electronic banking
13. General summary
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Thank you for your attention

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E banking slides raf 2

  • 1. 1 THE ROAD TO PROFESSIONAL COMPETENCE IN FINANCE 19RAF1/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association E-COMMERCE AND ELECTRONIC BANKING, MANAGERIAL VIEWPOINTS  Ruanda Academy for Finance  QTR 1, 2021
  • 2. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 2 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Mr. Hubert VAN DE VYVER International Trainer who regularly provides seminars on e- banking, electronic finance and multichannel banking within the programs elaborated by BBA and RAF o Professionally active in the marketing department and in the electronic banking department of the BNP - Fortis Group in Luxemburg, after some years in the Private Banking department of the Kredietbank Group in Luxembourg. o Also ebanking expert for the Belgian Bank Academy and Redcliffe Training (UK), giving worldwide trainings about Management Information Systems in Banking. Your trainer –2
  • 3. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 3 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association  World Wide Web  Global village  International products and services  Unbanked clients  Available anywhere E-commerce and electronic banking
  • 4. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 4 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association  Local banking  Human interface  Cash transactions  Special locations  Personal advice E-commerce and electronic banking
  • 5. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 5 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association E-commerce and electronic banking Offered products Electronic/mobile products and services e.g. banking software, financial information, mortgages (simple products in a complex category)  Physical products and services with electronic/mobile support e.g. Bond lending, bearable certificates of deposit, credit cards
  • 6. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 6 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association E-commerce and electronic banking is:  transactions 24 h a day, 7 days a week  access through browser (no software) on PC or mobile (or SMS)  acceptable level of security  new ways of banking and commerce  elements of logistics / bricks
  • 7. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 7 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Advantages for the shop/bank  An outlet/branch at each (potential) customer with computer or phone Tailored products and services Customers do more for themselves (satisfaction) Fewer resources (shop/bank) Cover local needs Provide public relations and business benefits for the shop/bank
  • 8. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 8 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Pitfalls for the shop/bank (1) No human interface Slow or unstable connections Imprecise laws Client’s acceptance AML and terrorism financing
  • 9. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 9 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Pitfalls for the shop/bank (2) Cost of development and maintenance of website, mobile apps and transactional tools Lower customer switching costs Some products digitally non deliverable High step in costs for starters (marketing, promotion, computing)
  • 10. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 10 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Pitfalls for the bank (3) Entry barriers Reputation to attract clients (higher rates) Fund raising to pool risk
  • 11. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 11 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 11 Which products and services need to be handled through a shop or branch will be treated by phone (mobile phone) are offered through the Internet or by e-mail could be handled using a Call Centre ? Test
  • 12. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 12 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 12 – A lot of products and services are still handled through physical shops and branches but most are already offered through the Internet or over mobile tools. – New/existing product ranges (easy products in complex product ranges) are coming up, like  mortgages  all types of insurances  phone subscriptions  ordering of goods Test: conclusion
  • 13. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 13 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Overview of the seminar 1. Introduction 2. Situation of e-commerce and e-banking 3. Strategic choices and new trends 4. E-money: new payment methods ? 5. Practical e-commerce and e-banking 6. Prudential approach in e-commerce and electronic banking 7. The client and the marketplace 8. Hold back the invisible enemy
  • 14. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 14 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Overview of the seminar 9. Upcoming technology 10. Training 11. Operations 12. Corporate e-commerce and electronic banking 13. General summary
  • 15. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 15 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Overview of the seminar Objective Both E-commerce and electronic banking (e-banking) have nowadays worldwide usual apps both for individuals and corporate users. Buying Christmas presents, order a quick meal and pay with Safari banking, sounds familiar? Even money is turning out to be used more electronically, just remember PayPal. Social media also develop payments techniques. But let’s not forget about e-banking! A lot of product developments will offer new technologies and broaden the range electronic products and services.
  • 16. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 16 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Overview of the seminar This can generate a lot of questions: - What are the best practises and the strategic choices to make? - What are the risks of these new developments and how to tackle them? - What type of new legislation is created? - Who are the clients in developing countries, in Europe and worldwide? – What are the commercial and technical challenges? - What about the security of e-commerce and e-banking?
  • 17. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 17 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association  the characteristics of the traditional brick and mortar (B&M) shopper contrast with those of the online shopper  the similarities and differences between the virtual and the real-world customer.  what new communications techniques are uniquely available in the world of e-commerce.  Ecommerce From the Customer’s Point of View | Blog Diary Online from Ernest Wolf (wordpress.com) E-commerce : the customer’s viewpoint
  • 18. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 18 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association  Supply Chain and Logistics Process in E-commerce Industry  Optimized Inventory Management, a Must-have for Supply Chain Management in E-commerce  Supply Chain Management in E-commerce  Importance of Supply Chain Management in E-commerce Industry (oodles.io) E-commerce: the system supplier’s viewpoint
  • 19. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 19 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association THE ULTIMATE ECOMMERCE CHECKLIST FOR NEW STORE OWNERS  Ecommerce Checklist for New Store Owners  The Final Steps  The Ultimate Ecommerce Checklist for New Store Owners (oberlo.com) E-commerce: the shop’s viewpoint
  • 20. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 20 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 1. E-banking 1. a Branch network 1. b Internet banking 1. c Mobile banking 1. d New channels
  • 21. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 21 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Internet Phone Branch Frequency per channel More than once a week Once a week Once a month Once per trimester Once per semester Once a year Never 1. Introduction Source: Banking Technology magazine
  • 22. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 22 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Branch network • Branches - Reduce and upgrade - More equipment inside - New services • ATM’s - Security and recognition - Outside branches, new places 1. Introduction
  • 23. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 23 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 1. Introduction ATM’s Advantages let the customer execute the time consuming and low value added operations like cash management, bill payments reduce the mail cost of sending bank statements promotional tool: useful to push products, advises etc Drawbacks (and problems) huge investment in machinery, update of programs, investment and transformation cost of buildings (branches) difficult for non-technological clients or technology adverse ones
  • 24. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 24 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Internet Banking • New generation of clients • Bare necessity • Huge success • Towards ebanking 3.0 o Services offered • Payment • Credits • Insurance etc. 1. Introduction
  • 25. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 25 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association • Mobile Banking - Specific services on the mobile channel • Payment via cellular phone • Small transactions • Alerts for orders • SMS (payments/alerts) 1. Introduction
  • 26. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 26 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Mobile Banking – action in developing countries • Africa - Hospital payment in Tanzania - Five years ago hype, now significant sales - Orange: 6 million in six African countries - Vodafone: 13 million users in Kenya, 6 mio in Tanzania 1. Introduction
  • 27. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 27 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Mobile Banking – action in developing countries • Latin America - Telefonica: 55 million users (2009) - 35 % bank accounts, 19 % bank cards, 90 % mobile phone • Asia - Policemen payment in Afghanistan - Starting in Philippines 2001 / sms payment - Pakistan: 500.000 users 1. Introduction
  • 28. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 30 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Point of sale (POS) • cards • terminals • network 1. Introduction
  • 29. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 31 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 1. Introduction
  • 30. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 32 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 1. Introduction
  • 31. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 33 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary part one Many different banking channels and shop outlets -Specialise each other -Combine them all -Correspond to the clients’ needs
  • 32. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 34 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 2. Situation of e-commerce and electronic banking 2. a Some figures 2. b Practical cases and examples
  • 33. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 35 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 2. Situation of e-commerce and electronic banking 2. a Some figures
  • 34. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 36 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 2. Situation of e-commerce and electronic banking 2. b Practical cases and examples One of the best ways to learn how to grow your eCommerce business is to model those who have done it. The problem? Without the right connections, it’s hard to get the insider information on how these e-commerce sites became so successful. The Best Ecommerce Case Studies (63+ Success Examples) (referralcandy.com)
  • 35. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 37 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 2. Situation of e-banking Definition e-banking or electronic banking is the use of electronic methods to deliver traditional banking services using any kind of payment media. Source: Six Puzzles in Electronic Money and Banking Connel Fullenkamp and Saleh M Nsouli International Monetary Fund (IMF)
  • 36. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 38 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Why Consumers buy Financial Products Online –Self-Direction Explains Which Markets Lead Online Finance –Some products are too complicated for even the self-directed to buy online without any online or off-line advice Frequently purchased or simple products are moving online: shares, savings accounts, credit cards….. …. But infrequent and complex products need more than self-direction: mortgage, life insurance, pension fund … most buyers are unfamiliar and need to speak to someone before buying or get online: their position, be able to analyse it, get advice and tools to support decision-making and transaction Source: BGL Bnp Paribas
  • 37. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 39 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Why Consumers buy Financial Products Online Self-Directed Consumers account for half of all online finance buyers, despite being only one- fith of all consumers Online experience and confidence in security drive WHEN they buy The reason for the difference in behavior lies in consumers’ attitude to finance, not technology. Online financial buyers are confident both in technology AND their own financial decision-making Self-direction: motivation and confidence to research and take financial decisions without the help of an advisor Financial Self-Direction determines who buys online Source: BGL Bnp Paribas
  • 38. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 40 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary of part two Two topics discussed : - Some figures - Practical cases and examples
  • 39. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 41 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Case study What would you need to start a new e- shop or an electronic bank from scratch ?  In terms of budget  In terms of material  In terms of legal actions Choose your case
  • 40. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 42 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 3. Strategic choices and challenges 3.a. Driving electronic and mobile banking to profitability 3.b. Powering multibrand and multichannel distribution 3.c. Banking and shopping for the poor 3.d. Why should banks organise electronic banking?
  • 41. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 43 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association What are the reasons why not going into mobile banking in this moment and what are the plans from your perception? what is your understanding of mobile banking (getting information only or transactions execution, investment found management, etc.)? Which concept do you prefer (full inhouse solution, outsourced solution, or combination with telco operator)? Case study (1/2): Mobile banking What population do you intent to target with mobile banking (whole retail, VIP clients, unbanked clients, ...)? Why is mobile banking important for the bank (new revenue, new clients, competition...)? How do you see business case, or even better, how do you calculate ROI of a mobile banking project?
  • 42. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 44 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association What are the reasons why not going into e-commercein this moment and what are the plans from your perception? what is your understanding of e-commerce (from customer’s view, shop’s owners’ view, supplier’s view, etc.)? Which concept do you prefer (full inhouse solution, outsourced solution, or combination with different operators)? Case study (2/2): e-commerce What population do you intent to target with e- commerce (whole retail, VIP clients, poor clients, ...)? Why are e-shops important for the shopkeepers (new revenue, new clients, competition...)? How do you see business case, or even better, how do you calculate ROI of an e-shop project?
  • 43. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 45 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 3.a. Driving online banking to profitability Stand alone vs. Web enabled Huge promotion budget and other costs Moderate returns Requirements to retain clients Get paid for services (normal pricing)
  • 44. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 46 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 3.b. Powering multi-brand and multi-channel distribution Multiple brands Multiple consumer segments Multichannel world Changing customer ’s experience
  • 45. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 47 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 3.c. Banking and shopping for the poor Iinclusion of unbanked and unshopped clients –primarily using mobile money to send and receive domestic remittances –purchase airtime and make purchases remotely –recommend mobile money to friends and family –feel their money is safe in a mobile wallet. –find it has value –potential customers know about services, believe they won’t be hard to use, and are already actively managing their money. –help combat customer churn (switching to other providers).
  • 46. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 48 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 3.c. Banking for the poor Untapped potential for shops and banks ? Negative – companies assume people with low incomes spend little –Spending goes to basic needs –Illiteracy, corruptions, lack of networks limit possibilities –Positive –Agregate buying power of the poor community is actualy quite large e.g. Grameen Telecom ‘svillage phones –Cheap to market and distribute to the poor –Very big concentration of population and increase of income over the years
  • 47. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 49 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 3.c. Banking for the poor Microfinance and mobile banking cost of the small transactions involved in microfinance—savings accounts, money transfers, and loans to the poor— Cell phones can cut the cost of such transactions, making widespread microfinance more efficient. Mobile banking was potentially six times cheaper for routine banking transactions. (CGAP study)
  • 48. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 51 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary of part three New services are driven by fast emerging industry trends and accompanying customer pressures (e.g. paper focus). The quickly moving, demanding factors of these initiatives contributed to banks’ and shopkeepers ongoing extension of its application and platform infrastructure with new developments, new answers to clients’ requirements …
  • 49. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 52 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Case study The Rowe Cos and Merrill Lynch: The ROI Process in Business/IT Planning What is the business value of the ROI methodology required for project planning by Merril Lynch? Ebanking strategy What happens, according to Randall Pearson, if a bank does not offer the following services: a. Portfolio Management b. Mobile banking solutions c. Mobile payments Do you agree, why ? Do you disagree, why ?
  • 50. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 53 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 4. New payment methods 4 a. E-money offer 4 b. Situation 4 c. SMS payment 4 d. Peer to peer payment 4 e. Friend to family payment 4 f. Value chain of payments
  • 51. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 54 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 4a. E-money offer Definition Electronic money, or e-money, is any electronic payment media – any material, device, or system that conducts payment via the transfer of electromagnetically stored information Source: Six Puzzles in Electronic Money and Banking Connel Fullenkamp and Saleh M Nsouli International Monetary Fund
  • 52. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 55 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Payment needs Electronic payment instrument 1. Micro payments Card-based e-money 2. Retail POS payments Card-based e-money at POS 3. Buddy Banking e-money, peer-to peer 4. Bill payments ATM, Internet banking, e-money 5. Electronic commerce e-money 4a. E-money offer
  • 53. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 56 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 56
  • 54. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 57 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 57 Pay Pal (Demo) http://www.paypal.com/en_US/m/demo/demo_consumer /demo_consumer.html 4a. E-money offer
  • 55. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 58 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Pay Pal (Data) – More than 65 million users –Present in 45 countries –6 different currencies (euro, yen, dollar, ..) –Fraud rate of 0,26 % on international transactions –Commissions of 2,2 % to 3,4 % (basis points) on transactions –Payment protection (till 500 usd, 250 gbp) for sale on ebay –More than 1500 employees at Paypal Source: Pay Pal.com 4a. E-money offer
  • 56. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 59 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Paypal and Facebook credits o http://www.facebook.com/credits/ 4a. E-money offer
  • 57. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 60 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 60 E-money: slow take off * Merchants * Regulatory framework * Cost * Number of people * Security * High investments * Compatibility * Multifunctional 4b. Situation
  • 58. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 61 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 4b. Situation C o u n t r y T y p eo fs y s t e m L o a d i n gp r o c e s s V a l u el i m i t ( U s d ) C a n a d a V is aC a s h ,c a r db a s e d s p e c ia llo a d in gp r o c e d u r e , I n t e r n e t 3 2 5 F r a n c e M o n e o ,c a r db a s e d A T M 1 0 0 G e r m a n y G e ld k a r t e ,c a r db a s e d A T M 2 0 0 U S A V is a ,A m e x ,M a s t e r c a r d ,n e t w o r kb a s e d c r e d itc a r do rb a n ka c c o u n t 2 5–1 0 . 0 0 0 H o n gK o n g O c t o p u s ,c a r db a s e d Y a h o oP a yD ir e c t , n e t w o r kb a s e d A u t o r e lo a d in g ,o v e rt h e c o u n t e r f r o m b a n ka c c o u n t s 1 3 0 6 4 0 R u s s ia P a y C a s h ,n e t w o r k b a s e d I n t e r n e t N olim it
  • 59. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 62 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 4b. Situation Country Number of issuers Number of cards issued Average value of transaction (USD) Canada 1 77 358 1.50 France 11 1.110.000 3.70 Germany 3500 62 million 1.95 Russia 1 47 30.33 Hong Kong 60 9.000.000 1
  • 60. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 63 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o E-money in Ukraine New electronic money regulations came into force on 5 August 2008 o only authorise banks to issue e-money. All other businesses issuing e- money in Ukraine have one year to either cease their activities or enter into an e-money distribution agreement with a bank. o do not cover plastic card payment systems (such as Visa or MasterCard) or online payment services (such as PayPal or Portmone). 4b. Situation
  • 61. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 64 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o E-money in Ukraine (continued) o prohibit anyone other than banks (and businesses who have entered into an e-money distribution agreement with a bank) from receiving e- money in exchange for monetary and non-monetary funds. o require all e-money to be in Ukraine's national currency (hryvnia), except for money loaded onto pre-pay payment cards. o include anti-money-laundering provisions limiting all e-money transactions and amounts stored on electronic devices (such as a plastic card or computer memory) to 5,000 hryvnias. o require all banks issuing e-money to submit their rules governing e- money systems to the National Bank of Ukraine for approval within 6 months. 4b. Situation
  • 62. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 65 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o E-money in Ukraine 4b. Situation http://www.mts.com.ua/eng/mob_pay_portmone.php
  • 63. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 66 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 66 Drawbacks (and problems) when lost, the money and credits can not totally be recuperated improve confidence of use (one does not see how much stands on his electronic purse) Advantages reduce the use of coins improvements with non financial credits integration in the existing cards (credit, debit, shops’ fidelity ...) promotional support request from younger consumers Electronic purse 4b. Situation
  • 64. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 67 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 67 Tunz (mobile payments) Banking & payment services – services to mobile operators and financial institutions –- a number of solutions for mobile payment services under own brand name. E-Money as a service – created in 2007, – approved e-money issuer –subject to the control of the Belgian Authorities –benefitting from the European Passport allowing to operate within the European Union. 4c. SMS payment
  • 65. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 68 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 68
  • 66. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 69 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Luup Mobile payments - Capitalize on the rapidly growing international money transfer market. - Attract new segments such as the unbanked, migrant workers and the youth market. - Boost revenue per customer and increase transactions by providing a new channel to existing customers. - Separate brand from the competition by offering modern, customer-focused services. - Offers financial institutions expertise in developing, operating and marketing mobile payment services. - Global payment network with endless possibilities - Customers pay, send and receive money from their mobile phone. – Demo: http://www.luupdemo.com/getstarted.html – Collaboration with Deutsche Bank : http://www.db.com/presse/en/content/press_releases_2009_4396.htm 69 4c. SMS payment
  • 67. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 70 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 4d. Peer to peer payment Situation and definition – p2p lending marketplaces (e.g. Prosper, Zopa, Lending Club, Smava) – participants driven mainly by economic motives – social lending services enabling micro financing (e.g. Kiva, MyC4) – participants driven mainly by social motives – other concepts (e.g. Virginmoney “We manage loans between family and friends“)
  • 68. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 71 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 4d. Peer to peer payment
  • 69. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 72 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 72 Fees: – borrowers:1% of the funded loans – lenders: 0.5% annual loan-servicing
  • 70. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 73 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association PROSPER - PAYMENT PROCESSING. 1. Borrowers and lenders  get information on standard interest rates and default rates associated with the various credit rating levels  make judgments about reasonable payments and risk levels. 2. When the listing ends,  bids with the lowest rates combined to produce a single loan ( repaid over three years).  payments drawn from the borrower's bank account and sent to the various lenders' accounts. . 73 4d. Peer to peer payment
  • 71. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 74 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 74 Source: P2P- banking.com 4d. Peer to peer payment
  • 72. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 75 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Virgin Money  facilitator of friends and family p2p loans in the US  does not do the matchmaking between borrowers and lenders,  supports the process between persons that already had offline relations  number on loan volume generated was 390 million US$.  acquired predecessor Circlelending in 2007 75 4e. Family to friend payment
  • 73. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 76 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Three objectives ◦ Mass personalisation ◦ Dematerialisation of cards and terminals ◦ Insure a good level of security 76 Process ◦ 1. products of the payments chain ◦ 2. Roles in the payments chain ◦ 3. Costs of the chain ◦ 4. Movements in the chain Standards Protocols Actors 4f. The value chain of payments
  • 74. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 77 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary of part four New payment methods: How do you want to pay tomorrow from person to person, on the POS, for e- commerce etc ? What are the challenges for the monetary policy ?
  • 75. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 78 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Case study Situation: You are visited by Western Union which offers you their international payment methods through the classical cash and clearing system You are also visited by PayPal which offers you their national and international payment methods through the Internet. What will you suggest the Management Team of your bank ? Why ?
  • 76. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 79 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking How to set up? How to improve and survive? More ...
  • 77. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 80 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking Start a new channel •Type of license •Specialised •Back Office •Front Office •Shop •Technical development •In house •Outsourced •Hotline, call centre •general •specialised
  • 78. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 81 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking Improve services and products - Plan improvements (at least twice a year) such as new products, other services, add- ins - Relooking of web/mobile site every 3 years - Integrate offline product promotions - Acquire new clients
  • 79. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 82 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking Survive on the market - Promotion (on-line and off-line) - New ways of collaboration and partnerships - Look at what others and competitors do - Improve the profitability (costs, commis- sions …)
  • 80. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 83 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking  Eight secrets for successful e-service 1. Make sure your channels listen 2. Give customers what they want 3. Make response mechanisms easy to find and use 4. The 80/20 rule 5. Get “pushy” 6. Respond fast 7. Track religiously 8. Automate, automate, automate
  • 81. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 84 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 5. Practical e-commerce and electronic banking  Benefits of responsive service websites 1. Reduced cost of customer service 2. Faster customer service and increased satisfaction 3. Increased customer “bonding” 4. Increased traffic and page hits per visit 5. Increased mindshare 6. 24x7 response 7. Freeing up staff EQ - Quiz
  • 82. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 85 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary of part five Practical e-commerce and electronic banking : start a new channel improve and survive responsive service websites
  • 83. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 86 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Case study Fidelity Investment and others: Evaluating usability in Website design. Is a usability lab like Fidelity ’s necessary, or are there other alternatives for testing usability in website design? Which is the better approach? Why? Ebanking usability a. What are the factors influencing usability according to these experts ? Make a list b. Do you agree, why ? Do you disagree, why ? c. Which improvements would you apply to your ebanking channel according to this usability discussion?
  • 84. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 87 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6. Risk, laws and legislation 6.a. Risk management 6.b. Fourteen principles for a sound risk management 6.c. Cross border issues 6.d. Risk policy 6.e. Laws and legislation 6.f. International standards
  • 85. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 88 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.a. Risk Management Trends and issues impacting bank risk profiles : e.g. new financial products, speed in transactions, expertise in technology
  • 86. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 89 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 89 Identification of risks Cross Border issues 2 Basic principles Beginning of E-banking standards ? (Technology/ Security) 6.a. Risk Management
  • 87. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 90 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.a. Risk Management Types of risk (1)  Strategic and business risk  Operational risk  Technology Infrastructure  Security  Data integrity  System availability  Internal control / Audit  Outsourcing
  • 88. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 91 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.a. Risk Management Types of risk (2)  Reputational risk  Legal risk  Other traditional risks Credit Liquidity Market Foreign exchange
  • 89. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 92 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 92 6.a. Risk Management Credit Liquidity Source: BIS
  • 90. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 93 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.b. Fourteen principles A) Board and management oversight Effective oversight of e-banking activities Establishment of a comprehensive control process Comprehensive due diligence and management oversight process for outsourcing relationships and other third party dependencies
  • 91. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 94 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.b. Fourteen principles B) Security controls Autentication of e-banking customers Non-repudiation and accountability for e- banking transactions Appropriate measures to ensure segregation of duties
  • 92. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 95 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.b. Fourteen principles B) Security controls Proper autorisation controls within e- banking systems, databases and applications Data integrity of e-banking transactions records and information Establishment of clear audit trails for e- banking transactions Confidentiality of key bank information
  • 93. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 96 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.b. Fourteen principles C) Legal and Reputational risk management Appropriate disclosures for e-banking services Privacy of customer information Capacity, business continuity and contingency planning to ensure availability of e-banking systems and services Incident response planning
  • 94. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 97 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 97 Types of bank/customer E-Banking Relationships Licensed Home Abroad Type of bank Onshore Offshore Onshore Offshore Brick and Click A B C D Virtual E F G H 6.c. Cross border issues Source: Bank for International Settlements
  • 95. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 98 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.c. Cross border issues Technology expanding the virtual geographical reach of banks and customers No need of physical expansion Interconnected networks -> countries not licensed or supervised Banking and non-banking activities Different jurisdictions
  • 96. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 99 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.c. Cross border issues Existing regulation, laws, controls etc apply to e-banking Bank mostly refrain from cross border activities in e-banking -> Addition of e-banking to existing Brick and Mortar
  • 97. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 100 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.d. Risk Policy Assess risks Control risks Monitor risks Integrate in overall risk management
  • 98. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 101 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 6.e. Legislation Introduction  European directives  American example  Other countries (Lebanon, Hong Kong)
  • 99. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 102 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 102 Europe Directive on prospectuses Dates: 2003 (Updates in 2004,2006 and 2007) Refce: directive 2003/71/CE Objectives: create a single passport for issuers offering securities to the public available on the website or in electronic format 6.e. Legislation
  • 100. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 103 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 103 Europe Personal Data protection Bill Dates: 1995 (Updated in 2003) Refce: Directive 95/46/EC Objectives: Free movement of personal data Rules for the state, companies and individuals Appropriate level of protection 6.e. Legislation
  • 101. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 104 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 104 Europe Filing via electronic means Dates: 1968 (Yearly Updates 2006 -> 2009) Refce: Directive 68/51/EC Objectives:  File acts via electronic means  Useful for bank statements 6.e. Legislation
  • 102. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 105 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 105 Europe Directive on e-money institutions Dates: 2000 (Updated in 2006 and 2009) Refce: Directive 2000/46/EC Objectives: Promote consumer confidence in the use of e-money Establish regulatory framework for electronic money institutions 6.e. Legislation
  • 103. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 106 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 106 Europe Electronic signature act Dates: 1999 (Updated in 2007 and 2008) Refce: Directive 1999/93/EC Objective: Legal framework and technical conditions for electronic signature 6.e. Legislation
  • 104. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 107 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 107 Europe Directive on traffic data retention Dates: 2002 (No Updates) Refce: Directive 2002/58/EC Revision of Directive 97/66/EC Allow traffic data retention for limited time (billing purposes) 6.e. Legislation
  • 105. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 108 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 108 Europe Distance marketing of consumer financial services Dates: 2002 (Updates in 2005 and 2007) Refce: Directive 2002/65/EC Mutual recognition of the banking licence and prudential supervision 6.e. Legislation
  • 106. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 109 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 109 USA E-sign act Date: 1999 Issuer: SEC (Securities exchange commission) Objectives: Retaining electronic records required by regulation, statute or law Rules of autentication, filing and timing terms 6.e. Legislation
  • 107. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 110 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 110 Lebanon Electronic banking and financial transactions Circular n° 1810, 30th march 2000 Objective: modernize, regulate and organize electronic banking sector 6.e. Legislation
  • 108. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 111 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 111 Hong Kong Authorization of virtual banks Banking Ordinance, section 16(10) Date : May 05, 2000 Objective: define, authorize and organize virtual banks, in order to conduct banking business in Hong Kong 6.e. Legislation
  • 109. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 112 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 112 International Convention on cybercrime Date: 23th November of 2001 Objective: International response and coordination to challenge cybercrime and cyberterrorism 6.e. Legislation
  • 110. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 113 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 113 Basel committee on banking supervision www.bis.org www.iosco.org / www.ias.org Cobit 4.0 www.isaca.org ISO 17799 www.iso.org OCTAVE www.cert.org 6.f. International standards
  • 111. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 114 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 114 COSO – Enterprise Risk Management www.coso.org PCI Data Security Standard www.mastercard.com Financial Action Task Force www.fatf-gafi.org Corporate governance codes www.ecgi.org 6.f. International standards
  • 112. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 115 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 115 6.g. Balance between risk and userfriendliness o Acceptable risk • Legal protection improves • Not 100% risk free • Risks in e-bkg reduces, risk in m-bkg to be reduced • Part of the risk identification process • Sometimes according to governance-defined goals
  • 113. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 116 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 116 6.g. Balance between risk and userfriendliness o The Y generation • Born with technology • Some experience with small amounts • New vision about shopping habits • Easy technological switch (e-bkg, m-bkg) • Lower risk perception
  • 114. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 117 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association –117
  • 115. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 118 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary of part six •Risk management •Fourteen principles •Cross border issues •Risk policy •European directives, US and elsewhere •International standards •Acceptable risk and userfriendliness
  • 116. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 120 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 7. The client and the marketplace 7.a. Segmentation 7.b. Marketing and commercial trends 7.c. Action in developing countries 7.d. Convert members into clients 7.e. CRM in e-commerce and electronic banking
  • 117. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 121 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 7. The client and the marketplace 7.f. New model of competition 7.g.Using SMS as promotional tools 7.h. The screens network as communication channel 7.i. Buying life insurances on Internet 7.j. Free tracking tools
  • 118. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 123 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 7b. Marketing and commercial trends Europeans use online banking to quite different degrees. Source: Deutsche Bank
  • 119. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 124 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 7b. Marketing and commercial trends What we learn from the differences in Europe Europeans do not discriminate between online banking and e-commerce. Share of online bankers does not decrease with age. Education drives online-banking adoption. Financial incentives can convince some to go online. Source: Deutsche Bank
  • 120. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 125 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 125 7b. Marketing and commercial trends Ebanking 3.0 - American examples Mint.com (link: www.mint.com) 400.000 users 21 billion usd transactions Demo: https://wwws.mint.com/ Xero.com More accounting possibilities Rudder.com Email alerts with complete report
  • 121. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 126 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 126
  • 122. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 127 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 127 –connects to more than 8,000 US financial institutions. – account information updated daily. – automatically categorizes all purchases, showing how much is spent on gas, groceries, parking, rent, restaurants, DVD rentals and more, with amazing precision. – automatically analyzes and graphs investment performance, – highlighting the fees paid in each of the accounts. –- advanced alerting system sends you email or SMS messages (your choice) on any unusual activity, low balances, fees and upcoming bills –constantly searches through thousands of offers from hundreds of providers to find the best deals on everything from bank accounts to credit cards; brokerage accounts; and more – suggestions are unique— as they’re based on individual spending patterns. Mint.com - features 7b. Marketing and commercial trends
  • 123. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 128 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association - A dashboard with real-time view of business at a glance with a snapshot of all transactions. - Easy bank reconciliation keeping accounts accurate and up to date. Automatic bank feeds get transactions into Xero without effort. - Manage the individuals and organisations to do business with and have them easily appear in invoices and transactions. 128 – Single view of where the money is coming from and when. Create, send, receive and report on invoices all from one place. –View and manage how much money is owde, what¹s overdue and what's waiting payment. – Easily enter and manage personal expenditure. – Generate and view interactive reports in real-time, anytime. Xero.com – features 7b. Marketing and commercial trends
  • 124. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 129 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 129 7b. Marketing and commercial trends Ebanking 3.0 European example Optissima France Demo http://www.optissima.com/caracteristiques Different features
  • 125. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 130 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 130 –My budget –My expenses –My operations
  • 126. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 131 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 131 –Optimisation – Opti-list
  • 127. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 132 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 132 7b. Marketing and commercial trends Ebanking 3. 0 - Conclusion For the Y generation Challenges for the banking world Improve advices and services for clients
  • 128. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 133 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 7b. Marketing and commercial trends Power to the user Blog for feedback Surveys on website Inform on the web -> call client / visit advisor (branch) -> confirm order by phone (mobile/call center) Web call back (bank phones client on demand)
  • 129. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 134 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 7b. Marketing and commercial trends e-commerce and e-banking Electronic bills Electronic bank payment Integration with electronic shopping malls Aggregators Insurance / investments / accounts Fidelity cards (shops) / frequent flyers
  • 130. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 135 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Africa o The immense potential in e-Banking in Africa warrants serious attention from all industry stakeholders. Ethical and legal issues should be factored in the development of any related ICT strategy, which regulatory authorities (e.g. Central banks), should be very familiar with so that the landscape can be a condusive one to support sustainable growth in all other socio-economic sectors. The Future of e-Banking in Africa, CBA 7c. Action in developing countries
  • 131. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 136 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Africa • The United Bank for Africa (UBA) Ghana Limited has taken electronic banking to another dimension by launching, “Wise Alert” allowing customers to receive SMS notifications on their mobile phones or through their e-mail addresses, or both, when transactions occur on their accounts. • http://www.modernghana.com/news/133123/1/united- bank-for-africa-steps-up-electronic-banking.html 7c. Action in developing countries
  • 132. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 137 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o India • Indian banks : the retail banking in a big way. • Internet Banking in the nascent stage of development (only 50 banks are offering varied kind of Internet banking services). • Internet sites offer only the most basic services. 55% are so called 'entry level' sites, offering little more than company information and basic marketing materials. • Only 8% offer 'advanced transactions' such as online funds transfer, transactions & cash management services. • Foreign & Private banks much advanced in terms of the number of sites & level of development. Study by Dr Mishra is Professor at IIM Lucknow. 7c. Action in developing countries
  • 133. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 138 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o India: o Most Popular Banking Service on Mobile o Checking account balances most popular banking service used by urban Indians (40 million users ) checking last three transactions, (28 million) and status of cheques (21 million users.) Usage Unique Users (In millions) Used mobile banking 43.70 Checking account balance 39.97 View last three transactions 28.15 Status of cheques 21.06 Payment reminders 20.92 Request a cheque book 19.11 Study mobile banking in india, by Vital Analytics 7c. Action in developing countries
  • 134. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 139 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Brazil • Today, the majority of the top Brazilian banks offer advanced e- banking services • 25 million Internet banking users.(2008) • Government actively supports electronic services - and security • Common services : - Real-time money transfer; - Bill pay; - Tax payment; - Social security payments. - ATM usage, (biometrical security as authentication method). 7c. Action in developing countries
  • 135. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 140 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Brazil • Today, the majority of the top Brazilian banks are offering online banking via mobile phones • Mobile Payment and Authentication with M-CodeOne in Brazil (vidéo) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFLvhzt81PU 7c. Action in developing countries
  • 136. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 141 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 7d. Convert members into clients Visitors -> members -> clients Online customer conversion rate 2.5 % in 2005 3.8 % in 2007 Average customer acquisition cost 20.45 Eur / client
  • 137. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 142 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary of part seven Segmentation Marketing and commercial trends Profile of a client Convert members into clients New model of competition
  • 138. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 143 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Case study: Electronic statements 1. Which of the 11 arguments used in this article are relevant to your bank? Why? 2. Which arguments in "Other opinions" are not relevant to your bank? Why? 3. What arguments could one give in favour of paper statements ? Case study
  • 139. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 144 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8. How to hold back the invisible enemy 8.a. Threats 8.b. Attacks 8.c. Safeguards 8.d. Security policy 8.e. Anti-Money Laundering
  • 140. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 145 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.a. Threats Fundamental threats (1) Disclosure Tampering Denial of service Repudiation Illegitimate use
  • 141. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 146 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.a. Threats Enabling threats (2) Masquerade Trojan Horse Virus Control bypass Authorisation violation
  • 142. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 147 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.a. Threats Underlying threats (3) Eavesdropping Scavenging Indiscretion Admin. error
  • 143. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 148 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.a. Threats Phishing/ whaling e-mail website trust/urgency CNP transactions stolen card stolen card details operate at distance Others Botnet Skimming Malware Spoofing Spyware Ransomware
  • 144. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 149 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.a. Threats Solutions directory on the antiphishing.org website listing the types of anti-phishing solutions available today on the market. Sponsor Solutions Prevent cousin domains Detect and analyze attacks Takedown Fraud analysis Forensic services Application gateways Consumer toolbars Email authentication Email filtering Web filtering Hardware-based 2-factor authentication Software-based Strong Authentication Mutual authentication Law enforcement enablement
  • 145. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 150 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.b. Attacks Threats into action = Attacks
  • 146. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 151 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.c. Safeguards Authentication (two/three factors) Access control Confidentiality Integrity Accountability
  • 147. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 152 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.c. Safeguards Physical Personnel Media Emanations Administration Lifecycle
  • 148. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 153 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.d. Security policy Why is security weak ? Organizations unaware of risks Organizations unprepared to act Countless contacts to corporate networks (ext. - int.)
  • 149. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 154 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.d. Security policy Why is security weak ? Too few experienced employees in security technology Lack of time to establish stronger security Complexity of technology
  • 150. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 155 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 8.d. Security policy New security features  pictures on login page  user tracks suspicious sites  special questions for users
  • 151. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 156 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 156 8.e. Anti-money laundering (AML) Management needs to recognize electronic banking as a potentially high-risk area and develop adequate policies, procedures, and processes for customer identification and monitoring for specific areas of banking.  Risk Factors  Lack of face to face contact  Cash withdrawals with no bank staff  Distance opening of accounts Source: http://www.ffiec.gov
  • 152. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 157 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 157 8.e. Anti-money laundering (AML)  Risk Mitigation  Evaluate  Assess  Transaction Testing  Customer identification  Credit reference agency search  Personal rating agencies  Controls and Audits on STP Source: http://www.ffiec.gov
  • 153. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 158 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 158 8.e. Anti-money laundering (AML) Tools Manuals for AML risk management http://bit.ly/b6ApzW (fifec) http://bit.ly/bZLPLV (fatf) GIFTS Software  single source provider of anti-money laundering solutions KYC solutions http://www.giftssoft.com
  • 154. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 159 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary of part eight Security is a key issue for clients’ confidence, for banking operations and for the future of electronic banking
  • 155. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 160 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Case study MTV networks and First Citizen Bank: Defending against Hacker and Virus attacks. 1. What are the business benefits and limitations of an intrusion-detection system like that installed at First Citizens ? 2. What security defenses should small business have to protect their websites and internal systems? Explain your choices. Ebanking Security What recommendations do the experts give for: • Data security • Login/ password security • Security to access applications • Identity protection
  • 156. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 161 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 9. Upcoming technology 9 a. E-mail centralisation 9 b. Controlled chat (direct talk)
  • 157. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 162 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 9. Upcoming technology E-mail centralisation Advantages better follow up of e-mails less overlap of contacts cost saving and improved efficiency Drawbacks (and problems) investment in equipment resistance of users
  • 158. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 163 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 163 –Addresses the operational problems introduced by the growing size of e- mail and electronic messaging data (records management, legal discovery, supervision and monitoring for non-compliance) –Includes rules-based retention and retrieval mechanisms to assure that the required e-mail is retained for the period specified by law –Adds for fast retrieval of both specific e-mails and subject, timeframe bound, or author-based batched queries –Reduces storage costs with advanced compression technology and tiered storage schematics –Assists in the management of mailboxes, increases server performance, enables faster backup and restore –Assists in the automation of workflow steps and associated e-mail and electronic messaging content to processes, cases and line-of-business systems FileNet Email Manager (IBM) 9. Upcoming technology
  • 159. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 164 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 9. Upcoming technology Controlled chat (direct talk) Advantages no physical meeting: that can be either more frequent, either with both participants on a better time scheme frequent contact: as soon as the client is connected and the adviser is available, a contact can be established promotional tool: useful to push products, advises etc Drawbacks (and problems) security to be improved: direct talk can use an unprotected channel of communication can be perceived as invasive: to be treated carefully by the bank
  • 160. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 165 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 165 Summary of part nine New technologies are coming up, sometimes from outside the banking environment, but all will change the way electronic and mobile banking will look like in the future
  • 161. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 166 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 10. Training 10 a. Technical staff 10 b. Commercial staff 10 c. Staff in Auditing and Controlling 10 d. Back Office staff 10 e. The client
  • 162. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 167 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 167 10. Training Technical staff From security experts to computing professionals, the update and improvement of their knowledge through training is very essential, since the technological standards change quite frequently, every month new techniques are discovered, new security breaches have to be covered. Training with external experts about many items have to be considered: networks and internet security (physical, networks, access codes) programs and software
  • 163. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 168 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 168 10. Training Sales force and branch staff Selling financial products (either non-physical or physical, like credit cards) in electronic banking is influenced by: new legislation (distance selling, protection of personal data etc) new techniques of communication on the marketplace new relations between the client and the (electronic) bank
  • 164. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 169 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 169 10. Training Staff in auditing and controlling To reduce the risks and improve the prudential approach in electronic banking, specific training for auditing and controlling experts is required. The content should integrate: new legislation (distance selling, protection of personal data etc) new administrative methods and back office procedures new security techniques
  • 165. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 170 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 170 10. Training Back office staff For the back office staff, the new techniques of transactions (mainly the straight through processing) changes a lot the job of the back office staff. The new hours of operations (later at night for access to a lot of stock exchanges) changes also. Required trainings: new methods of operations’ checking new methods of financial operations improved security new electronic supports and documents
  • 166. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 171 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 171 10. Training The client Even the client is an important participant to be trained. It’s more a general approach to electronic banking: advantages and pitfalls, how to do simple operations like transfers or standing orders, how to invest for private clients, how to act as a electronic banking professional’s clients (industry’s financial officers)... e.g. WeProsper.org
  • 167. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 172 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 172 Summary of part ten Training is essential , in order to  Maintain security  Be up to date technically and technologically  Educate and acquire clients
  • 168. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 174 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 11.Operations 11 a. Cost of operation 11 b. Front Office vs. Back Office 11 c. Brick & Click
  • 169. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 175 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 11.Operations Costs of operation Human (branch) : 1 EUR Paper transaction: 0.75 EUR Self banking: 0,50 EUR PC transaction: 0.25 EUR Internet transaction: 0.10 EUR Source: Gartner Group
  • 170. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 176 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 11.Operations Front Office vs. Back Office Collaborate with “brick” back office integrated back office (automation, on line orders on stock exchanges) Call centre < - > CRM
  • 171. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 177 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 11.Operations Brick and click Click virtual bank Brick Confidence transaction during lunch time human relation image building cash deposit opening an account
  • 172. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 178 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary part eleven Key elements to operate a sound e-bank :  Transactions  Back Office  Brick & Click
  • 173. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 180 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 12. Corporate electronic banking 12.a. Foreign exchange 12.b. Corporate portals 12.c. BTB banking over the web 12.d. Marketplaces for industrial clients and the electronic bank 12.e. Automatic clearing houses 12.f. Direct access to quotes and Stock Exchanges 12.g. Direct access to financial information
  • 174. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 181 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Basic services • Web-based Cash Management platform • Web Based Cash Management file transfer • Foreign Exchange Spot/Forward and swap execution, an FX Derivative pricing capability and access to extensive proprietary research. • Internet based trade services o Additional online services • Credit & Relative Value Analysis • Corporate & Institutional account enquiries 12. Corporate electronic banking Foreign exchange
  • 175. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 182 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Examples of corporate banking services : ANZ http://www.anz.com/corporate/productsservices/transactionservices Nordea https://www.nordea.com/en/our-services/banktobankbusiness/ Automatic clearing houses http://www.depositaccounts.com/blog/how-ach-transfers-work.html http://www.finweb.com/banking-credit/learn-the-basics-of-ach-debit-programs.html e-marketplaces http://www.epiqtech.com/e-marketplaces.htm Fedline Web https://www.frbservices.org/fedline-solutions/index.html 12. Corporate electronic banking Foreign exchange
  • 176. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 183 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 12. Corporate electronic banking Corporate portals
  • 177. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 184 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Services on corporate portals • cash management, • trade finance • securities services functions o Requirements and evolutions • local regulations: resilience, security, data integrity and adherence to local requirements • evolved from direct host-to-host connections for single purpose transactions to multi-functional internet portals o E.g. Straight2Bank of Standard Chartered Bank 12. Corporate electronic banking Corporate portals
  • 178. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 185 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o New needs (Corporate Portals 2.0) • information sharing • interoperability • user-centered design and collaboration • lack the visual, easy to use and customizable dashboards 12. Corporate electronic banking Corporate portals
  • 179. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 186 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Money can be transferred from one bank account to another, without using a check or debit card. Large numbers of transactions are processed every day through the Automated Clearing House system. Every bank now uses this system for a large number of their transactions. 12. Corporate electronic banking Automatic clearing houses
  • 180. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 187 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Services • balance reporting • payroll direct deposits • vendor disbursements • book transfers and wire transfers. • ACH capabilities • federal tax payments. . 12. Corporate electronic banking BTB banking over the web
  • 181. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 188 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Technology • a way to speed up the time it takes corporate suppliers and buyers to send and receive payments • aims to help banks make better financing decisions by giving them closer insight to their customers' business relationships. 12. Corporate electronic banking BTB banking over the web
  • 182. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 189 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 1. European Central Bank (ECB) No e-banking with commercial banks, only exchange of information via Internet 2. U.S. Federal Reserve (FedLine Web®) web technology to access critical payment services Services offered Account Services, Check Services, FedCash® Services, FedACH®Services, Fedwire® Funds Service, Fedwire Securities Service and National Settlement Service. 12. Corporate electronic banking Central bank and commercial banks
  • 183. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 190 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Location on the Internet where companies can obtain or disseminate information, engage in transactions, or work together in some way o Two basic functions: • 1) they allow companies to obtain new suppliers or buyers for company products • 2) developing streamlined trading networks that make negotiating, settlement, and delivery more efficient. 12. Corporate electronic banking e-marketplace
  • 184. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 191 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association o Services • forward or reverse auctions • vendor catalogues • fixed price ordering • trading exchange functionality • bulliten boards / wanted ads • RFQ, RFI, or RFP capability. • http://www.epiqtech.com/e-marketplaces.htm 12. Corporate electronic banking e-marketplace
  • 185. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 192 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Summary of part twelve Direct access to information, quotes, investment advice and economical data, « a click away ».
  • 186. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 194 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 13. General Summary 13.a. Others and summary 13.b. More and questions 13 c. Topics handled in this seminar
  • 187. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 195 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 13.a. Others and Summary Significant work in evaluating trends in e- finance from international Forums and organisations The World Bank: www.worldbank.org FIBV: International stock exchange federation ww.fibv.org BIS: Bank of International Settlements www.bis.org
  • 188. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 196 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 13.a. Others and Summary IAIS: International association of insurance supervisors wwww.iaisweb.org OECD: Organisation for economical cooperation and development www.oecd.org APEC: European finance ministers www.apec.org ENISA: European Network Information Security Agency www.enisa.europa.eu
  • 189. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 197 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 13.b. More and questions Website: http://ebanking2000.wordpress.com E-mail address : hubvv@outlook.com
  • 190. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 198 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 13.c. Topics handled in the seminar 1. Introduction 2. Situation of e-commerce and e-banking 3. Strategic choices and new trends 4. E-money: new payment methods ? 5. Practical e-commerce and e-banking 6. Prudential approach in e-commerce and electronic banking 7. The client and the marketplace 8. Hold back the invisible enemy
  • 191. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 199 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association 13.c. Topics handled in the seminar 9. Upcoming technology 10. Training 11. Operations 12. Corporate e-commerce and electronic banking 13. General summary
  • 192. 19C04 © HOUSE OF TRAINING 200 19RAF2/BAPS © Rwanda Bank Association Thank you for your attention