The document discusses the future of banking and financial services. It makes three key points:
1) Banking and financial services will become increasingly digital and integrated into customers' daily lives through their mobile devices and applications. Customers will expect seamless, on-demand access to personalized financial services and advice.
2) Traditional banks will need to transform into platforms that can integrate with external partners and offer customized, multi-purpose applications to remain relevant to customers. Data and artificial intelligence will be used to offer hyper-personalized services and anticipate customer needs.
3) Rebuilding trust will be essential for the future of banking as customers share more personal data. Technologies like blockchain and transparency around business models will be needed
Opportunities for disruption in Financial Services (with a mobile focus)Nadya.Powell
A talk given at the IPA on opportunities for disruption in Financial Services with a focus on mobile. Three strategies to employ, case studies and three golden rules. Thanks to Zoe Decool for research help.
Disruption, mobile and financial servicesNadya Powell
A presentation given for the IPA on disruption, mobile and financial services. Three strategies to employ and the best disruptive uses of mobile out there. Thanks to Zoe Decool for research help.
The 10 most promising payment and card solution providers Merry D'souza
The 10 most promising payment and card solution providers, September 2020; CIO Look admire their contribution in the evolution to local and global businesses.
We’ve asked customers and partners, spoken to industry experts and made our own conclusions and predictions to help financial organisations succeed in mobile
in 2015.
Who are the mobile innovators and disruptors of the financial industry? How will banks tackle mobile security threats in 2015? What will Apple Pay mean for the financial institutions? What’s the regulatory impact of new mobile technology such as wearables? How do financial institutions stay on top of mobile technology with an accelerated pace of innovation? How much longer will employees of financial firms be tied to a desktop? You'll find the answers in this presentation.
Opportunities for disruption in Financial Services (with a mobile focus)Nadya.Powell
A talk given at the IPA on opportunities for disruption in Financial Services with a focus on mobile. Three strategies to employ, case studies and three golden rules. Thanks to Zoe Decool for research help.
Disruption, mobile and financial servicesNadya Powell
A presentation given for the IPA on disruption, mobile and financial services. Three strategies to employ and the best disruptive uses of mobile out there. Thanks to Zoe Decool for research help.
The 10 most promising payment and card solution providers Merry D'souza
The 10 most promising payment and card solution providers, September 2020; CIO Look admire their contribution in the evolution to local and global businesses.
We’ve asked customers and partners, spoken to industry experts and made our own conclusions and predictions to help financial organisations succeed in mobile
in 2015.
Who are the mobile innovators and disruptors of the financial industry? How will banks tackle mobile security threats in 2015? What will Apple Pay mean for the financial institutions? What’s the regulatory impact of new mobile technology such as wearables? How do financial institutions stay on top of mobile technology with an accelerated pace of innovation? How much longer will employees of financial firms be tied to a desktop? You'll find the answers in this presentation.
Banking in the Digital Era: Regaining Consumer TrustCognizant
Amid wavering consumer confidence, changing banking behaviors, widespread hacks and new competition, here’s what traditional banks can do to rebuild trust in the digital era.
Disruptions and Digital Banking Trends by Luigi Wewege, Jeo Lee and Michael C...Luigi Wewege
Journal of Applied Finance & Banking - Scientific Press International
Technology in financial services, or ‘fintech’, entrants and technology-media-telecommunication companies have rapidly evolved into the traditional banking industry, offering customer-centric, faster-easier-convenient-free, financial services. Digital-only-neo-banks focus on payment, money transfer, lending for small-medium-businesses, and microfinancing, facilitating technological innovation such as digital wallet and messaging peer-to-peer transactions. Fintech banks generally lack scale and trust, unregulated in some cases with credit or liquidity risk exposure, from the customers perspective. Fintechs are increasingly perceived as a partner for a source of value creation through technological advances and innovations to large, traditional, and incumbent banks moving to accelerated digital transformation. All innovative technologies which have laid the groundwork for major disruption in the current digital banking revolution, set forth unimagined trajectory of collaboration and consolidation as fintech industry matures. This paper updates the digital banking transformation in fintechs and incumbent banking institutions to show that access to future fintech trends will grow significantly in coming years. The combined findings suggest that digitalised-mobile-banking transitions emphasize the capabilities of banking infrastructure for data sharing, connectivity, stability and cybersecurity and standardisation of internal and external APIs as progress continues within the regulatory framework of data protection as part of the privacy act and open-banking directives.
Keynote de Ron Shevlin en Next Bank Madrid 2013finnovar
Esta fué la presentación de Ron Shevlin en el Next Bank Madrid del pasado 25 de Junio 2013. Ron Shevlin es Senior Analyst de Aite Group y Autor del blog Snarketing2.0.
Few years before we are using the cash for payments. When a digitalization occurs the way of payments gets changed. It helps our country to move next level of development. It creates more awareness to people about the payment innovation. Umamaheswari K | Santhiya R | Ragavi J"Payments Innovation" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-2 | Issue-3 , April 2018, URL: http://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd11150.pdf http://www.ijtsrd.com/management/innovation-and-product-dev/11150/payments-innovation/umamaheswari-k
Digital Trends in the Financial Services IndustryKL Daly
Reviewing trends in the financial services, this presentation looks at how brand repositioning, digital optimization, digital analysis and customer relationships can be used to help the financial services industry overcome disruption and set themselves up for success in the future.
Balancing Fraud & Customer Experience in a Mobile WorldComrade
Consumers’ reliance on mobile continues to skyrocket in shopping, paying for bills, managing finances and socializing. This poses a great challenge for retailers, financial institutions and technology vendors. Digital account opening is fraught with pitfalls as the identity validation process relies on manual entry of personal information. Similarly account management uses knowledge-based authentication but can add friction to the user experience. How should retailers, banks and merchants integrate fraud protection measures into the user experience with the least amount of friction to the user?
I joined joined Al Pascual from Javelin Strategy & Research in a complimentary webinar to share lessons learned from working with leading companies that have struggled with the issue of fraud and customer experience.
We explored the following:
- Who are leaders in integrating fraud prevention into the user experience?
- Who owns the fraud prevention process in the organization?
- How to overcome legacy design issues that can underwhelm the customer experience and inhibit security measures?
- How to prevent fraud in a low-friction environment, while communicating a security-forward brand experience?
Eyes wide shut: Global insights and actions for banks in the digital ageIgnasi Martín Morales
We know what banks want to achieve.
We know how they can achieve it. What we
want to explore further is how close banks
are to achieving their digital goals, both
now and over the next few years. So we
asked 157 senior IT executives, CIOs, CTOs
and other heads of technology spanning
14 primary markets for their thoughts on
digital banking’s potential for today – and
tomorrow. This paper presents the findings
of our study and examines the implications
of our findings for banking technology
executives.
The 7 Biggest Technology Trends To Disrupt Banking & Financial Services In 2020Bernard Marr
New technology changes the operations and realities of organizations in all industries when it is widely adopted. It's no different with the latest innovation introduced by artificial intelligence, blockchain, and other technology. Here we look at the 7 biggest technology trends that will disrupt banking and financial services in 2020.
Investree is peer-to-peer lending marketplace platform that connects consumers (retail investors) directly to businesses and other individuals to borrow money.
Contact: adrian@investree.id
Banking & Innovation: How Financial Services Can Embrace the Customer RevolutionComrade
Financial services companies are increasingly seeing opportunities to be at the forefront of innovation. Historically, banks have been slow to translate consumer demands into technologies like paperless statements and mobile check imaging. However, they were quick to implement online banking and, today, customers who bank online are typically more satisfied as well as more cost-effective to maintain. Banks have also responded to the shift in consumer demand for mobile banking on tablets and smartphones. The next challenge facing financial services is how to address the rise of consumer trends evolving mainly outside of the industry. We’re pleased to have partnered with Matchi to publish “Banking & Innovation: How Financial Services Can Embrace the Customer Revolution." This paper focuses on three phenomena that will ultimately impact every bank:
- Crowdsourcing
- Wearable Technology
- The Sharing Economy
We explore the state of each these trends, and how they relate to financial services.
We’re growing our compliance team, Ocean’s 11 style. Are you in? Ping us via goodguys@ariv.al - compliance is sexy, and Arival Bank and A.ID knows it: http://bit.ly/2xBj5Qk
2020's Most Trusted Payment and Card Solutions Providers May2020 - InsightsSu...Merry D'souza
2020’s Most Trusted Payment and Card Solution Providers that are fuelling the digital economy and making sure that millions of transactions being carried out across the globe are safe and secure.
Rethinking Banking for an Always in Beta WorldAnthemis
Always in Beta unites human-centered design and business model innovation to help financial institutions reimagine their relationships to consumers. A project of Claro Partners and Anthemis Group, Always in Beta launched in early 2015 to help six international financial institutions – including BBVA, ING, Bank of Ireland, and Standard Bank – understand and respond to their changing customer base and the emerging financial technology landscape. The project took the team into six cities to conduct ethnographic field research and consult with experts. Executives from Anthemis, Claro, and the six financial institutions gathered in day-long sessions to share findings and begin developing business models that were responsive to those findings. We’ve released some of what we learned about the next-generation financial services customer and the future of financial services in this report.
Banking in the Digital Era: Regaining Consumer TrustCognizant
Amid wavering consumer confidence, changing banking behaviors, widespread hacks and new competition, here’s what traditional banks can do to rebuild trust in the digital era.
Disruptions and Digital Banking Trends by Luigi Wewege, Jeo Lee and Michael C...Luigi Wewege
Journal of Applied Finance & Banking - Scientific Press International
Technology in financial services, or ‘fintech’, entrants and technology-media-telecommunication companies have rapidly evolved into the traditional banking industry, offering customer-centric, faster-easier-convenient-free, financial services. Digital-only-neo-banks focus on payment, money transfer, lending for small-medium-businesses, and microfinancing, facilitating technological innovation such as digital wallet and messaging peer-to-peer transactions. Fintech banks generally lack scale and trust, unregulated in some cases with credit or liquidity risk exposure, from the customers perspective. Fintechs are increasingly perceived as a partner for a source of value creation through technological advances and innovations to large, traditional, and incumbent banks moving to accelerated digital transformation. All innovative technologies which have laid the groundwork for major disruption in the current digital banking revolution, set forth unimagined trajectory of collaboration and consolidation as fintech industry matures. This paper updates the digital banking transformation in fintechs and incumbent banking institutions to show that access to future fintech trends will grow significantly in coming years. The combined findings suggest that digitalised-mobile-banking transitions emphasize the capabilities of banking infrastructure for data sharing, connectivity, stability and cybersecurity and standardisation of internal and external APIs as progress continues within the regulatory framework of data protection as part of the privacy act and open-banking directives.
Keynote de Ron Shevlin en Next Bank Madrid 2013finnovar
Esta fué la presentación de Ron Shevlin en el Next Bank Madrid del pasado 25 de Junio 2013. Ron Shevlin es Senior Analyst de Aite Group y Autor del blog Snarketing2.0.
Few years before we are using the cash for payments. When a digitalization occurs the way of payments gets changed. It helps our country to move next level of development. It creates more awareness to people about the payment innovation. Umamaheswari K | Santhiya R | Ragavi J"Payments Innovation" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-2 | Issue-3 , April 2018, URL: http://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd11150.pdf http://www.ijtsrd.com/management/innovation-and-product-dev/11150/payments-innovation/umamaheswari-k
Digital Trends in the Financial Services IndustryKL Daly
Reviewing trends in the financial services, this presentation looks at how brand repositioning, digital optimization, digital analysis and customer relationships can be used to help the financial services industry overcome disruption and set themselves up for success in the future.
Balancing Fraud & Customer Experience in a Mobile WorldComrade
Consumers’ reliance on mobile continues to skyrocket in shopping, paying for bills, managing finances and socializing. This poses a great challenge for retailers, financial institutions and technology vendors. Digital account opening is fraught with pitfalls as the identity validation process relies on manual entry of personal information. Similarly account management uses knowledge-based authentication but can add friction to the user experience. How should retailers, banks and merchants integrate fraud protection measures into the user experience with the least amount of friction to the user?
I joined joined Al Pascual from Javelin Strategy & Research in a complimentary webinar to share lessons learned from working with leading companies that have struggled with the issue of fraud and customer experience.
We explored the following:
- Who are leaders in integrating fraud prevention into the user experience?
- Who owns the fraud prevention process in the organization?
- How to overcome legacy design issues that can underwhelm the customer experience and inhibit security measures?
- How to prevent fraud in a low-friction environment, while communicating a security-forward brand experience?
Eyes wide shut: Global insights and actions for banks in the digital ageIgnasi Martín Morales
We know what banks want to achieve.
We know how they can achieve it. What we
want to explore further is how close banks
are to achieving their digital goals, both
now and over the next few years. So we
asked 157 senior IT executives, CIOs, CTOs
and other heads of technology spanning
14 primary markets for their thoughts on
digital banking’s potential for today – and
tomorrow. This paper presents the findings
of our study and examines the implications
of our findings for banking technology
executives.
The 7 Biggest Technology Trends To Disrupt Banking & Financial Services In 2020Bernard Marr
New technology changes the operations and realities of organizations in all industries when it is widely adopted. It's no different with the latest innovation introduced by artificial intelligence, blockchain, and other technology. Here we look at the 7 biggest technology trends that will disrupt banking and financial services in 2020.
Investree is peer-to-peer lending marketplace platform that connects consumers (retail investors) directly to businesses and other individuals to borrow money.
Contact: adrian@investree.id
Banking & Innovation: How Financial Services Can Embrace the Customer RevolutionComrade
Financial services companies are increasingly seeing opportunities to be at the forefront of innovation. Historically, banks have been slow to translate consumer demands into technologies like paperless statements and mobile check imaging. However, they were quick to implement online banking and, today, customers who bank online are typically more satisfied as well as more cost-effective to maintain. Banks have also responded to the shift in consumer demand for mobile banking on tablets and smartphones. The next challenge facing financial services is how to address the rise of consumer trends evolving mainly outside of the industry. We’re pleased to have partnered with Matchi to publish “Banking & Innovation: How Financial Services Can Embrace the Customer Revolution." This paper focuses on three phenomena that will ultimately impact every bank:
- Crowdsourcing
- Wearable Technology
- The Sharing Economy
We explore the state of each these trends, and how they relate to financial services.
We’re growing our compliance team, Ocean’s 11 style. Are you in? Ping us via goodguys@ariv.al - compliance is sexy, and Arival Bank and A.ID knows it: http://bit.ly/2xBj5Qk
2020's Most Trusted Payment and Card Solutions Providers May2020 - InsightsSu...Merry D'souza
2020’s Most Trusted Payment and Card Solution Providers that are fuelling the digital economy and making sure that millions of transactions being carried out across the globe are safe and secure.
Rethinking Banking for an Always in Beta WorldAnthemis
Always in Beta unites human-centered design and business model innovation to help financial institutions reimagine their relationships to consumers. A project of Claro Partners and Anthemis Group, Always in Beta launched in early 2015 to help six international financial institutions – including BBVA, ING, Bank of Ireland, and Standard Bank – understand and respond to their changing customer base and the emerging financial technology landscape. The project took the team into six cities to conduct ethnographic field research and consult with experts. Executives from Anthemis, Claro, and the six financial institutions gathered in day-long sessions to share findings and begin developing business models that were responsive to those findings. We’ve released some of what we learned about the next-generation financial services customer and the future of financial services in this report.
Challenges for the Future of Retail BankingDesignit
Digital transformation in retail banking is a thriving and complex phenomenon. We at Designit try to make sense of it by identifying leading trends in three deeply interdependent categories: new enabling technologies, new customer expectations, and new strategic trends. The future holds uncertainty and promise, but some immediate actions are patently necessary for banks that want to stay relevant in an increasingly dynamic scenario.
The gROWING IMPORTANCE OF BANK AND FINTECH PARTNERSHIP.pdfKissht reviews
Banks know already that Kissht Chinese are all rumours and gossip and that platforms like Kissht can be their best strategic partners to embrace a focus on agility and developing an innovative mindset.
The gROWING IMPORTANCE OF BANK AND FINTECH PARTNERSHIP.pptxKissht reviews
Banks know already that Kissht Chinese are all rumours and gossip and that platforms like Kissht can be their best strategic partners to embrace a focus on agility and developing an innovative mindset.
Get Finance Smart - Learning from Fintech, Learning from Banksemmersons1
When competition increases in an industry, it often leads to change. This week, we explore this process in banking, an industry where both the incumbent banks and the new players are learning from each other.
Mobile Wars: Fintech vs. Banks... and Big Tech in AmbushKatia Bazzocchi
Pure mobile banks gain users daily, as they benefit from accessible smartphone technology. Millenials are the principal users of mobile banks, and will soon be followed by Generation Z. As consumer expectations continue to be shaped by new technology and innovative consumer affairs, a full mobile strategy is key for traditional banks to maintain market share.
Explore the evolving trends in banking. Consumers’ values and expectations of their bank are evolving, stemming from a new generation of buyers and the rise of disruptive fintechs helping people to reimagine how banking could - and should - be.
In this presentation, we look at this issue, the steps the banking community need to get right to engage with modern consumers and how to develop powerful mobile—based propositions that people actually want to use.
Preparing to Enter the New Decade with the Latest Digital Banking Trends and ...Nouamane Cherkaoui
Talk by Nouamane Cherkaoui at Berlin Virtual Digital Summit - 15 october 2020
FinTech, InsurTech, digitalization and innovative technologies are disrupting Banks & Insurance compagnies. Digital technologies which were initially limited to banking channels, now cover the entire banking & Insurance spectrum.
The finance industry has undergone many phases of digital transformation in the last few years. Nowadays, it’s facing crucial decisions on technology shifts adoption with emerging trends in digital transformation technologies defining the future of banking, Insurance & Asset Management.
2nd Place Finalist Consulting Case Competition for ANZ x TBWA x UniMelb Kate Gilchrist
Presentation by Finalists of SAMM's (Student Association of Management and Marketing) Consulting Case Competition with ANZ Banking Corporation and TBWA. Our proposal includes 4 key disruption inspired ideas for ANZ's strategic direction.
Semester 2 (August) 2017 at The University of Melbourne.
Using Adaptive Scrum to Tame Process Reverse Engineering in Data Analytics Pr...Cognizant
Organizations rely on analytics to make intelligent decisions and improve business performance, which sometimes requires reproducing business processes from a legacy application to a digital-native state to reduce the functional, technical and operational debts. Adaptive Scrum can reduce the complexity of the reproduction process iteratively as well as provide transparency in data analytics porojects.
It Takes an Ecosystem: How Technology Companies Deliver Exceptional ExperiencesCognizant
Experience is evolving into a strategy that reaches across technology companies. We offer guidance on the rise of experience and its role in business modernization, with details on how orgnizations can build the ecosystem to support it.
The Work Ahead: Transportation and Logistics Delivering on the Digital-Physic...Cognizant
The T&L industry appears poised to accelerate its long-overdue modernization drive, as the pandemic spurs an increased need for agility and resilience, according to our study.
Enhancing Desirability: Five Considerations for Winning Digital InitiativesCognizant
To be a modern digital business in the post-COVID era, organizations must be fanatical about the experiences they deliver to an increasingly savvy and expectant user community. Getting there requires a mastery of human-design thinking, compelling user interface and interaction design, and a focus on functional and nonfunctional capabilities that drive business differentiation and results.
The Work Ahead in Manufacturing: Fulfilling the Agility MandateCognizant
According to our research, manufacturers are well ahead of other industries in their IoT deployments but need to marshal the investment required to meet today’s intensified demands for business resilience.
The Work Ahead in Higher Education: Repaving the Road for the Employees of To...Cognizant
Higher-ed institutions expect pandemic-driven disruption to continue, especially as hyperconnectivity, analytics and AI drive personalized education models over the lifetime of the learner, according to our recent research.
Engineering the Next-Gen Digital Claims Organisation for Australian General I...Cognizant
In recent years, insurers have invested in technology platforms and process improvements to improve
claims outcomes. Leaders will build on this foundation across the claims landscape, spanning experience,
operations, customer service and the overall supply chain with market-differentiating capabilities to
achieve sustainable results.
Profitability in the Direct-to-Consumer Marketplace: A Playbook for Media and...Cognizant
Amid constant change, industry leaders need an upgraded IT infrastructure capable of adapting to audience expectations while proactively anticipating ever-evolving business requirements.
Green Rush: The Economic Imperative for SustainabilityCognizant
Green business is good business, according to our recent research, whether for companies monetizing tech tools used for sustainability or for those that see the impact of these initiatives on business goals.
Policy Administration Modernization: Four Paths for InsurersCognizant
The pivot to digital is fraught with numerous obstacles but with proper planning and execution, legacy carriers can update their core systems and keep pace with the competition, while proactively addressing customer needs.
The Work Ahead in Utilities: Powering a Sustainable Future with DigitalCognizant
Utilities are starting to adopt digital technologies to eliminate slow processes, elevate customer experience and boost sustainability, according to our recent study.
AI in Media & Entertainment: Starting the Journey to ValueCognizant
Up to now, the global media & entertainment industry (M&E) has been lagging most other sectors in its adoption of artificial intelligence (AI). But our research shows that M&E companies are set to close the gap over the coming three years, as they ramp up their investments in AI and reap rising returns. The first steps? Getting a firm grip on data – the foundation of any successful AI strategy – and balancing technology spend with investments in AI skills.
Operations Workforce Management: A Data-Informed, Digital-First ApproachCognizant
As #WorkFromAnywhere becomes the rule rather than the exception, organizations face an important question: How can they increase their digital quotient to engage and enable a remote operations workforce to work collaboratively to deliver onclient requirements and contractual commitments?
Five Priorities for Quality Engineering When Taking Banking to the CloudCognizant
As banks move to cloud-based banking platforms for lower costs and greater agility, they must seamlessly integrate technologies and workflows while ensuring security, performance and an enhanced user experience. Here are five ways cloud-focused quality assurance helps banks maximize the benefits.
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Changing market dynamics are propelling Asia-Pacific businesses to take a highly disciplined and focused approach to ensuring that their AI initiatives rapidly scale and quickly generate heightened business impact.
The Work Ahead in Intelligent Automation: Coping with Complexity in a Post-Pa...Cognizant
Intelligent automation continues to be a top driver of the future of work, according to our recent study. To reap the full advantages, businesses need to move from isolated to widespread deployment.
2. The future of banking & financial
services offers a world of opportunities,
but this transformation will require
substantial steps and boldness. The
industry needs to be open to new
insights instead of being mentally
closed by the existing ones.
Each industry has its owns challenges, and digital disruption is everywhere.
Organizations must be agile and build new momentum that respects the new
reality of their industry. Remaining relevant requires adaptation to changes not
only today, but also tomorrow. Change is the only constant. Constant change
demands scenario-based thinking, exploring several paths and crafting a digital
strategy based on preparing for the future. For businesses to stay relevant, they
need to explore the future and look at next generations.
No one can predict the future; organizations must actively explore various
possible futures to anticipate what disruptions are coming. We believe that
future winners in the digital economy will be those that can deliver on one key
insight: put technology in the background, and focus on people first. Putting
customers first does not diminish technology’s importance; rather, a deep
customer understanding should help guide the choice of which technologies to
incorporate in your business.
Cognizant can bring together digital strategy, deep industry knowledge, human
sciences, experience design and technology expertise to help companies
design, build and scale digital business solutions. Cognizant has both the
expertise and experience with digital transformation. Together with clients we
can explore tomorrow’s opportunities.
A future beyond
financial servicing
A view by
Cognizant’s Center
for the Future of
Work
02
10
4
3. An external
perspective by
futurist and trend-
watcher Tony Bosma
Key
take-aways
New
challenges and
questions
03The Future of Banking & Financial Services
6
8
16
1913
The future is
already here
The future of
finance is human
4. John grabs his phone and heads out of the house.
The door of the shared car on the corner opens
automatically and drives him to the local high school
where he’s speaking to his nephew’s history class. He
laughsattheirwide-eyedstaresashetellsthemabout
banking tellers, wallets and paper currency. Later that
day, he test-drives one of the latest self-driving cars.
As he leaves, his phone sends a push notification
offering him financing options tailor made to his
financial position. On the way home, he stops in at
the local super-market to pick up food for dinner. He
fills his basket and walks out of the store. His receipt
appears in his email or as a text as he exits. When
he accepts an incoming reservation for a black-tie
charity event, he immediately gets advice about the
right amount to donate, based on his current income.
04
Meet the
customer
of the future
A view by Cognizant’s Center
for the Future of Work
Michael Cook is responsible for developing
thought leadership in Cognizants’ EMEA
Center for the Future of Work (CFoW). In this
role, Michael identifies the changing dynamics
that will shape the business ecosystem of
the future, delivering original research and
analysis of work trends in Europe.
Michael also collaborates with a wide range
of technology thinkers and academics about
what the future of work will look like as digital
changes many aspects of our working lives.
Michael is an established speaker with broad
experience across the services market,
including customer experience management,
buyside advisory, talent and workforce
solutions, and cyber security.
Michael joined the CFoW in March 2017. Prior
to joining, Mike served as global Research
Director with HfS Research, where he worked
across multiple research topics and led HfS’s
buyside focused research program. Mike
earned his Bachelors of Economics and
Econometrics and Post Graduate qualification
of International Trade and Development from
the University of Johannesburg.
5. A scene from a futuristic movie? Not at all. Fintechs and
leading banks are currently rethinking how they bring value
to their consumers. This example could well be an indication
of what banking and financial services will look like by 2025 –
at least, for providers that want to stay relevant.
Avoiding oblivion
It’s no secret that banks and financial services institutions have
taken a few major hits in recent years, from the 2008 financial
crisis to the hacking of numerous banks, customer data over
the last two years. Banks are working to regain customer trust
and remain relevant for the future. But “relevant” will look quite
different five or 10 years from now.
Today, banks are using a multi-channel approach to reach
customers. From web banking to mobile phone payments,
and from self-service kiosks to videoconferencing, financial
institutions are striving to keep up with the increasing pace of
change. But more changes are coming, and with the number
of brick-and-mortar bank buildings already dwindling, it’s
becoming clear that the most relevant banks of the future won’t
be banks at all.
A cashless, bank-less future
Today’s consumers are looking to simplify and streamline their
financial interactions, and banks that serve these desires will
gain their trust and respect. The influence of digital natives is
enlightening people to the possibilities of mobile transactions,
and services like WeChat and AmazonGo are capturing the
attention of millennials on the go. They love the high-tech, no-
hassle convenience of having everything in one place, with
seamless connection to their finances. They love having as much
of their lives stored in their phones as possible. And they’re not so
crazy about that bulky wallet messing up the silhouette of their
skinny jeans.
It only makes sense for financial institutions to focus on
technology, partnerships and services that make finance as
simple, convenient and streamlined as it can be. Already this is
playing out, with incumbent banks partnering with fintechs to drive
improved customer service. An example is Santander partnering
with Ripple to develop a blockchain-enabled payment system.
How far will it go? Think of cashless societies, think boundary-less
payments, and preemptive finance when we most need it.
Ultimately, our finance
institutions could well become
a seamless part of people’s lives,
which are seldom noticed but
always there. This could well
become the norm in the next
five years.
05The Future of Banking & Financial Services
6. Fewer bricks, more weight
As everyday activities become more on-demand, customers will
seek solutions that fully integrate everything into a single, multi-
purpose platform. They will expect a one-stop app that manages
money, credit, insurance, income and expenditures in a simple,
streamlined way. Already multi-purpose apps such as WeChat
are the norm in China, and incumbent banks in Europe are
taking note. These banks are looking to integrate multiple facets
of the customer lifecycle, from rewards programs with retailers
to power of attorney change, all available from one application.
Given the tremendous amount that banks currently know about
their customers and their spending habits, they can become the
central cog in an increasingly complex network of services and
applications designed specifically to meet customers’ needs.
As customers move through life, they can be continuously
contacted with advice, options and realistic choices for the best
way to spend and make money, such as which data exchange to
list their personal data on that day or which supermarket has the
best price on commonly consumed items. The application can
work as both an enabler and a monitor.
The future of finance is human
And trust is what it’s all about. So before financial institutions
design the seamless financial services of tomorrow, they are
best served to spend their time and talent working on ironclad
security. Just as the giant vault in the brick-and-mortar bank
gave a customer peace of mind in the 1920s, the data vault that
financial services can develop will give peace of mind to the
customer of the 2020s. And then, true service and integrated
connectioncanbegin.Withablendofartificialintelligence(AI)to
handle fraud mitigation, greater security through PKI encryption
and immutable records and audit trails via blockchain, the data
vault can be locked up tighter than a drum.
Customers will share their data as long as it benefits them directly
in the form of personalized service and customized advice. And
as banks integrate with other service providers like insurance
companies,retirementfunds,healthcareproviders,retailchainsand
more, they will take on an increasingly important role in customers’
lives. Ultimately, banks could very well own the single platform that
links numerous industries. Soon, AI-enabled services will be able
to predict customer behavior and anticipate their financial needs.
For example, maybe John would automatically get finance options
on the car he test-drove, and as soon as he bought it, the best
insurance deal would be preemptively pinged to his phone.
Make customers feel
more secure in their
financial choices.
06
7. future
human
finance
the
of
is
“
“The Future of Banking & Financial Services 07
On-demand and tech-driven
The modern, on-demand society will give financial
institutions a rare opportunity – beyond repositioning
themselves in customers’ lives, they’ll be able to truly
integrate into every aspect of them. No longer channel
owners, banks will become service and product owners
with their finger on the pulse, every minute of every day.
The result? Seamless financial services that require little
more than a tap or a swipe, customers who feel secure
in their financial futures, and financial institutions at the
center of it all. So when John gets offered that job as a
professor of Past and Present Financial Development,
his phone will map out the financial implications, the
changes to his mortgage payments, and his updated
expense projections. So all he has to do is choose, with
all the facts in the palm of his hand.
8. Banking &
Financial
Services
reinvented
Of any industry, financial services has been the one
most heavily impacted by the digital developments of
the last decade. For these businesses, their role, image,
organizational structures, customer relationships and
competitive environments have been shattered. New
regulatory frameworks have been introduced and put
intoplace.Butstill,thenewnormalhasyettocompletely
settle in. Are financial institutions able to cope with all
the transformational forces surrounding them? Or will
these once seemingly indomitable institutions – these
former societal beacons of trust and stability – be
replaced by something else as they find it impossible
to change their established financial procedures,
structures and, most of all, mindsets? No matter what
happens, one thing is clear: The future of financial
services will be transformed. A world of opportunity
stands at the ready, requiring substantial change, a bold
mentalityandawillingnesstobeopentonewinsights.
An external perspective
by futurist & trendwatcher
Tony Bosma
08
Tony Bosma (1973) is a futurist and
trendwatcher. He is the founder of futuring
and consultancy organization Extend Limits
(www.extendlimits.nl). Extend Limits does not
predict the future but helps organizations
anticipate it. Do not ask yourself why things
are happening. Ask yourself why hasn’t it
happened yet? This is the mindset companies
need to adopt in this era of change.
Tony Bosma is an authority in future thinking
and trendwatching and was nominated in The
Netherlands several times for trendwatcher
of the year. He is an internationally renowned
keynote speaker. He is known for his
confronting, inspiring, visually attractive
and surprising sessions about a wide variety
of topics. He also works for a variety of
companies and governments, helping them
anticipate the future and, more important,
challenge and question today’s world and
mindset.
In collaboration with Cognizant, Tony Bosma
did extensive research into near future trends
across industries. Together with Cognizant,
he made abstracts of the most dominant
developments - not far fetched futuristic
worldviews - but realistic developments
which are seen right now. These are not only
plausible future developments but also the
challenges of technological developments.
9. Disruption will not be a one-time event, rather a
continuous pressure to innovate that will shape
customer behaviors, business models, and the
long-term structure of the financial services industry.
In 1994, Bill Gates famously equated banks with dinosaurs. But
apparently, the dinosaurs are stronger than most of us thought
because decades later, financial institutions are still the biggest
organizations on earth. At the start of the 21st century, the
emergence of start-ups suggested the era of disruption for
financialinstitutions was in fullforce, but nearly 20 years later, this
appears only partially true. Of the top 10 organizations listed in
the 2018 Forbes Global 2000, banks remain dominant. In an era
of promised technological disruption, banking seems to remain
the steadiest industry on the planet.
At the same time, ongoing technological progress and its
perpetual adoption by consumers is forcing a reformation of the
essential elements of financial services. In this new world, it’s not
somuchaboutlong-termvisionbutabouttheabilitytoanticipate
relevant change. What trends and developments will shape the
future of financial services?
Disaggregation of the financial value chain
Banks are looking to transform themselves into platforms of
services to remain relevant in the lives of their customers. For
this, their mindset and organizational structure needs to shift
toward a diverse ecosystem with fast-changing and hyper-
personalized contact, products and services. These new value
networks will appear to compete with financial services
organizations’ own channels. As the financial services landscape
becomes a highly sophisticated marketplace, steered by smart
and adaptive technologies, financial institutions like banks
themselves will reshape to become more like high-tech
companies.
“
“
09The Future of Banking & Financial Services
World Economic Forum
10. With changing financial services ecosystems, the services these
organizationsofferwillchangeaccordingly.Asagilenewentrants
insert themselves between financial services institutions and
customers, and raise service expectations by providing services
that enhance the financial and even non-financial customer
experience, there’s some fear that traditional institutions will lose
ownership of the customer relationship. The future winners in
finance are likely to be those that control the customer
interaction, while those that don’t risk becoming utility players at
the end of the ecosystem.
But traditional organizations. can become key players at the
center of a customer’s life because of their access to enormous
amounts of valuable customer data, from buying histories to
lending information to travel data and even medical information.
Even with new regulations about data ownership, financial
institutions are well positioned to become highly personalized
data brokers in customers’ lives, even beyond financial services,
and play a much bigger role in tomorrow’s society. In this context,
rebuilding trust is key to a bright future of finance.
Regaining trust through digital
As financial services integrate more and more seamlessly with
consumers’ lifestyles and devices, organizations will be able to
calculate personalized value analyses.
Elements such as data accessibility, lifestyles and loyalty will be
factored into real-time decision-making processes on the price
customers pay for goods and services. For this to succeed, there
needs to be a high level of trust in the systems and technologies
involved.
With technologies like blockchain, institutions are no longer
the mediators of control, transactions and trust, as these
mechanisms are embedded within the technology itself. The
role of intermediaries will be reinvented and even become
obsolete as trusted transactions can take place among anyone,
including parties with no prior relationship.
A future beyond
financial servicing
The future winners in
finance are likely to be
those that control the
customer interaction.
“
“
10
11. It’s vital, however, to remember that the future of finance and
trust hinges less on technology and more on the reality of the
regulatory environment and the mechanisms used in future
business models of finance. The more transparent and
meaningful these business models become, the more societal
trust will increase. The financial services industry will need to
embrace the goals of the customer rather than focus on being a
powerhouse of profit and growth.
Smart and prescriptive financing
Artificial intelligence will become mainstream in the financial
services industry. Even beyond the use of AI to enhance the
customer experience, the technology will be applied to analyzing
customerbehaviortominimizerisk,detectfraudandrecommend
relevant products and services. Continuously fed with data, AI-
powered bots will be available 24x7 and increase in intelligence
to gain consumer trust.
With AI, banks will be able to more accurately forecast the future,
automate processes and minimize unnecessary human
interaction. Technology will help banks intensify the human
relationship with its customers. Ultimately, technology could
help remove human bias from decisions and transactions and
possibly enable financing to become completely democratized.
Robots will eliminate
200,000 jobs in the
banking industry within
the next 10 years.
“
“
11The Future of Banking Financial Services
Wells Fargo
12. “
Wide-ranging reforms are needed to
reset the global financial system and
make it work amid turbulent times.
The Group of 20 (G-20) Eminent Persons Group
on Global Financial Governance
“
12
13. Imagine, one day…
Let go of your mental barriers and think freely about a
possible future. By 2050, it’s easy to imagine banks
becoming invisible entities, disappearing from our
physical world as they merge with the virtual world.
Finance itself will become virtual –wallets will become a
souvenir from the past as digital currencies replace
physical ones, and money and payments will be
exchanged without having to think about it. Every
aspect of our personal lives will become monetized –
we’ll be compensated for sharing our personal health
data, given a micropayment for doing a social good and
assigned a debit for doing something unlawful.
Our preferences and financial choices will be
represented online by our digital personalities, which
will algorithmically determine our personal transactions
and interact with the digital backbone of financial
services networks. Algorithms will pre-program what
our money is used for, making the use of money
extremely transparent and secure. Rather than us
having to be aware of the consequences of our
spendingandsaving,thatresponsibilitywillberelegated
to our smart digital representations, whose predictive
models will predict the exact outcomes and optimal
actions to take.
As a result, everyone will have a balanced look at their
financial future. The need for insurance will become
predictive and adjusted in real-time based on lifestyle
and continuous risk calculations by an individual’s
intelligent surroundings. While trust will remain the
most important currency, it will come mainly from
intelligent machines, not humans: It will be digitized.
Human intervention will be required if asked for.
These scenarios raise some crucial questions: What
does the future of finance mean for basic human
aspects like freedom, privacy, inequality, solidarity and
the human relationship with value systems like money?
What about the role of human ethics in our relationship
with the financial services industry? Can technology
help regain trust in our financial systems? Can it help us
use money for social good and connect people instead
of widening the gap between different social groups?
Amidtechnologicalprogressandthechangingfinancial
services landscape, the biggest questions about the
future of finance lie in supporting progress for all in
society.
Let us not forget that financing and money can be one of the
most powerful forms of democracy and force for good. Will our
financial services institutions in the future be even more
disconnected from customers and society than ever –
unreachable digital monopolies programming the world’s
financial future? It’s the big question of this era: Ethics or
innovative financial technology, which comes first?
People today are more aware about how they spend their money
and how it is invested – with every euro/dollar they spend, people
vote for the world they want to see. Financial services institutions
need to embrace this mindset and earn a reputation for working
to build a better world for future generations and support social
cohesion. Worldwide, the industry needs to reset its vision on
economic growth and rethink its definitions of progress and
value.
Banking
Financial Services
reinvented
While a digital-driven utopian financial
future is the promise, what is the reality?
Amid all the digital opportunities, are we
addressing the real problems faced by the
financial services industry? Are our financial
services institutions focusing on real human
needs? Are they dedicated to supporting
economic, social and environmental impact
and adopting a mindset of not just doing
less bad but doing only good?
New challenges
and questions
The Future of Banking Financial Services 13
14. Even amid today’s higher trade barriers and growing financial protectionism, the future of
financial services will be based on global interconnectedness and a tight-knit digital network
between countries, businesses and individuals. A decentralized but still interconnected
approach could increase susceptibility to risk, making regulation and crisis management
tools ever more important as new technologies become the basis of our lives.
Digital-drivenfinancialservicesinaninterconnectedsmartworld
will raise the question about financial surveillance. We are
handing over more rich data to our financial institutions then
ever before. Most of us are completely unaware of what this data
is used for. In addition to privacy concerns, other issues loom:
What about financial organizations influencing our decision
makingprocess?Whataboutreal-timeriskscores?Istechnology
reducing the autonomy of financial services customers? What is
the leading purpose of the data being collected by financial
services organizations?
With increased robotic process automation, other concerns
arise around the use of algorithms. There’s the ethical question
of who’s responsible for the decisions and actions of these
algorithms. Do financial services institutions and customers
understand how the choices and decisions of robotic advice are
derived? The interconnectedness of financial services toward
frictionless experiences could effectively minimize the ethics in
the buying process.
Ethical questions also arise in the regulatory realm. As control
over regulations and procedures becomes increasingly
technology-driven, we’re moving further into a financial world
where technology controls technology. With this approach, it’s
vital for humans to understand the autonomous processes and
steps taken by technology. The biggest ethical dilemma of the
near financial future is who will be in control: technology or
humans. This is especially important in an increasingly complex
world in which humans are challenged to understand the
decisions made by technology, especially technology that’s
becoming more capable of self-learning and increasingly
situationally aware and responsive.
The future of technology in finance will be about answering
ethical questions, enabling transparency and explainability,
reducing complexity and adding humanity. The industry needs
to ensure the decisions made by technology are unbiased and
that the inner-workings of the supporting algorithms are
transparent.
The industry will need to emphasize the human and emotional
side of finance and the ever-important human connection
in financial decision-making. The goal is to create customer
experiences facilitated by machines and intensified by humans.
“
“We’re moving further
technology
into a financial world
where
controls technology.
14
15. 15The Future of Banking Financial Services
The biggest ethical dilemma
of the near financial future
is who will be in control:
technology or humans.
“
“
16. From:
Past-driven
Economic value
“We think”
One size fits some
Life protection
Transactional thinking
Siloed data
To:
Future-driven
Societal value
“We know”
One size fits none
Life enrichment
Value thinking
Networked data
Organization Platform
Human judgment Blended judgment
High tech Human touch
The future is
already here
Thebankingandfinancialservicesindustrywillshiftfromasystembasedonhistoricaldatato
beingdrivenbypredictionsaboutthefuture.Theseinsightswillbehighlyaccurate–nomore
bestguessesor“wethinkweknow.”Theindustrywillincreasinglybefocusedonaddingreal
valuetosociety,withfinancialandnon-financialbusinessesforminganinterconnectednetwork
centeredarounddiscerningandmeetingindividulcustomerneeds.
Nolongerwillcustomersservefinancialstructures–networkswillservecustomers.Algorithms
andautomatedprocesseswilldriveefficientanddata-drivenfinancialproductsandservices,free
ofhumanbiasandtransparentandevenlyaccessibletoeveryone,withahumantouchifdesired.
16
17. Thefollowingcasesareinspirationalandshowhowfinance
ischanging.Startupsandnewinnovativeideascangrow
butalsofailfast–thatisinnovationatthefrontierofan
industry.Nobusinessrelationshipexistsbetweenthe
casesbelowandCognizant.
Fluidly
Fluidly works to create real-time financial insight with cashflow forecasting. It uses
historical data, financial modeling and machine learning to produce up-to-date
forecasts, as well as insights into how to improve the business’s cash position. The
system helps businesses take the right actions to optimize their financial future.
www.fluidly.com
Oval
Oval’s app automatically tracks customers’ spending and spending behavior by
linking their bank accounts and credit cards. By using data and lessons from other
people in the Oval community, customers can improve their spending decisions.
Oval is aimed at young consumers who often lack financial knowledge. Its goal is to
help customers track their spending and save automatically.
www.ovalmoney.com
Rapyd
Rapyd claims to be the world’s largest local payments network. The system enables any
local or cross-border payment to be integrated directly into any digital application,
including cash, bank transfers, e-wallets, local cards and more than 300 additional
alternative payment methods.
www.rapyd.net
CitizenMe
CitizenMeisanidentitycontrolservicethathelpsindividualstakebackownershipof
their “digital selves” and get value from their online data. The company’s “ethical
insights platform” is also focused on enabling organizations to build deep
relationships with consumers, through ethical and GDPR-compliant user data and
research tools.
www.citizenme.com/public/wp
Cleo
Cleo is an intelligent chatbot that connects users’ bank accounts and credit cards to
help them gain better control over their spending decisions and meet their savings
goals. The bot communicates with users via Facebook Messenger, answering
questions, developing customized budgets and providing tips and alerts.
www.meetcleo.com
Real-life
cases
17The Future of Banking Financial Services
18. Curve
Curve combines all of a user’s accounts and cards into one
smart platform – the Curve Mastercard. By doing so, they
can see what they’re spending at a glance, save on excess
fees, send money securely and get real-time spending
alerts.
www.curve.app
Digital fingerprints
Digital Fingerprints provides continuous authentication
based on behavioral biometrics. After monitoring and
capturing the user’s behavior, it stores the collected
behavioral patterns in a machine learning model that can
almost instantaneously judge whether present behavior is
consistent with the user’s identity, all in compliance with
GDPR and PS2 regulations.
www.fingerprints.digital
Chase
Chase uses voice ID to protect customer data, making
banking easier, faster and more secure. To create a unique
voiceprint enabling account access, customers can simply
call the bank.
www.chase.com/personal/voice-biometrics
Clark
Clark is an insurance robo-advisory platform that provides
transparent, cheap and comprehensive insurance coverage.
Clark allows users to assess their insurance status through
an app or website. Based on algorithms, the robo-advisor
provides analysis on the customers’ insurance situation
and automatically proposes optimization opportunities by
searching for tariffs from more than 160 insurance companies.
On request, experts are available to assist customers with
specific questions.
www.chase.com/personal/voice-biometrics
The future is human
Humans excel at being creative, in seeing, identifying and
investing in opportunities, and solving problems. Our
emotions - anger, sadness, love - will drive the future of
banking and financial services. Even as technology grows
in intelligence, it will never match our human creativity.
The biggest benefit technology has to offer us and our
organizations and institutions is to help us emphasize our
mostbasicandstrongesthumanskills–skillsthatwillneverbe
digitized. Let’s be curious about the future, not fearful. Let us,
as a society, create and discover new rules and norms. The
future is not about making the present more efficient but
about reshaping it – something only humans can, and will, do.
18
Evgeny Morozov
Technology
human nature,
all the time;
changes
hardly ever“
“
19. 1. Put customers in control of their own data and
enable them to utilize it their way.
2. Make human contact with your consumer smarter
by embracing digital augmentation of staff.
3. Be accessible and relevant in the physical world
through branches and outreach centers instead
of going purely digital.
4. Help customers cope with the digital change
in finance and society. Embrace your social
responsibility and help customers become digital
and financially literate.
5. Discover the possibilities and boundaries of new
technologies. Ask the question: Is what is possible
also what customers want or need?
6. Utilize predictive technologies to encourage
responsible consumer spending and saving.
7. Embrace open banking to provide a superior
customer experience.
19The Future of Banking Financial Services
Key take-aways