Managing Director & Senior Partner
London
Related Expertise: Retail Banking, Wealth Management, Financial Institutions
By Aymen Saleh, Nadjia Yousif, Christophe Duthoit, Emma Bunnell, and Roman Regelman
It is a truism in banking that digitalization has the potential to transform the business model, cut costs, and reduce time to market. This assumption is supported by evidence showing that retail banks that digitalize can achieve a 20% increase in revenues and a 30% decline in expenditures. And wholesale-banking digitalization programs can deliver a 12% reduction in cost-to-income ratios. (See “How Digitized Customer Journeys Can Help Banks Win Hearts, Minds, and Profits,” BCG article, June 2016, and “Digital in Corporate Banking Reaches the Tipping Point: Is Everyone Ready?” BCG article, November 2015.)
The numbers are impressive, but they represent the exception rather than the rule. Despite significant investment and effort, many banks struggle to make digitalization pay. To understand why, we surveyed digitalization programs at 12 international institutions. Our research revealed a range of organization structures, technology frameworks, and funding models that support digitalization, but in the majority of cases—at least one in three—implementation results are disappointing. The pace of delivery is slower than initially expected, it is difficult to scale digital solutions across the bank and end-to-end, or the impact on the bottom line is insufficient.
Of the three areas of concern, slow delivery is the problem most widely cited: almost two-thirds of the banks in our survey reported that delivery was not as fast as they’d anticipated, one-quarter said that scaling up is the primary issue, and 15% reported that they are most disappointed in the impact on the bottom line. (See Exhibit 1.)
Our research highlights four key causes of failure to deliver:
The failure of banks to execute their digital rollout in line with their ambitions suggests that they have fallen into a value trap: the upside fails to compensate for the level of their investment. There is also a problem of comprehension. Not even half of the respondents to BCG’s survey said that they have a clear understanding of the benefits of digitalization or that they are achieving those benefits. Respondents said that programs lack delivery speed, the scale expected, or bottom-line impact.
Banks with stretched project timelines cited such challenges as problems attracting appropriate talent to the right locations and the operational difficulties of implementing across multiple locations. Talent deficits are seen as a reason for scaling challenges too—for example, in relation to customer journeys. One bank reported that shareholder pressure for short-term performance militates against effective long-term investment. Another said that patchy resource prioritization had led to a failure to achieve certain financial targets.
In fact, few banks are able to execute digital transformation across all potential use cases, and in many cases, distribution channels take precedence over back-end capabilities such as systems and data architecture. For example, nearly 80% of the banks in our survey acknowledged that their data architecture is relatively immature.
In assessing the reasons for the digital value trap problem, banks highlight a number of challenges. Exhibit 2 shows those challenges, which include the following:
Two banks that have recently taken the lead in digital transformation are HSBC and National Australia Bank (NAB). BCG met with change leaders at both banks and asked them to describe what they had learned from the implementation experience.
Niall Cameron, Global Head of Corporate and Institutional Digital, HSBC
What characterizes digital success at HSBC?
Our major success is that we have not waited long to get deliveries live. Also, we are very conscious that there will be multiple versions of products. We know how to produce a product quickly and then use client feedback to make it excellent over time.
How did HSBC manage to balance early successes with long-term targets?
We decided from the beginning that if we spent all our time and resources on engineering the “pipes under the floorboards,” we would lose the confidence of customers, even if we met our objectives in the long term. We’ve found that a balanced portfolio of short-term, high-impact—predominantly channel-based—projects, along with long-term restructuring, is the way to go.
What have been the largest impediments to the digital transformation?
The challenge has been to bring everything together effectively. Getting people on board involves a lot of orchestration—and a lot of influencing of hearts and minds.
How do you balance achieving speed, scale, and impact from digital initiatives?
One of the traps people fall into is setting up standalone units that develop very quickly, but they then fail to prevent the units from disappearing into the sunset without achieving scale or impact. Still, it is important to keep speed and agility close to the heart of the bank, otherwise you will never succeed at getting the digital units integrated.
Antony Cahill, Chief Operating Officer, NAB
You have designed your program around customer journey transformation. What does that mean, and why did you choose that approach?
Journey transformation means fundamentally reimagining and redefining all customer experiences. We are doing it in a way that has the customer at the center of everything we do. We are breaking down corporate silos and transcending long-held views to deliver better experiences for our customers, and this drives better commercial outcomes.
How have you built customers’ allegiance and commitment?
First of all, customer buy-in is about shared ownership. No business unit or department owns a customer. We all do. Across the organization.
Second, we are making a cultural and mindset shift away from how we’ve always done things. We’re changing the way we work so that we can deliver more quickly. And last, we are focusing on value, which is most important for our customers and also for our shareholders. We have built our program to “back the bold” who move Australia forward.
What is your approach to talent?
We are fundamentally changing the way we work and the way we build teams. To us, journeys are not projects or assignments. They are the new ways of working: we have cross-functional teams that jointly own outcomes working with a high degree of autonomy and empowerment. This model attracts the best people in our bank, in our industry, and beyond.
Has it been difficult to scale your customer journey initiatives?
The most important thing is vision: being bold for our customers. Our goal is to reach “20 by 20.” We aim to have 20 major journeys running by 2020. Those 20 will have an impact on the absolute majority of our employees and 50% of our cost base. The challenges we’ve faced in scaling have involved talent and legacy platforms, which are important to working in a truly agile way. Given our vision and broad management commitment, we know that we will succeed. Our customers are feeling it already.
How do you assess the success of your digital program?
There are four key measures: the impact of customer journeys on the customer experience, productivity improvements, revenue uplift, and the velocity of change.
Across the industry, there is considerable variability in the ways that banks have approached the transformation process. Some have chosen to launch new digital solutions alongside existing interfaces, while others have built entirely new lines of business or companies. The following three delivery models stand out:
The three models can be seen as design blueprints, and many banks run all three approaches in some combination across markets, regions, and business lines. Some digital leaders have other layers to coordinate, for example, in different regions or relating to individual lines of business. Each model offers advantages and disadvantages that are related to the bank’s status, position, and needs.
BAU+
Using the BAU+ model, banks define and execute their digital strategy with the existing processes, organization, and governance, typically adding digitalization to an executive’s responsibilities and assigning new personnel to help. Funding is generally provided through the change budget for the P&L of the specific market or line of business. Existing reporting lines and P&L accountability remain unchanged.
Advantages. Such models launch quickly and offer early progress. Change can be driven through customer journeys, delivering cost savings and higher revenues.
Disadvantages. In many cases, it is difficult to change the fundamental business model, which may be contained within a particular line of business. This makes it tough to run cross-asset programs and customer journeys, especially in a product-led organization whose P&L sits with the product owner.
Use Case. Large banks with significant digital war chests have adopted this approach. One bank earmarked $2 billion to push its digital agenda, which it developed through existing entities in each market.
A New Line of Business
Using this model, the bank creates a new digital division, which, in many cases, is led by a head of digital who reports directly to the CEO and has authority in line with other business unit heads. In addition to running the new unit, the head of digital may be responsible for other digital offerings. In the retail context, the head of digital might be responsible for such nonbranch customer concerns as mobile, call center, and online channels. The digital division typically owns digital projects, but it relies on shared services in areas including IT, risk, and HR. The head of digital controls the budget and roadmap for the new business.
Advantages. This model allows for the radical reimagination of customer journeys and propositions. There is more accountability because the head of digital owns the budget and is responsible for delivery. Scale can be achieved by rolling out initiatives across the organization.
Disadvantages. The new line of business may add to organizational complexity and compete with existing businesses for, say, internal IT services. However, it does not resolve legacy IT and data issues.
Use Case. One large European bank has created a separate business unit for its retail digital initiative. The head of the digital unit sits on the executive committee and has a veto over investments. The unit is organized into a series of labs, each responsible for specific programs, and each lab has a product owner who drives the customer experience roadmap, a delivery director who helps coordinate technology, and design teams who execute the roadmap. The labs enable rapid delivery to the end customer.
The Digital Native Approach
The digital native approach calls for acquiring or building a digital bank with its own P&L for a given market or line of business. Unlike other approaches, the digital native design is made from scratch, avoiding the complexity associated with existing architecture, and the digital roadmap is heavily focused on acquiring new customers. The digital native is independent of the parent, meaning that they share no services, including IT. The digital targets sit with the CEO of the new digital native bank.
Advantages. The digital native model allows for fundamentally different economics and capabilities, offers the potential for rapid impact, and obviates the need for legacy IT modernization. Using an approach that is pretty much off-the-shelf, a digital bank can get to market quickly and be highly competitive, because there’s no need to take the time to modernize or improve legacy systems.
Disadvantages. By definition, the model does not change the existing bank, so it’s rarely possible to execute as the only delivery model and difficult to migrate legacy customers and products to the new architecture.
Use Case. A European retail bank successfully built a digital native bank, which was initially designed to deliver mobile and Internet-based services. The bank was powered by advanced analytics, which permitted it to provide highly tailored offerings, and it was built on top of a new core banking platform with the cooperation of a number of fintech providers. A key reason for its success was that the bank had planned—from the start—for how it would deal with the legacy bank and had developed a realistic five- to seven-year roadmap to manage legacy migration.
Banks that fail to address the key challenges associated with digital rollout—clunky legacy systems, organizational resistance, talent gaps, and weak data architecture—are liable to find themselves caught in a digital value trap, in which the return on investment does not reflect the cost of transformation.
To recalibrate the ROI equation, banks must take concerted action that is based on a view of digital as a solution to fundamental business problems and that also meets customer needs. As leaders consider strategies for effective implementation, they should consider several guiding principles that we believe may provide a foundation for progress:
Flowing from the general principles, we recommend five key strategic actions:
Identify the right delivery model. Each bank must determine which digital delivery model, or combination of models, is appropriate for its strategic purposes. Banks just embarking on the transformation journey or wishing to test and learn on a small scale are likely to see BAU+ as the preferred approach. BAU+ can energize teams in the early stages of digital transformation and help generate critical early wins and proofs of concept.
For banks that have already made progress, the new line of business or digital native model is likely to be more appropriate. The new line of business model has the potential to transform the organization, but it requires adaptations of existing processes, policies, and governance—and, inevitably, cultural change. If that approach seems likely to present insurmountable challenges, then the digital native model will probably work better. With either of these models, transformation of the legacy business still needs to be tackled at some point.
For some banks, a combination of delivery models will work best, with different iterations across locations and types of business.
Update legacy technology. Banks must employ one-speed—rather than two-speed—IT that is grounded in an agile methodology. Core banking replacement is not always (or even often) necessary for modernization. Instead, change leaders should focus on creating an application programming interface (API) architecture that enables legacy applications to communicate with digital applications. One caveat: don’t try to build everything at once; prioritize APIs on the basis of their business benefit and value.
Foster buy-in across the organization. A key challenge may be a prisoner’s dilemma in which digitalization is the right answer for the bank but not for individual executives, who, for example, might lose headcount or influence. Solving this requires the creation of winning scenarios for those executives, perhaps by expanding their mandate in a new operating model. Bank executives must be aware of the potential for wider internal resistance and should communicate necessary changes early, openly, and transparently.
Nurture and acquire talent. Banks should plan for big shifts in the delivery model and hire digital talent early and with sufficient scale to make a fundamental difference to the proposition. Typically, a bank needs to expand its advanced analytics resources by a factor of ten. Executives must determine what needs to change for the bank to focus intensely on the customer, and they should foster a culture of creativity and entrepreneurialism that encourages talented employees to stay. For example, existing delivery processes, stage gates, and authorizations and sign-offs are unlikely to suit agile project delivery. Digital engineers should be authorized to access the latest open-source tool sets rather than having to use standardized internal versions.
Every bank’s strategy for hiring digital talent should be based on the delivery model it has chosen and the scale of talent ramp-up. With a BAU+ model, the optimal approach involves retraining current staff and adding infusions of external talent. Under the new line of business approach, the hiring strategy is similar—but on a much larger scale—and involves new physical spaces designed to foster innovation and digital delivery. The digital native model creates a blank canvas for hiring individuals and teams, depending on the desired scale and ramp-up speed. Talent retention is generally more successful under the digital native model, because the organizational construct is tailored and uninhibited by existing processes and policies. For example, ten years ago, a credit card provider, seeing how important data and analytics capabilities would become, started to build an analytics team. Over the past decade that team has grown twentyfold. The many banks that lag behind that company must ensure that their recruitment strategy complements a forward-looking digital vision.
Address weakness in the data architecture. Banks must understand the strengths and weaknesses of their current data architecture. For example, data lake projects may struggle to deliver because of a lack of use cases or insufficient planning for operationalization. Analytics, meanwhile, may be boosted with the processing power of the cloud. However, banks may be required to determine how existing processes and procedures inhibit the use of cloud environments. One European bank spent two years improving the quality of its data before it was able to launch a workable digital program.
In managing a digital transformation, bank executives must work to mobilize the entire organization around a strategy tailored to the commercial opportunities available. Ultimately, the banks that adapt their organization to the digital age and replace or integrate legacy IT systems and data repositories by digitalizing end-to-end will be the most likely to both avoid the digital value trap and cut costs and boost revenues.
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