Download PDF
A Banking Newcomer Leads the Way from Its Founding to GDPR Superstar with ARIS & Alfabet
Technology Category
- Application Infrastructure & Middleware - API Integration & Management
- Application Infrastructure & Middleware - Data Exchange & Integration
Applicable Industries
- Finance & Insurance
Applicable Functions
- Business Operation
Use Cases
- Regulatory Compliance Monitoring
- Process Control & Optimization
Services
- Software Design & Engineering Services
- System Integration
The Challenge
The bank, founded in 2010, faced several challenges as it grew rapidly to over 1.2 million customers and 55 branches in just a few years. The high barrier to market entry, consumer stickiness, and extraordinary growth were some of the challenges. The bank also lacked a unified process management system and had to deal with looming GDPR regulations and manual documents. As a newcomer in the field, the bank sought to find a balance between well-worn protocols related to process planning, optimization, and efficiency, and the demands of savvy customers for legendary service and great products. The looming deadline for enforcement of the EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in early 2018 only added fuel to the fire.
About The Customer
The customer is a bank founded in 2010, which became the first new mainstream bank to go to market in the U.K. in more than 100 years. It has achieved phenomenal growth in a notoriously tricky market, mainly by acquiring customers from its rivals through focusing on the in-branch user experience. Just seven years from its founding, the bank’s 3,000 employees are responsible for assets of more than £16 billion a year. The bank scaled these heights in such a short time by taking a laser-like focus on customer experience, for example, by opening on Sundays, launching its brick-and-mortar locations as retail-like stores rather than staid branches and measuring success based on customer experience.
The Solution
In 2017, the bank turned to Software AG's solutions, ARIS and Alfabet. With ARIS, the team mapped processes at an award-winning rate. Starting from manual, dispersed records, the bank mapped more than 280 processes in less than a year—20 percent of which was regulatory. Then, using Alfabet, the bank is set to gain new clarity on its enterprise architecture, giving it the keys to leverage the power of new apps and better services, face regulations like GDPR effectively, and mitigate risks through full lifecycle visibility of its IT capabilities. The combined business and IT transformation capabilities of ARIS and Alfabet have opened the way for exciting new services and applications based on greater data and process transparency, third-party data transfer and accessibility, and enhanced privacy protection and risk reduction.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
Related Case Studies.
Case Study
Real-time In-vehicle Monitoring
The telematic solution provides this vital premium-adjusting information. The solution also helps detect and deter vehicle or trailer theft – as soon as a theft occurs, monitoring personnel can alert the appropriate authorities, providing an exact location.“With more and more insurance companies and major fleet operators interested in monitoring driver behaviour on the grounds of road safety, efficient logistics and costs, the market for this type of device and associated e-business services is growing rapidly within Italy and the rest of Europe,” says Franco.“The insurance companies are especially interested in the pay-per-use and pay-as-you-drive applications while other organisations employ the technology for road user charging.”“One million vehicles in Italy currently carry such devices and forecasts indicate that the European market will increase tenfold by 2014.However, for our technology to work effectively, we needed a highly reliable wireless data network to carry the information between the vehicles and monitoring stations.”
Case Study
Safety First with Folksam
The competitiveness of the car insurance market is driving UBI growth as a means for insurance companies to differentiate their customer propositions as well as improving operational efficiency. An insurance model - usage-based insurance ("UBI") - offers possibilities for insurers to do more efficient market segmentation and accurate risk assessment and pricing. Insurers require an IoT solution for the purpose of data collection and performance analysis
Case Study
Smooth Transition to Energy Savings
The building was equipped with four end-of-life Trane water cooled chillers, located in the basement. Johnson Controls installed four York water cooled centrifugal chillers with unit mounted variable speed drives and a total installed cooling capacity of 6,8 MW. Each chiller has a capacity of 1,6 MW (variable to 1.9MW depending upon condenser water temperatures). Johnson Controls needed to design the equipment in such way that it would fit the dimensional constraints of the existing plant area and plant access route but also the specific performance requirements of the client. Morgan Stanley required the chiller plant to match the building load profile, turn down to match the low load requirement when needed and provide an improvement in the Energy Efficiency Ratio across the entire operating range. Other requirements were a reduction in the chiller noise level to improve the working environment in the plant room and a wide operating envelope coupled with intelligent controls to allow possible variation in both flow rate and temperature. The latter was needed to leverage increased capacity from a reduced number of machines during the different installation phases and allow future enhancement to a variable primary flow system.
Case Study
Automated Pallet Labeling Solution for SPR Packaging
SPR Packaging, an American supplier of packaging solutions, was in search of an automated pallet labeling solution that could meet their immediate and future needs. They aimed to equip their lines with automatic printer applicators, but also required a solution that could interface with their accounting software. The challenge was to find a system that could read a 2D code on pallets at the stretch wrapper, track the pallet, and flag any pallets with unread barcodes for inspection. The pallets could be single or double stacked, and the system needed to be able to differentiate between the two. SPR Packaging sought a system integrator with extensive experience in advanced printing and tracking solutions to provide a complete traceability system.
Case Study
Transforming insurance pricing while improving driver safety
The Internet of Things (IoT) is revolutionizing the car insurance industry on a scale not seen since the introduction of the car itself. For decades, premiums have been calculated using proxy-based risk assessment models and historical data. Today, a growing number of innovative companies such as Quebec-based Industrielle Alliance are moving to usage-based insurance (UBI) models, driven by the advancement of telematics technologies and smart tracking devices.
Case Study
MasterCard Improves Customer Experience Through Self-Service Data Prep
Derek Madison, Leader of Business Financial Support at MasterCard, oversees the validation of transactions and cash between two systems, whether they’re MasterCard owned or not. He was charged with identifying new ways to increase efficiency and improve MasterCard processes. At the outset, the 13-person team had to manually reconcile system interfaces using reports that resided on the company’s mainframe. Their first order of business each day was to print 20-30 individual, multi-page reports. Using a ruler to keep their place within each report, they would then hand-key the relevant data, line by line, into Excel for validation. “We’re talking about a task that took 40-80 hours each week,” recalls Madison, “As a growing company with rapidly expanding product offerings, we had to find a better way to prepare this data for analysis.”