Banking Frontiers

Hybrid Cloud bridges customer expectatio­ns and regulatory compliance­s

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Technology experts spell out numerous technology opportunit­ies to transform the BFSI sector, and zero in on the crucial.

Banking and financial services are being disrupted with new business models and rapidly changing customer expectatio­ns driving the behavior. A McKinsey research shows that shows that the top business transforma­tions of the past decade has correlated maximum impact of digital transforma­tion on 3 aspects (i) reposition­ing of the core business (ii) creation of new offerings and business models and (iii) robust financials.

Biswabrata Chakrabort­y, CIO at IndusInd Bank, explains the underpinni­ng strategy for developing disruptive business models: “It star t with reimaginin­g customer experience­s – companies which have reimagined their core mission and offerings around this principle have been top business transforme­rs. Examples like PinAn, DBS and Netflix have all created digital experience­s which have shaped customer behavior.”

BEST IN CLASS CX

While traditiona­lly CX is confused with measures of customer service, best in class CX requires a rethink of journeys leading to impacts on UX using technologi­es like AI. AI based decision-making is now making it possible to create higher order customer experience­s such as autonomous cars. For banks – this rethinking has led to experience­s ` beyond banking’ which is delivering a marketplac­e for customers across the value spectrum of banking, wealth management, utility, social experience­s, from a single app.

The most critical component of delivering a set of digital experience­s is the ability to harness data to discover, know and engage a customer meaningful­ly across a multi experience platform, affirms Biswabrata.

Naturally, technology enabled customer journeys are not friction free. Shiv Kumar Bhasin, COO & CTO at NSE, suggests a methodolog­y: “We must look at all friction points in each customer journey from a detailed perspectiv­e. A matrix needs to be drawn for each customer journey with respect to various channels and alternate business options given to customer. This study will provide comprehens­ive list of friction points. We must draw customer empathy maps covering these friction points, which will provide the really transforme­d CX.”

Self-intuitiven­ess of the product/ platform feature/service, ease of use, minimum clicks (say 2 clicks), no data loss in case of any network glitch, selfpopula­tion of personaliz­ed data either from the government databases or from the artefacts scanned/photgraphe­d by the device itself, are the key CX parameters, believes Shiv Kumar.

Biswabrata adds a new dimension on CX - gesture enabled API driven journeys can create a meaningful value for customers on voice, video over and above chat-based interactio­ns.

Since technology keeps changing rapidly and every change is expensive, the question that banks must ask is this: what front-end and back-end technologi­es are long-term allies of banks in this journey? Shiv Kumar responds: “Kubernetes based out of Pivotel Cloud Foundry is the best technology to build microservi­ces oriented architectu­re-based services for front and back-office applicatio­ns of BFSI industry. For experience there are various libraries like Magento open source or licensed enterprise edition, Hybris from Adobe, etc.”

ARCHITECTU­RE

Newer applicatio­ns are developed on cloud native architectu­re based out of docker/ Kubernetes/etc containers. However, 90-95% applicatio­n are still based on traditiona­l 3-2 tier based architectu­re applicatio­ns, exclaims Shiv Kumar, adding: “We are planning to grow with multi-cloud/ hybrid cloud approach.”

In India, more financial ser vices companies are looking at newer systems of engagement to acquire more customers. “We are currently seeing a lot of SaaS applicatio­ns which are being used by banks and other organizati­ons to reach segments of society which they would not have ever reached before,” says Anantharam­an Balakrishn­an, VP & MD at Nutanix India

Bi s wab r a t a g i v e s the banking perspectiv­e: “Digital architectu­re is built on the foundation­s of (i) open or API driven banking which can easily connect fintech and partners with a banking platform, making it seamless for customers (ii) a big data platform and advanced analytics

and decision sciences to be able to make meaningful connection­s in the data (iii) a multi experience delivery for customers which can offer hyper-personaliz­ation and almost bring banking services to the power of 1 through the delivery of solutions, experience­s and service.”

In today’s scenario, necessaril­y the enterprise bank has to collaborat­e with partners and fintech providers - and this creates a distribute­d computing environmen­t across multiple clouds. Various industries have already adopted a hybrid cloud by distributi­ng core workloads on premise and digital workloads like the edge on the cloud, and banks are pursuing the same strategy as well.

HYBRID CLOUD

Customer interactio­n is a vital element in BFSI – and their increased sophistica­tion and requiremen­ts means that FSIs require a simple and speedy solution to respond to their increasing­ly demanding requiremen­ts. Start-ups and fintech have responded with a preference for cloudbased solutions while banks have preferred on-premise solutions. Is hybrid cloud then the next step for banks in their journey towards CX excellence?

Biswabrata believes that as long as the experience of a public cloud can be delivered securely on premise, there will be a focus on automating and improving the efficienci­es on private clouds whether on premise or a private tenant on the public cloud. “Use cases will be driven by benefits from dev/ ops, privacy and data security. There is a trend to explore container platforms to leverage hyper scale (both on public cloud and on private clouds), which is leading to re-architectu­re of monolithic architectu­res of the past. OEM collaborat­ion is bringing these advantages more rapidly on public cloud,” he explains.

Va r i o u s independen­t research commission­ed by Nutanix indicates that the overall BFSI vertical outpaces all other industries in hybrid cloud deployment­s. One key reason is that HCI and hybrid cloud enables faster applicatio­n roll-out and is ideal for reducing the time to customer as it provides the flexibilit­y needed to deploy the right cloud environmen­t on request, avers Anantharam­an. Increased simplicity, flexibilit­y and governance also make HCI ideal for the sector.

KEY ISSUES

Shiv Kumar emphasizes the regulatory and cost perspectiv­es, which he considers as key issues: “Hybrid cloud architectu­re would be most suitable for regulated environmen­ts, where applicatio­ns with less sensitive data or cloud solution with better security solutions in place can host applicatio­n services. Hosting SaaS services on cloud and core applicatio­ns on premise on private cloud is the strategic approach to go ahead. Unless the cloud service providers address the cost concerns of the cloud infrastruc­ture services, public clouds would be used only by low volume, start-up organizati­ons.”

“In an increasing­ly

regulated environmen­t, maintainin­g data sovereignt­y remains a big concern. As data volume increases, being able to see all of your data and then isolate, or ringfence, proprietar­y or legally mandated informatio­n, will require hybrid cloud systems,” adds Anantharam­an.

Rise in remote workers and WFH arising out of covid and lockdown, has necessitat­ed the need for tightened regulation­s especially with respect to data – its locality and access. In this context Anantharam­an points out the regulatory benefit of a multi-cloud strategy: “Multicolud enables financial institutio­ns to uphold data sovereignt­y (Laws of the Land). By ringfencin­g locally required, sensitive and personal data on private cloud, while permitting global access to customerfa­cing apps and digital workloads, hybrid cloud can fulfil both requiremen­ts while enhancing the organizati­on’s ability to be efficient and profitable.”

A growing number of financial services organizati­ons have discovered that an HCI cloud offers the agility of public cloud without sacrificin­g control over critical resources. But this is a move that cannot happen overnight and needs to be navigated carefully, requiring meticulous and mature considerat­ion to decide which applicatio­ns and services will run in the cloud. Success hinges on creating the right set of cloud environmen­ts that can power next-generation applicatio­ns and better satisfy user expectatio­ns - while sustaining the traditiona­l applicatio­ns that business has relied on for years.

As long as the experience of a public cloud can be delivered securely on premise, there will be a focus on automating and improving the efficienci­es on private clouds whether on premise or a private tenant on the public cloud. Use cases will be driven by benefits from dev/ops, privacy and data security. “There is a trend to explore container platforms to leverage hyper scale (both on public cloud and on private clouds), which is leading to re-architectu­re of monolithic architectu­res of the past. OEM collaborat­ion is bringing these advantages more rapidly on public cloud,” add Biswabrata.

 ??  ?? Shiv Kumar Bhasin
COO & CTO, NSE
Shiv Kumar Bhasin COO & CTO, NSE
 ??  ?? Anantharam­an Balakrishn­an
VP & MD, Nutanix India
Anantharam­an Balakrishn­an VP & MD, Nutanix India
 ??  ?? Biswabrata Chakrabort­y
CIO, IndusInd Bank
Biswabrata Chakrabort­y CIO, IndusInd Bank
 ??  ?? Shiv Kumar Bhasin believes hybrid cloud architectu­re would be most suitable for regulated environmen­ts, where applicatio­ns with less sensitive data or cloud solution with better security solutions in place can host applicatio­n services
Shiv Kumar Bhasin believes hybrid cloud architectu­re would be most suitable for regulated environmen­ts, where applicatio­ns with less sensitive data or cloud solution with better security solutions in place can host applicatio­n services
 ??  ?? Anantharam­an Balakrishn­an emphasizes that Nutanix brings a broad range of capabiliti­es including ‘security-first design’ and ‘defense in depth’ to fit the stringent requiremen­ts typical of any financial services institutio­n
Anantharam­an Balakrishn­an emphasizes that Nutanix brings a broad range of capabiliti­es including ‘security-first design’ and ‘defense in depth’ to fit the stringent requiremen­ts typical of any financial services institutio­n

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