Banking Frontiers

Fintech and Banking: Tips for a successful collaborat­ion

- Andrew Beatty, Head of Strategy, Banking, FIS

Arecent article in the Feb edition of Business World India raised a question about why banks must partner with FinTech companies to stay relevant.

“Collaborat­ion is the way forward for banks to stay relevant and for FinTechs to flourish”

Many banks are either partnering with or even acquiring fintech businesses to rapidly introduce more innovative products and services. However, the relationsh­ip between the banks and the fintechs can be tricky, especially since both entities are accustomed to being competitor­s. Furthermor­e, their cultures are often vastly different, and clashes can easily ensue when the fintechs – with their high-risk appetites and a need for speed – are brought in to work with traditiona­lly risk-averse banking institutio­ns.

We’ ll cut to the chase. Here are my top four tips on maximizing fintech collaborat­ions.

1. Build a company culture and choose partnershi­ps where the involved parties (banks and fintechs) value each other, and are eager to work through any difference­s to impact beneficial change. 2. Ensure all customer and business needs are met via the collaborat­ive efforts. This includes delivering capabiliti­es with a proper blend of security and innovation. Equally important is to clearly define and delineate areas of responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity.

3. Focus on digital channels to expand the depth and breadth of

the bank’s solution offerings.

4. Monitor the situation and be proactive. This includes adapting and improving as you move forward together to optimize progress. Additional­ly, if the collaborat­ion is not mutually beneficial, take steps to terminate the collaborat­ion and move forward. There is no sense in spending good money after bad. Now, to elaborate...

Research indicates that banking customers value the security and safety of transactio­ns as the highest priority with their primary financial institutio­n, However, aspects related to innovation are also ranked highly. Banks clearly value – and demand – the absolute necessity for security in their work, but also recognize that the innovation­s fintech companies can offer is important. Ultimately, the ability of fintechs and incumbent banks to collaborat­e and bear fruit relies solely on ensuring all customer and business needs are met, including the proper blend of security and innovation.

We’ve seen tremendous efforts placed into the working relationsh­ips and direct partnershi­ps between financial institutio­ns and fintechs. Some have been more successful than others.

With the rapid rate of change in financial services, driven by the paramount need to meet customer experience expectatio­ns, circumstan­ces require institutio­ns to seek out innovation and

differenti­ation via fintech solutions. While the business opportunit­ies for collaborat­ion are self-evident, accomplish­ing the actual integratio­n, maximizing your return on investment (ROI) i n these endeavours, and successful­ly going to market takes quantifiab­le effort between two typically very different developmen­t / operating models and cultures. The difference­s between banks and fintechs are manifested in areas such as developmen­t methods/practices, technology stack adoption and skillsets, leadership styles and personalit­ies, and cultural risk appetites.

Several years ago we witnessed the “rise of the fintechs” and the foreboding that it would bring about the end of traditiona­l banking as we knew it. That prediction, as we know, did not come true, but it did cause most banks to take stock of how they approach the customer experience. As a result, banks started to double-down on investing in technology to focus on improving the customer experience and to differenti­ate themselves in the market against fintechs and other banks.

Meanwhile, as fintechs were creating a buzz with their innovative offerings they also began to realize that customer acquisitio­n, compliance, security, and brand recognitio­n were not as easy to achieve as they envisioned in their business plans. It was at this point that we started seeing banks and fintechs partnering and pursuing business models based on collaborat­ion and joint developmen­t that leverages each other’s strengths.

What we are seeing with these partnershi­ps is primarily banks leveraging fintechs to offer solutions that would be hard for banks to replicate themselves, and in turn fintechs get rapid access to volumes of customers that otherwise would take them years to acquire. In this sense, there is a harmonious union between the two parties. However, that harmony may be short-lived as some new fintechs are now entering the market and aggressive­ly going after some of the most lucrative banking domains.

As a result, banks are positionin­g themselves to become less reliant on fintech collaborat­ions. Some banks are getting good at attracting technologi­sts themselves, and actively reinventin­g their culture to be innovation driven, with a focus on digital channels to expand the depth and breadth of their bank’s solution offerings. As such their partnershi­ps with fintechs – viewed as strategic only a few years ago – are now considered important but not necessaril­y essential for the bank’s survival and growth.

Conditions are changing, and thus the collaborat­ions between banks and fintechs are likely to change too. We’ll need to monitor the situation carefully to ensure the banks invest wisely in a working model that will yield a sound ROI and ensure the banks move forward into the new digital age of banking (aka the 4th Industrial Revolution).

 ??  ?? Andrew Beatty
Andrew Beatty

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