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Customers need access to multi-currency accounts in an integrated platform within the banking system if they are to thrive in a challenging, global, economy and banks need to respond to market demand

By Muj Malik, CEO, iFAST Global Bank

In today’s multi-channel, always on, environment, customers want to shop and spend on demand, when they want to. Any delays and they will soon be off the platform and buying something else or getting a quote from another supplier. Fortunately, the rise of artificial intelligence and machine learning has enabled the whole ecommerce process to react far more quickly and intelligently; suppliers can now, in theory, both manage their risk adequately while, simultaneously, being able to offer highly personalised pricing demanded by their customers. In practice, the outcome is not always so clear cut.

One industry that has been slow to evolve is the traditional banking industry. This has led to newcomers – ‘challenger banks’ – entering the market. They are agile and nimble but have to spend time building the mandatory frameworks to comply with stringent regulation and data protection and data privacy laws, or face potentially stringent fines, as well as potential loss of reputation and customers.

Banks face a number of issues when moving to develop their digital banking products and services and extend their financial ecosystems. From the customers’ perspective, the simple availability of a seamless online account opening process is essential. In their rush to get to market, this is not always easy for them to do.

Take the following example. Offering customers a hassle-free experience can offer significant opportunities by reducing the friction and difficulties commonly associated with opening UK bank accounts, especially for overseas customers seems like something a bank would want to do in today’s global consumer marketplace. Many banks make it very difficult to accommodate such customers though or are simply appear not interested at all. At their worst, they fail to develop robust enough technology and due compliance, meaning they risk falling foul of the regulatory guidelines and incurring heavy fines. It’s obvious why barriers seem insurmountable and so they fail to evolve their services, or customer reviews are poor because of lack of services that suit how the customer wants to shop and buy.

Despite their massive potential, research by Boston Consulting Group (BCG)’s Henderson Institute found that less than one-third of the world’s largest banks are investing in financial ecosystems in a meaningful way. Nearly one-quarter aren’t investing in them at all, beyond the occasional pilot. Challengers from outside the traditional banking arena, however, such as Amazon and Google are taking action, extending the services they offer and integrating services from third-party providers, or offering additional services through API gateways.

Traditional banks need to sit up and take notice if they are not to be left behind. For example, in Asia, we identified challenges faced by customers who are overseas residents and require a UK bank account but may find it difficult to open one without an established UK presence. These customers may include migrants preparing to move to the UK, families planning to send their children to study in the UK and wishing to fund their education expenses, or global customers seeking to diversify their wealth and hold assets in a place with strong financial and political stability like the UK.

Banks need to consider what type of bank they want to be. There are three main types of banking technology platforms, BaaS (Banking-as-a-Service), BaaP (Banking-as-a-Platform) and Open Banking.

  1. BaaS (Banking as a service)
    Traditional banks offer BaaS as a white label service to a non-bank where those companies want to offer digital banking products, but without a banking license and integrate entire services into their apps.
  2. BaaP (Banking as a Platform)
    Banking as a platform is where a fintech business offers services to a bank where it might integrate a fintech product then be able to guarantee things like smart transaction routing, meaning fewer fees, real-time POS analytics, and greater automation of POS services. Because Fintechs often have huge scope, the scalability of these technologies is key.
  3. Open Banking
    In Open Banking, non-banks access data or trigger payments, via API. Similar to BaaS, there’s the bank and the non-bank business. Often the company that supplies the API which connects the two is a specialist banking API provider.

Making a Digital Banking Platform (DBP) compatible with Open Banking allows the technology provider to connect to various fintech offerings in the industry. This offers a significant advantage to the player as it can offer a seamless experience between retail banking and investment banking or wealth management.

Customer benefits, such as the all-in-one-place multi-currency account, multi-currency deposits, etc. can make a bank even more attractive to customers who require more than just one currency. Additionally, being able to link their bank accounts with their investment account is a powerful way to make a bank stand out from its competitors and ultimately benefits customers. Offering a flexible range of banking and investment products with multiple currencies, varying interest rates such as Multi-currency accounts, Notice deposits and Fixed term deposits, linking across to a variety of investment products to a Wealth Management platform is something that consumers are beginning to recognise that not only do they want it but that they should be offered.

Direct participation in payment rails such as CHAPs, Faster Payment Services (FPS) and SWIFT can provide a bank with significant advantages in the Banking-as-a- Service space. Plug-and-play solutions to address payment needs is particularly relevant to DTB offerings.

For example, in the UK, DTB can help customers, Non-Bank Financial Institutions (NBFIs), other banks and building societies, corporates and SMEs, or e-commerce providers through offering safeguarding account facilities and GBP clearing facilities, operating bank accounts across multiple currencies as well as fixed term and notice accounts. It helps support the currently underserved UK Payment Services industry.

The next few years could be a make-or-break period for some banks. They will join the digital financial ecosystem movement—or be consumed by it. By 2030, digital ecosystems could account for a significant share of the banking revenue pool.

References:
https://www.bcg.com/publications/2023/exploring-digital-financial-ecosystem-opportunities

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Business

How can businesses make the cloud optional in their operations?

Max Alexander, Co-founder at Ditto

Modern business apps are built to be cloud-dependent. This is great for accessing limitless compute and data storage capabilities but when connection to the cloud is poor or shuts down, business apps stop working, impacting revenue and service. If real-time data is needed for quick decision-making in fields like healthcare, a stalled app can potentially put people in life-threatening situations.

Organisations in sectors as diverse as airlines, fast food retail, and ecommerce that have deskless staff who need digital tools accessible on smartphones, tablets and other devices to do their jobs. But because of widespread connectivity issues and outages, these organisations are beginning to consider how to ensure these tools can operate reliably when the cloud is not accessible. 

The short answer is that building applications with a local-first architecture can help to ensure that they remain functional when disconnected from the internet. But then, why are not all apps built this way? The simple answer is that building and deploying cloud-only applications is much easier as ready-made tools for developers help expedite a lot of the backend building process. The more complex answer is that a local-first architecture solves the issue of offline data accessibility but does not solve the critical issue of offline data synchronisation. Apps disconnected from the internet still have no way to share data across devices. That is where peer-to-peer data sync and mesh networking come into play.

Combining offline-first architecture with peer-to-peer data sync

In the real world, what does an application like this look like?

  • Apps must prioritise local data sync. Rather than sending data to a remote server, applications must be able to write data using its local database in the first instance, and then listen for changes from other devices, and recombine them as needed. Apps should utilise local transports such as Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) and Peer-to-Peer WiFi (P2P Wi-Fi) to communicate data changes in the event that the internet, local server, or the cloud is not available.
  • Devices are capable of creating real-time mesh networks. Nearby devices should be able to discover, communicate, and maintain constant connections with devices in areas of limited or no connectivity.
  • Seamlessly transition from online to offline (and vice versa). Combining local sync with mesh networking means that devices in the same mesh are constantly updating a local version of the database and opportunistically syncing those changes with the cloud when it is available.
  • Partitioned between large peer and small peer mesh networks to not overwhelm smaller networks if they try to sync every piece of data. In order to do this, smaller networks will only sync the data that it requests, so developers have complete control over bandwidth usage and storage. This is vital when connectivity is erratic or critical data needs prioritising. Whereas, the larger networks sync as much data as they can, which is when there is full access to cloud-based systems.
  • Ad-hoc to enable devices to join and leave the mesh when they need to. This also means that there can be no central server other devices are relying on.
  • Compatible with all data at any time. All devices should account for incoming data with different schemas. In this way, if a device is offline and running an outdated app version, for example, it still must be able to read new data and sync.

Peer-to-peer sync and mesh networking in practice

Let us take a look at a point-of-sale application in the fast-paced environment of a quick-service restaurant. When an order is taken at a kiosk or counter, that data must travel hundreds of miles to a data centre to arrive at a device four metres away in the kitchen. This is an inefficient process and can slow down or even halt operations, especially if there is an internet outage or any issues with the cloud.

A major fast-food restaurant in the US has already modernised its point of sale system using this new architecture and created one that can move order data between store devices independently of an internet connection. As such, this system is much more resilient in the face of outages, ensuring employees can always deliver best-in-class service, regardless of internet connectivity.

The vast power of cloud-optional computing is showcased in healthcare situations in rural areas in developing countries. By using both peer-to-peer data sync and mesh networking, essential healthcare applications can share critical health information without the Internet or a connection to the cloud. This means that healthcare workers in disconnected environments can now quickly process information and share it with relevant colleagues, empowering faster reaction times that can save lives.

Although the shift from cloud-only to cloud-optional is subtle and will not be obvious to end users, it really is a fundamental paradigm shift. This move provides a number of business opportunities for increasing revenue and efficiencies and helps ensure sustained service for customers.

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Business

When something personal fills an important gap in the market 

by Cécile Mazuet-Eller, founder of NameSwitch

There aren’t many business ideas that go from a personal experience to filling an important gap in the market. However, this is certainly the case for NameSwitch, the UK’s pioneering and only name changing support service launched in 2018. But what inspired its inception and what challenges did it face? Here, Cécile Mazuet-Eller, the founder of the company, in its seventh year, explains.

My entrepreneurial journey is a bit unusual in that it started from my own experience of going through a divorce, which became a pivotal turning point for me not only emotionally, but practically too. I wanted to remove my married name, and I had a visceral reason to do so as I really didn’t want to keep it. Feeling extremely frustrated at still receiving letters and official documents featuring my previous name, I was desperate to change it but like for so many people it became a stop-start, arduous task.

Once I started the process, I realised it was taking up far too much time I didn’t have; being a single mum to two young children and working full-time is no mean feat, so when I embarked on the name changing process I realised it wasn’t going to be easy.  Searching for a solution to help, all I came up with was a service covering the US and Canada, but nothing that worked for the UK, so in the end, I spent a whole year to get everything changed that had to be, which proved long and stressful to say the least.

Nurturing the idea

In the early days I was fortunate enough to be surrounded by positive people who had good contacts, and who saw the viability of my idea. Living in a small community filled with intelligent and well-rounded people, I wasn’t short of encouragement from them and friends, who recognised as well as I did there was a definite gap in the market. Working with a web development team in Serbia which was also recommended, I enlisted additional help from a university student on some research.

I always wanted to run my own business, and there were several reasons why I needed to embark on something new. As the only breadwinner in the house, there were mounting bills while balancing the demands of motherhood and other financial responsibilities. Cash was limited but what little I had was used carefully which I put into the business.

In the early stages, which included the development of the unique technology that underpins the service, I carved pockets of time at night and on weekends to create a strong foundation for the business. Creating something completely from scratch was like a form of healing, which is why it was and remains such a personal project.

Mulling over the idea for at least two years following the original lightbulb moment, the business was registered in 2015, with time needed for building the robust platform in order to  create a viable product. Drawing on my previous experience, I investigated overseas equivalents, financials and marketing intelligence ensuring there was a genuine need for the service in the UK. Fortunately enough I was able to share my plans with my employer at the time, who turned out to be my biggest supporters, becoming my first paying customer who purchased a NameSwitch for his ex-wife, who was getting married to someone else!

With a career in telecommunications and a degree in marketing, I was already used to hard work and having the support and encouragement from my telecoms team was extremely helpful.   

Support and coaching

Coaching was an important element of the start-up process, obtained through a wider network and some financial support from family,  with no other funding or investment being available.

The challenges

Presented with certain obstacles like all businesses are, there was a lot to juggle and at times it felt like too much but I managed to navigate the complexities involved. When Covid hit that was a huge set-back, given that our biggest target market was and still is, newly-weds. With all weddings being banned, it hit NameSwitch hard, but our saving grace were the people who used the time to change their name’s in lockdown, by doing something they previously didn’t have time for. Being 100% employed by the business by this stage, it turned into a year of survival and another big challenge.  

In 2022-2023 we concentrated on growth for NameSwitch, when me and my dedicated team were satisfied with the service, it was time to consider investment into PR, advertising and partnerships to increase brand awareness to reach the revenues that were needed.

In 2022-2024, it was forecast that 285,000 – 415,000 weddings will take place resulting from the pandemic, which has reflected well on the business in recent years. And amidst the trials and tribulations it’s proved to be both exhilarating and exhausting in equal measure.

With hindsight, there are certain things I’d have done differently, such as bringing in a partner early on to put us in a stronger position sooner, and adding more resource  to improve growth, but I know that’s all part of the steep learning curve and something to take with me to projects in the future.

Advice for aspiring entrepreneurs

For anyone contemplating their own entrepreneurial endeavours, I’d recommend to ‘one hundred percent go for it’ – but do not bet the house on it and whatever happens, embrace the journey.

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Business

How relationships with work are changing

by Amrit Sandhar (CEO/ Founder, &Evolve)

Since Chris Argyris’s work in the 1960s into the psychological work contract, the assumption’s remained that it’s based on mutual exchange of beliefs and expectations of what employee and employer can expect from each other, given a contract only works with two parties agreeing to it.

But have we seen a shift in the balance of this contract, where the expectations of employees have really changed? Since the industrial revolution, organisations dictated employees’ working arrangements which focused on driving greater productivity and performance. This reflected the imbalance of power, with employees reliant on their organisations to structure working arrangements to drive the best results.

Employees signed up to this psychological contract, despite it representing an imbalance in favour of the employer. However, the pandemic stressed this equilibrium, which has led to many, reevaluating their relationship with their work.

While the pandemic has had a long-term impact on most, affecting everything from education to mental health, it could also be the cause of an evolution that’s changing people’s relationship with work. While organisations were supported through furlough schemes and government grants, employees took responsibility for keeping businesses going, by changing the way they worked. Employees took an unprecedented situation and found ways of dealing with it and since the first time in many years, employees had and took direct ownership of the success of the organisations they worked for – which changed everything.

We’ve seen a seismic shift in how we think about work since the that time, which goes far beyond submitting requests for flexible working. It shows that we’re at the threshold of realising a more balanced psychological work contract, driven by employees, who have different mutually agreed beliefs and expectations in how employees and employers work together.

Gone are the days when employees are only satisfied with financial reward and a nice manager. Gen Z will soon become the largest generation making up our workforce and while money is important to them (as they’re likely to be poorer than previous generations), many want work to be something that complements their life, and not something that only provides financial reward.

Some have said the generation gap is a myth, and before the pandemic this may have been true. But when a generation has experienced such a paradigm shift it brings a different mindset of beliefs and expectations about how work can and should be carried out.

It’s hard to see how anyone could go back to the previous way of working, which should have always focussed on outputs and outcomes rather than hours worked. Other than manufacturing, where it was easy to measure productivity, organisations have become complacent in measuring output and outcomes, with employees paying the price for this ambiguity.

Organisations utilising employee engagement surveys, listening forums, and employee representative initiatives often launch them with the best of intentions, however, the historical underlying imbalance of power towards employers, has prevented a more equitable relationship from forming, despite these initiatives. The strain some organisations are experiencing with mounting pressure to challenge how work is carried out, whether from expecting remote working to questioning if a four-day week would drive greater productivity, shows the shift taking place to the long-standing equilibrium of the psychological work contract.

Future successful organisations will be those that can attract and retain the best talent, and it’s unlikely that the next generation of employees will be willing to relinquish their courage to challenge how work is done.

Employees will seek a greater understanding of exactly what’s required of their role and expect organisations to clearly define measures, to understand how their value and success will be measured, regardless of when, where, and how they choose to work.

Rather than resisting change organisations should consider how they can shape it, by questioning and finding solutions to measuring outputs and productivity, by looking at how they help employees feel respected and valued, and how they help bring the psychological contract, based on a new set of mutually agreed expectations and beliefs to life.

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