Jan 12, 2024
By Gary Singh
By Gary Singh
The landscape of card technology is shifting rapidly, fueled by advancements in digital payments, evolving consumer expectations, and a growing competitive landscape. Banks face a critical decision: modernize their card processing systems or risk falling behind.
With outdated systems threatening revenue and agility, banks may see a significant impact on revenue if they do not adapt and invest. The Datos Insights (formerly Aite-Novarica) Group1 estimates that revenue at risk for retail banks that do not focus on modernization could be 10% to 15% of retail bank payments revenue annually, or $100 billion to $150 billion globally.
However, conversations about moving to modern card processing systems must go beyond leveraging the cloud or using new technology. The next generation of card processing is about enabling new business models for issuers and launching products that meet innovative use cases.
Most boards wrestle with prioritizing such a significant shift over other operational considerations. Apart from the challenge of proving the urgency of such a move, the risk of disrupting traditional processing workflows must be evaluated against possible benefits. This blog presents a value creation framework to demonstrate how the 10 dimensions of next-gen issuer processing overcome the shortcomings of legacy systems to help banks achieve 5 value outcomes.
The premise of next-generation issuer processing is straightforward. It allows banks to transform into genuinely digital-native organizations that build stronger customer relationships and enhance revenue while significantly reducing IT and operational costs.
Compared to legacy processing systems, which were deployed when cloud, mobiles, or even the internet did not exist, next-generation technology is inherently connected, scalable, and composable. For example, while legacy processing platforms have a monolithic architecture with hard-coded objects and poor API coverage, next-gen issuer processing systems are powered by a Microservices, API-First, Cloud-Native, Headless (MACH2) core that allows near-infinite scalability and extreme integrability – in turn enabling rapid innovation of products with seamless connectivity with the larger financial services ecosystem.
You can read our white paper on modernizing card technology platforms for a fuller drill-down into the 10 capabilities that differentiate next-gen issuer processing from legacy processing.
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Let’s evaluate how specific differentiators of next-gen issuer processing can help banks drive cost savings, accelerate time to market, drive stronger compliance, enhance customer delight, and boost revenues (image 1).
A McKinsey report found that operating costs of fintech banks powered by next-gen core platforms are around 10 percent of the operating costs of traditional banks3. Specifically, next-gen processing platforms enable cost savings through:
In the 2023 Global Payments Report, McKinsey observes that modernization of banks’ technology stacks halves the time to market for new products5. The elements that drive this acceleration are:
McKinsey research7 shows that banks designated as ‘Customer Experience (CX) leaders’ generate 72% more total shareholder return than ‘Customer Experience (CX) laggards’. Next-gen processing platforms drive customer delight in two significant ways:
Next-gen processing systems drive growth in revenue for banks by helping them deliver winning digital experiences (image 2), build a vibrant ecosystem of distribution and partnerships, build products for new customer segments, and improve upsell, cross-sell, retention, and top-of-wallet use.
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In recent years, financial institutions have been particularly impacted by rising compliance costs. Most compliance management frameworks today rely on post-facto audits, manual interventions, and little to no automation in response to changing compliance or risk norms. The architecture of next-gen systems enables banks to have an ‘always-on’ posture on compliance through stronger programs that not only guarantee compliance but do so efficiently and at lower cost.
Geoffrey Moore, Innovation Expert and Author of best-selling books such as Crossing the Chasm and Zone to Win, recently delivered the keynote at Zeta’s exclusive banking workshop. In his address, Moore issued a critical call to action, emphasizing that digital transformation is not a choice but an imperative for the financial industry.
While the challenges of building a case for transformation remain, the next generation of technology solutions is establishing itself as a viable alternative. As Accenture argues in their 2023 Top 10 Banking Trends report8: “The likely disruption caused by a multi-year transformation was always a good excuse for sticking with your mainframe. However, today’s cloud-native platforms not only dramatically reduce the timeline; they also allow migration and the launch of new products to be done progressively, which reduces the risk. The ROI has improved dramatically”.
The time to act is now.