Australia’s banks need a good SMAC

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[Blog post] Financial services need to focus on social, mobile, analytics, cloud.

Australia’s financial services organisations are in need of a good SMAC. Not physical abuse or a substance-induced high, but a sound strategy that encompasses social, mobile, analytics and cloud - SMAC.

Australia’s banks need a good SMAC

If there was any doubt that these four forces are critical to today’s business, consider the following predictions:

SOCIAL:
The fastest growing demographic for Facebook and Google+ is the 45-54 age bracket, according to Fast Company. For Twitter it’s the 55-64 bracket. So much for the assumption that only GenY or your teenagers use social media! The growth segment for social networks just happens to also be the one with the most disposable income and is thus the most profitable for banks.

MOBILE:
Cisco Systems predicts that by the end of 2014, the number of mobile-connected devices will exceed the number of people on earth, and that over two-thirds of the world's mobile data traffic will be video by 2018. Last year's mobile data traffic of 18 exabytes (an exabyte has 18 zeros after it) was nearly 18 times the size of the entire global internet in 2000. Bottom line, mobile is THE channel for interacting with your customers.

ANALYTICS:
IBM has estimated that every day the world creates 2.5 exabytes of data. We know that 90 percent of the data in the world today has been created in the last two years alone. Now try to imagine that future in terms of the amount of data that we need to make sense of.

CLOUD:
Three in four US companies are already using a cloud computing service, according to the 2013 Future of Cloud Computing Survey. Cloud is becoming so pervasive as a viable business model that the latest buzz terms associated with it are “everything-as-a-service” and “anything-as-a-service”. Pretty much anything can be provided on a utility-based model.

In Australia, most organisations should by now have a well articulated group-wide IT strategy with the better among them able to articulate their position in terms of sustainable IT capabilities required to meet their business objectives. This strategy would likely outline their plans for leveraging social networks, using mobile, what insight they might be able to get out of better analytics and how best to take advantage of the cloud.

While this is a good start, in my experience as a CTO and Head of Strategy in some of Australia’s largest financial services companies, looking at these trends in isolation isn’t enough.

What organisations need to do is spend more time and effort thinking about the convergence of these four elements. Specifically, they need an integrated “SMAC Strategy”.

The concept (and acronym) of SMAC is not so new. It has been rearing its head for more than a year or so now within the more advanced organisations and certainly within some key technology services vendors such as HCL, IBM, TCS and Cognizant.

All of these firms espouse it in some form, some better than others. Gartner has been using the phrase the “Nexus of Forces” to describe the importance of social, mobile, cloud and information. These slightly different terms point to the same concept. This has been a key theme of theirs since 2012 and is now embedded into a lot of their predictive research.

While focusing on a SMAC strategy is relevant for organisations of all sizes, banks and insurance companies with large numbers of retail customers need to prepare for it most. Having worked in banking and insurance over the last 26 years in Australia and parts of Asia, I have seen the need first hand.

Personally, I don’t feel the larger financial services organisations around the globe have quite nailed the importance of this yet, certainly not all the elements of SMAC. Many have been successfully experimenting and making progress in one or a more of the four areas, although I suspect none are doing anywhere as well as they could, at least from the end customer’s perspective.

Specifically, in Australia, we tend to do better at social and mobile, less well on leveraging the cloud and not very well at all when it comes to getting real value out of analytics.

The key point here is that while the bigger financial services companies take time to make progress in these areas, there is an increasing risk that new entrants will appear who might be more advanced in their thinking. Here are some examples:

  • PayPal is shaping to provide a direct threat to banks on multiple fronts. The company has no physical presence and provides all of its services via the cloud. It's whole business model of peer-to-peer payments is a form of social networking. PayPal also leverages the mobile channel substantially. Merchants are able to buy a dongle to enable them to accept credit card payments in a very simple and easy fashion - even my local bakery allows customers to place orders and pay using their PayPal account - all cashless and seamless.
  • Google recently invested in a social network based peer-to-peer lending platform that allows individual borrowers to obtain unsecured loans from individual investors, via their mobile phones. Google Wallet also has the potential to disrupt traditional payment mechanisms.
  • Apple boasts over 570 million iTunes accounts with a built-in payments capability that is simple and intuitive. Cupertino’s Passbook application allows users to store various things like boarding passes, coupons, tickets and store cards. They don’t store credit and debit card information but the capability is there. Apple is also making its iCloud platform a key component of all products.  
  • Woolworths recently noted that it had managed to "overlay" its insurance company's car crash data base and its Everyday Rewards statistics to reveal which consumers were best to target for insurance. A good example of the use of analytics.
  • In the US, Citibank has improved the quality of its consumer loan portfolio by leasing access to a supercomputer running predictive analytics programs. By analysing information on market conditions as well as the applicant's life events, interactions on social media and past decisions, the company is able to get a far better prediction of potential loan defaults and fraud. Citibank could easily bring this capability to Australia.

All of the above are good examples of organisations leveraging elements of SMAC.

It gets ever more powerful when all are combined. IMDB, now owned by Amazon, is the world’s largest movie database. When looking up a movie on IMDB, viewers are presented with an amazing array of movie specific information but also related information that the customer didn’t ask for, based on sophisticated analytics.

Customers are able to immediately share this information with their major social networks or collaborate with other likeminded people directly on the site. Once a movie has been reviewed, US viewers can then buy the show, which is immediately served up via the cloud to any device for instant enjoyment.

So how might an Australian bank combine all the elements of SMAC and hold off the new market entrants? Read on...

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Jeff Jacobs
Jeff Jacobs, a 25-year veteran of enterprise IT in Australia, has held senior IT positions for AMP, CommBank, Westpac and Zurich. In '20/20 Strategy', Jacobs argues that Australian business and government needs to focus on building an IT capability, and not be blinkered by short-term delivery of 'solutions' and 'projects'.
Read more from this blog: 20/20 Strategy

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