Discover Financial Services is housing, deploying and pushing out updates to its own robotic process automation bots via virtual desktop infrastructure to test processes in real time. The robotic process automation (RPA) bots reside within the virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI), where Discover’s engineering team can fine-tune them, said Matthew Radaci, principal automation engineer at Discover, […]
Fifth Third Bank is enhancing its AI strategy by increasing the amount of data ingested by the language model it uses to build conditionals into the bank’s mobile application and messaging platform improving customer experience and self-service options. The $206 billion bank will update its language model in June to ingest more than 2 million […]
Goldman Sachs Transaction Banking has developed internal APIs that link into the firm’s existing core infrastructure to streamline global payment capabilities for its clients at scale. The financial institution’s Transaction Banking business helps treasurers and chief financial officers store and move liquidity globally in a way that can be tracked in real time through API […]
Arvest Bank is switching from its existing core to a new one built from scratch by a development team working closely with the bank. The $26 billion financial institution has been in the building phase for the past 10 months, adopting a side-by-side approach with its existing Fiserv Signature core as Arvest looks to get […]
CHARLOTTE — Truist launched its commercial digital experience in the cloud and is currently working toward a mobile offering. The $548 billion bank has taken its virtual loan capabilities and built them within a cloud environment, said Bryce Elliott, chief information officer for wholesale and enterprise payments technology at the Charlotte-based bank Thursday at Bank […]
Charlotte – Fifth Third Bank plans to reduce the footprint of its applications by 30% in the next three to five years as the $206 billion bank focuses on refactoring and rewriting apps for the cloud. The Cincinnati-based bank’s cloud strategy does not entail “any lift and shift, we are doing a lot of either […]
CHARLOTTE — Wells Fargo set out to reach 50% cloud certification among its 30,000 engineers at the start of 2022; and by the end of the year, the $1.8 trillion bank saw 46% of its engineers reach that status — up from 0.03% at the top of the year. “We didn’t get all the way […]
CHARLOTTE – Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 kicks off Thursday with panelists from Fifth Third Bank, Truist Financial and Wells Fargo taking the stage to discuss data expandability issues through cloud technology at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C.
The two-day event features panel discussions, presentations, networking roundtables and a fireside chat with Goldman Sachs’ Brinda Bhattacharjee, chief operation officer and head of partnerships for transaction banking.
Brinda Bhattacharjee, chief operation officer and head of partnerships for transaction banking, Goldman Sachs
The event brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including RPA strategy and automation of real-time payments. View the full agenda.
The Summit will take on the following three key trends:
1. How to approach automation projects: Financial institutions continue to automate and invest in technology
Decision makers from PNC Financial and Discover Financial Services will discuss how to approach new projects, how to pitch to senior management and how to determine where to invest time, energy and resources.
2. Balancing automation and human capital: As more technology surfaces in the financial industry, banks are faced with finding the right mix between digitizing and hiring.
In many cases, banks are investing in both to balance customer needs and their desire for digital capabilities. Sessions will deliver how to maintain that balance through employee training.
3. Implications for core systems: Cloud modernization, integration tools and pushing legacy systems to their limits.
The Summit will address on how to determine whether to wrap or scrap a core system. Speakers from TD Bank, BankUnited and Arvest Bank will discuss how they have approached core modernization.
Lekha Banerjee, technology executive at Truist, will join the panel “Innovations in Business Intelligence for Banking” at Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on Thursday, March 2, at 1:30 p.m. ET at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C.
Banerjee will discuss business intelligence use cases and methods for using data in product implementations.
The $548 billion Truist is focused on new products via its Innovation and Technology Center, which opened in 2022, and improving customer experiences via its virtual assistant, Truist Assist, which also launched last year.
Banerjee joins Jessica Gonzalez, director of lending strategies and automotive market at fintech Informed.IQ; Steve Smith, president and chief executive at Louisville, Ala.-based 22nd State Bank; and Brian White, enterprise account executive at customer experience platform Glia, on the panel.
Banerjee joins fellow Truist speakers Bryce Elliott, the bank’s executive vice president and chief information officer for wholesale and enterprise payments technology, and Lindsay Holden, head of Truist Foundry, at the event.
The Summit takes place Thursday and Friday and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including RPA strategy and automation of real-time payments.
Washington Federal Bankhas spun off a digital innovation provider, Archway Software, led by WaFd Chief Technology Officer Dustin Hubbard, who will speak at the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 in Charlotte, N.C., next week.
As part of the panel, “Automation Operations: Use Cases for Transformation” on Thursday, March 2, at 1:30 p.m. ET, Hubbard will discuss his role as president of Archway Software and share how his experience at WaFd and Pike Street Labswill carry over into his latest endeavor.
Attendees of the panel discussion will learn about:
How to take advantage of tools or technologies you currently have;
How to pick the right tool for an automation job; and
Use cases on successful automation implementation.
Hubbard will be joined by Tom Lang, head of treasury management products and operation at PNC Financial Services; Daniel Ireland, senior manager of automation business and strategy atDiscover Financial Services; Karen Oakland, vice president of financial services industry marketing at Smart Communications; and John Trapani, industry leader for financial services at Appian.
Listen as Hubbard discusses the launch of Archway Software and his plans for next week’s Bank Automation Summit U.S.
Learn more about Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here and register here.
Whitney McDonald 0:05 Hello and welcome to a special edition of the buzz a bank automation news podcast. Joining us is Dustin Hubbard, president of Archway Software. Dustin will speak at the upcoming bank automation summit us 2023. On Thursday, March 2 in Charlotte, the following is a preview of his upcoming discussion on the automation operations use cases for transformation panel. First question, just tell me a little bit more about this new endeavor of archway software that you’re diving into
Dustin Hubbard 0:38 your Whitney Well, archery software really has been over three years in the making. And that’s because just about three and a half years ago, Washington Federal Bank asked me to join and help build out a technology platform to help them modernize their digital experiences for their clients. And we started that as pipe street labs. And over the last three years, we’ve been winning several awards on the on the platform. And so in 2022, we decided to split it out into a new company with venture funding called archway software. And really, you know, our goal is digital freedom for banks, we want allow banks to pick and choose the best providers and have the ability to deliver the best client experiences with the least amount of friction. And so our technologies are designed to help empower banks put the best technology in their clients hands.
Whitney McDonald 1:39 Of course, we know that you’ll still be on automation projects and leading the way there for archway, can you share a little bit how you’re going to be approaching automation for archway and where that overlap is?
Dustin Hubbard 1:52 Yeah, so automation, when it’s working really well, starts with integration. And so our trade is really an integration stack, first and foremost. And so if you think about automation, it’s how do I get information from point A to point B in the most seamless way possible, oftentimes, that sort of API connection, sometimes it’s through ETL, jobs and others. And while typically, it’s being used to help streamline things for the back office, it’s client impacting because it’s speeding up the ability to do something like originate a loan or open an account. And so our choices still totally focused on automation in the sense of interconnecting different providers together such that you’re removing a lot of those manual processes that happen oftentimes behind the curtain. Clients don’t necessarily always see the friction that banks are going through to get them set up. But it’s there. And so archway will certainly help remove a lot of that.
Whitney McDonald 2:53 And can you give us a little bit of insight as to what you’re going to talk through at the upcoming bank automation summit when it comes to approaching automation projects?
Dustin Hubbard 3:03 Yeah, so I’ll focus probably a lot about how do you take advantage of tools and technologies that you either currently have or need to have to pick the right tool for the job. And so as an example, take something like rpa, which is pretty popular, but rpa, like automation anywhere projects can be a little bit difficult to maintain. So automation should start with API’s as the first point of integration, when possible, and then follow the other tools when that’s not when that’s not available. So at the summit, I’m going to talk about some use cases that we did at weIfare. That really sped up automation sped up solutions by using automation, in many cases, completely eliminating manual processes that had been there for years.
Whitney McDonald 3:58 Great. Well, I know that I’m excited for the panel, wondering if you can share a little bit also about what you’re most looking forward to at the upcoming event.
Dustin Hubbard 4:08 For me, it’s hearing from other people in the industry, right? It’s an opportunity, especially as a software company to understand what are the pain points that people are facing? What are the emerging technologies that companies are interacting with? How can archway play a part of that? And so really, it’s just getting a good pulse of other people in the industry, making some new connections, and making sure that I’m tied down with all the latest sort of trends in terms of technologies and approaches banks are starting to take.
Whitney McDonald 4:44 You’ve been listening to a special edition of the buzz, a bank automation news podcast, please find us on LinkedIn and visit bank automation news.com For more information on the upcoming bank automation Summit, which will take place March 2 and third at the Westin Charlotte, please Visit bank automation summit.com
Alyson Karow, head of small business digital channels at TD Bank, will join the panel “At the Core: Strategies for Addressing Legacy Core Systems” at Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on Thursday, March 2, at 2:15 p.m. ET, at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C.
View the full agenda for the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here.
Alyson Karow, head of small business digital channels, TD Bank
Karow will discuss strategies for pushing legacy systems forward despite their limitations via integration tools.
TD Bank has invested in its core processes to help meet client demand, including modernizing its IT infrastructure through its Next Evolution of Work model, which supports new tooling and platform capabilities such as the use of the cloud and adopting agile at-scale processes.
Karow joins Michael Lehmbeck, chief technology officer at BankUnited, and Ninish Ukkan, chief technology officer at Arvest Bank, onthe panel.
The Summit takes place March 2-3 and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking technology topics, including digitization of real-time payments and strategies for automation.
Learn more about Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here and register here.
Ninish Ukkan, chief technology officer at Arvest Bank, will join the panel “At the core: Strategies for addressing legacy core systems” at Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on Thursday, March 2, at 2:15 p.m. ET at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C.
Ninish Ukkan, CTO, Arvest Bank
View the full agenda for the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here.
Ukkan will discuss how to approach legacy core systems through integration and modernization.
Arvest Bank is focused on a digital consumer experience and has a partnership with core banking platform Thought Machine. The bank also works with Google Cloud on internal training for its own employees to reskill and upskill its talent.
Ukkan joins Michael Lehmbeck, chief technology officer at BankUnited, and Alyson Karow, head of small business digital channels at TD Bank.
The Summit takes place March 2-3 and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including cloud strategies and use cases for transformation.
Learn more about Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here and register here.
Steve Devine, senior vice president and head of payables at Citizens Bank, will join the panel “Strategies for automating real-time payment processes” at the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on Friday, March 3, at 9:50 a.m. ET at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C.
View the full agenda for the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here.
Citizens in Q4 continued to modernize its cloud-based digital platforms, increased total revenue to $2.2 billion, and grew its equipment and software expenses 16% YoY to $170 million.
Devine joins Lauren Kenney, senior vice president of payment services at U.S. Bank, on the panel.
The Summit will take place March 2-3 and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including ideation in banking and cloud migration.
Learn more about the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here and register here.
Several technology leaders from PNC Financial Services are joining the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 event to discuss their approaches to automation: Tom Lang, executive vice president and head of treasury management products and operation, Matthew Barrett, AI and intelligent automation manager, and Scott Kinross, senior vice president and software engineering director.
View the full agenda for Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here.
Image courtesy of PNC Bank
Lang will speak Thursday, March 2, at 1:30 p.m. ET on the panel “Automation operations: Use cases for transformation”;
Barrett will speak Thursday, March 2, at 2:15 p.m. ET on the panel “Automation and the pursuit of efficiency: A frank discussion on cost/benefit”; and
Kinross will speak Friday, March 3, at 9:05 a.m. ET on the panel “New approaches and techniques in RPA.”
PNC’s recent automated innovations include earned wage access tool PNC Earned It and forecasting tool PINACLE Cash Forecasting. The bank’s equipment spend increased 7% sequentially to $369 million in Q4 2022.
The Summit takes place March 2-3 at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C., and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including cloud modernization and automating real-time payment processes. The Summit will feature more than 35 exceptional speakers from across the banking technology ecosystem.
Learn more about the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here and register here.
Although it may seem counterintuitive, as financial institutions push further into the digital realm, the human element of banking is all the more important.
Chris Tremont, chief digital officer, Grasshopper Bank
Digital is becoming the go-to method for managing finances; in fact, 79% of consumers use their mobile device at least once a month to manage their bank account, according to research from the American Bankers Association. So, it is important for FIs to not overlook the human aspect of the profession when planning for digital expansion. While we may not immediately think of digital banking as human and personal, human relationships are irreplaceable when it comes to creating a superior customer experience. What’s more, human guidance remains critical for ensuring banks get the most out of the technology they use.
Digital-native FIs and those that are expanding their digital offering need not sacrifice the human relationships and decision-making that are at the heart of successful banking to make technological progress. In fact, the institutions that prioritize unifying technological advancement with human connections and intelligence will create personalized customer experiences that separate themselves from the pack and benefit all parties. There are several areas where FIs that are making a digital push should consider the importance of human skillsets.
Hiring the right talent
What’s perhaps most critical to tying together human expertise and digital innovation is ensuring that the right team is in place within the financial institution. Importantly, financial institutions making a digital push should not restrict hiring to those within the banking industry; new, valuable insights and ways of thinking can come from many different sources beyond bankers.
Assembling the right team is the crucial first step, and from there, the group can go about finding and implementing the right technology stack that improves the customer experience and automates much of the day-to-day banking operations. Freed from the daily tasks that would otherwise use up large amounts of time and energy, a skilled team can focus both on the customer experience and the factors that have a direct impact on the FI’s bottom line, such as unit economics and exploring how to reduce costs while increasing revenue. In this way, tech and talent form a combination that has benefits for customers and the overall business health of the financial institution.
Customer experience
Building a strong customer experience underpinned by human relationships creates a number of benefits for financial institutions and customers alike. For any digital product to be truly successful, there needs to be a team of specialists and other resources available to make the process run smoothly to the benefit of the client. Having trained industry experts on staff to advise businesses on loans, real estate purchases, and other important decisions can create an environment where customers feel their FI is acting more as a guide than a salesperson.
Personalized customer experiences should resonate throughout the banking journey through a mix of digital tools and inclusive, human support. In addition to having professionals on staff to support the long-term financial well-being of customers, digital programs like banking-as-a-service (BaaS) and virtual cards can help businesses manage and generate revenue.
As financial institutions become less likely to interact face to face with customers, creating a customer experience that blends digital with human is imperative. Using automated chatbots as a first line of customer support can help remove the burden of answering FAQs and performing simple tasks. According to research from Userlike, more than half of customers are willing to talk to a chatbot initially in order to be transferred to an agent. This means that using chatbots to answer basic questions and ensure customers are connected with the right support staff that can offer guidance can be a successful strategy. Furthermore, chatbots reduce the amount of work agents have to take on, allowing them to more efficiently help customers: at Radius Bank, we saw chatbots reduce chats sent to a live agent by 20%.
As research from Insider Intelligence shows that only 42% of consumers trust their financial institution to provide them with banking services — a 6% drop from 2021 and lower than the percentage of consumers that trust PayPal to provide those services — having a team of professionals available to assist customers supplanted by automated solutions can forge a mutually beneficial partnership, where the customer trusts that their FI has their best financial interests in mind.
Personalized tech requires human guidance
The human element of digital banking extends beyond having a team of professionals ready and able to assist customers. Personalized technology requires human decision making to be most effective. The use of data in banking has exploded: research from Alkami shows that 86% of banks and credit unions are using data to drive better customer experience. However, using customer data to create a personalized experience still requires human guidance. Technology can sift through and analyze data to provide automated recommendations, but having humans advise customers on which banking solutions best fit their needs creates an added layer of trust. For example, institutions that serve small businesses can use digital integrations to gain a clearer view of these customers’ financial outlooks and combine that data with industry expertise to produce clear recommendations that benefit the business.
Data can be used for more than just cross-sell opportunities, though. Other important use cases include reducing fraud and keeping clients’ finances and personal information safe in the digital world. Here, too, human guidance works hand in hand with technology to create superior results for financial institutions and customers alike: automated programs sift through mountains of data to produce alerts regarding possible fraudulent behavior and security risks, so that human security professionals can respond accordingly.
Hyperpersonalized banking technology also yields broad insights into customer patterns and behaviors as well as the trends driving the markets. In this instance, the human element becomes critical for driving a financial institution’s business plan and path forward. Through human analysis of the data they collect, financial institutions can determine the risks and rewards of different strategies and reach decisions that meet their business goals while satisfying customer needs.
A virtuous cycle
Blending innovative technology and human relationship management creates a virtuous cycle for financial institutions and customers, where FIs can drive revenue and deposits as customers’ financial needs are satisfied with personalized solutions. This strategy not only wins business, but also establishes meaningful connections that develop into loyal relationships.
Going all-in on digital banking doesn’t mean sacrificing the human element that’s long been central to success in the industry. On both the customer experience and business operations fronts, the institutions that meld innovative, personalized technology with human expertise will emerge as leaders and create solutions that will power the future of banking.
Chris Tremont is the chief digital officer at Grasshopper Bank. He will join the panel discussion “Automation and the pursuit of efficiency: A frank discussion on cost/benefit” at the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on March 2. Learn more about Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 and register here.
Steve Hagerman, chief technology officer at Wells Fargo, will join the panel discussion “Solving data expandability issues through cloud” at the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on Thursday, March 2, at 9:15 a.m. ET.
Steve Hagerman, CTO, Wells Fargo
View the full agenda for Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here.
Hagerman will discuss Wells Fargo’s multiyear digital transformation journey, its new AI-powered digital banking platform Vantage — which is hosted on an internal cloud — and strategies and implementation for effective cloud migration.
Hagerman will be joined by Bryce Elliott, executive vice president and chief information officer for wholesale and enterprise payments technology at Truist, and Jude Schramm, chief information officer at Fifth Third Bank.
The Summit will take place March 2-3 at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C., and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including ideation in banking and automation operations.
Chris Tremont, chief digital officer at Grasshopper Bank, will join the panel discussion “Automation and the pursuit of efficiency: A frank discussion on cost/benefit” at the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on March 2, at 2:15 p.m. ET.
Chris Tremont, chief digital officer, Grasshopper Bank
View the full agenda for Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here.
Tremont will offer insight into the importance of balancing automation and human capital as financial institutions continue to invest in digitization. He will also discuss the value of partnerships following the bank’s recent collaboration with automation platform Ramp.
Grasshopper’s Lauren McCollom, director of banking as a service, spoke about embedded financing and open banking at Bank Automation Summit Fall 2022.
The Summit will take place March 2-3 at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C., and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including ideation in banking and solving data expandability issues through the cloud.
Brinda Bhattacharjee, chief operating officer for transaction banking in platform solutions at Goldman Sachs, will headline the fireside chat at the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on Thursday, March 2, at 10:00 a.m. ET, to discuss the bank’s digital-first strategy in its transaction banking business.
Brinda Bhattacharjee, COO for transaction banking in platform solutions, Goldman Sachs
Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 takes place March 2-3 at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C., and brings together industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including cloud modernization and implementation of automation processes.
The $1.5 trillion Goldman Sachs increased its communications and technology spend in the fourth quarter 12% YoY to $481 million as it completed “reorganization, which will further strengthen our core business, help us scale our growth platforms and improve efficiency,” Chief Executive David Solomon said during the bank’s Q4 earnings call last week.
This session will explore how Goldman Sachs is driving digital transformation through automation, data and digitization, providing differentiated technology offerings.
Bhattacharjee joined Goldman Sachs in 2016. She previously served as a principal in the finance and risk practice at management consulting firm Oliver Wyman, where she advised financial services firms on finance, treasury and risk-related topics.
Discover Financial Services’ Joe Mills, director of transformation strategy and automation, and Dan Ireland, senior manager of automation and businesses strategy, have joined Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 to speak on robotic process automation and automation operations.
View the full agenda for Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here.
Photo by Bloomberg Mercury
Mills will join the panel “Automation operations: Use cases for transformation” on Thursday, March 2, at 1:30 p.m. ET, to discuss how to tackle automation projects.
Ireland will discuss how to build better RPA bots using process mining and process discovery on the panel “New approaches and techniques in RPA” on Friday, March 3 at 9:05 a.m. ET.
In 2022, Discover Financial Services partnered with vendor management platform TYDEi to streamline and digitize payments in the health care industry, and launched its Advanced Analytics Resource Center to enhance technology and analytics investments, according to a Discover release.
The Summit takes place March 2-3 at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C., and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including cloud modernization and automating real-time payment processes.
Learn more about the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here and register here.
Lauren Kenney, senior vice president of payment services at U.S. Bank, will join the panel “Strategies for automating real-time payment processes” at the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 on Friday, March 3, at 9:50 a.m. ET.
Kenney will discuss how to selectthe right partner for RTP, prioritizing risk assessment and provide an update on the FedNow implementation.
U.S. Bank reported continued momentum for its RTP transactions in the third quarter of 2022, Chief Executive Andy Cecere said during the $591 billion bank’s earnings call.
Kenney joins Steve Devine, senior vice president and head of payables at Citizens Bank, and Hank Word, president of the open banking division at Evolve Bank and Trust.
The Summit will take place March 2-3 at the Westin Charlotte in Charlotte, N.C., and brings together U.S.-based industry experts to discuss banking automation and technology topics, including ideation in banking and solving data expandability issues through cloud.
Learn more about the Bank Automation Summit U.S. 2023 here and register here.