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Blog on RIAs, SaaS and User Experience

Changing application design priorities in the financial services industry

Posted on June 05, 2009 by Paul Giurata

FinTech 100 and rapid application design

I was reviewing the latest FinTech 100 and noticed that 4 of the top 10 firms are recent or current clients of Catalyst Resources. To be sure, the economic downturn has impacted the financial services sector and almost everyone is aggressively seeking ways to cut costs. However we find that many of these firms are also responding by investing in new applications that improve ROI, manage risk, reduce business process inefficiencies and attract new customers.

Financial services firms continue to invest in new applications

Different financial services firms (across banking, capital markets and insurance) call Catalyst in at different points in the design of these new applications - anywhere from the early idea stage, to a project with well-defined requirements. But one thing that is consistent. Because these tend to be mission critical applications, designing the application functionality and the user experience, is always an interesting challenge.

Typically these are global systems with extremely high performance requirements (e.g. trading platforms, or financial communications systems), as well as uncompromising fault tolerance and security (e.g. payroll systems or credit card processing). Progressively there is an increasing awareness that the functionality and components need to be modular so that they can be applied across disparate applications and, more importantly, to so that they can be reconfigured very quickly, and still adhere to regulatory compliance standards.

Changes in how software is delivered consumed - SaaS and mobile

There has been a fundamental shift in the requirements for how services are delivered and consumed in the financial services industry. Web-based applications, SaaS and on-demand cloud infrastructure are increasingly important for point financial processes such as governance, or tax management, as well as core systems such as HR, payroll and process management. In a Feb 2009 report, Saugatuck predicted that usage of SaaS-based core financial systems will reach 40% or greater by the end of 2010.

Firms are also asking that their applications become more user-centric, accommodating the diverse ways that their services are experienced by an increasingly distributed and mobile workforce. In the past, mobile meant laptops. But with users now accustomed to web-based business applications, firms are asking to adapt their mission-critical applications for handheld devices such as the iPhone and Blackberry. For these applications in particular it is essential to thoroughly encapsulate critical business processes and streamline the functionality so the apps are more refined, prioritized and elicit greater productivity within the small visual real-estate of the device.

A renewed focus on monitoring

As part of the focus on optimized application design, financial services firms want to be able to monitor how and when applications are being used. This information can then be applied to correct drop out points, improve effectiveness and efficiency for their users, and quickly determine how to modify an application on a regular cycle to adjust to changing needs.

Changing priorities

The priorities of senior financial service firm executives are changing as they adapt to today’s unprecedented economic conditions. Firms are jettisoning less efficient business processes and technologies, but they are also spending on well-designed applications that allows them to reduce costs elsewhere (via automation and self-support), generate new revenues, or attract additional customers. For us its an exciting time and certainly keeping us busy.