At the start of June, Marketing & Partnerships Manager, Matt Flenleywas a panellist on an on overcoming barriers to RegTech adoption alongside DZBantanidisof Citi,KayvanAlikhaniof Compliance.ai, and PatrickBoscherof Pabora.io. With questions posed by Sarah Underwood, the webinar delved deep into views from different sides of the fence – buyers, sellers and investors–seeking to provide a broad understanding of the barriers each side face with regulatory compliance and adopting regtech solutions.Here, he focuses on a few of the biggest talking points raised by the webinar.
Fromthe moment thepanellistsbeganintroducingthemselves, I knew it was going to be pretty wide-ranging.PatrickBoscheris ex-Allianz Group, nowRegTechadvisor andStartupAngel;DZBantanidisis a former regulator,now leadingRegTech& Fintechinnovation at Citi’sInnovation Lab;KayvanAlikhaniof Compliance.ai, a technologist who’sworked with hundreds of compliance officers; and then, of course, me – now at a Fintech/RegTech, but formerly in a bank and dealing with the sorts ofproblemsthat technology is rapidly solving.
A-Team Group usually gets a good panel together, full of opinions from across the sphere of a debate,and this was no different.
SophiaԳٲԾ徱’sviews reflected the need of a massive financialorganisation tohave regtech companies think big – how can my solution be deployed at an enterprise level to solve multiple problems around regulatory requirements and risk management for thousands of people, in hundreds of different countries? – and the counterpointRegTech adoptionviewfromKayvanAlikhaniwas thatbanks should think in terms of specific problems they haverightnowthat must be solved,even on a small scale.
Fundamentally, the most important thing emerging was that both sides – all sides, including investors – have a strong desire to make it work and improve their regulatory processes with the help of RegTech.
Innovation centres at banks are a superb way of getting a foot-in-the-door, and asMs.Bantanidissaid– they can act as a sponsor throughout the organization, a champion for the firm to gain a foothold and start to grow.
This willingness to supportinnovative tech firmsflourishing in organisationsissomethingthe independent commentatorChris Skinnerexpanded uponin a session last year held by the FS Clubon digitisation (and the focus of his most recent book);he asserted that much of the evolutionnecessaryto fully benefit fromthe opportunities thatRegTech promises in mitigating against financial crime and improving the financial services industry requiresa change in mindset within banking and finance,tobecomedata-and-digital-first – and notsimply parrot those statements without changing the underlying structure of banking and financial regulations.
Now, it would be too easy– not to mention wrong –for me to suggest that all we need for a banking and finance revolution is for the banks to evolve culturally!
Like partners in a relationship whereperhapsdifferentviews on apointare held, we needa willingness to work things out togetherandsome intelligent mediationalong the way. The webinar’sconclusion really hit home on this, with some sage points of advice and compromise:
- RegTechs shouldn’t over-inflate their involvement with a financial institution, because they’ll figure out that the contract with a big bank that’s on the sales deck was actually just a one-off piece of work which didn’t go anywhere;
- Banksmustn’tjustputRegTechsinto the sameIT procurement processas used for giant blue-chip tech firms;there’s a need to be creative andflexible, as difficult as that might sound for banks (and I do genuinely understand!)
- RegTechsshouldtellthe innovation department at a bank if they’realready working on a project elsewhere in the organisationto avoidmiscommunication – something Ms. Bantanidiswas really very clear about
- Lastly, banks should view a paid project with a RegTech – at the very worst – as a valuable way of “failing fast.” It might be a big cultural shock to think this way, butthe saying is true: if we always do what we’ve always done, we’ll always get what we’ve always got. And in 2020, with no let-up in regulatory reporting scrutiny and COVID-19 pressuring margins, it’s clear that backing the right RegTech adoption could turbocharge compliance while delivering better efficiencies. Regulatory technology offers the opportunity to compliment compliance teams and make their regulatory obligations easier to deliver.
Next up forĢƵon the webinar front, we’ve Head of Sales Kieran Seawardin a Wealth Management special on “”, followed a week later by Head of AI, Dr Fiona Browne, exploring uses of AI inAML & Know Your Customer.I’ll share details of these in my LinkedIn feed, or follow the company one.
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