News Release

New Cisco Research Provides Digital Roadmap for Capturing $405 Billion Retail Banking Opportunity

Key digital solutions – including sales and service transformation, mobile payments, analytics, video advice, and cybersecurity – drive more than 90 percent of the value for retail banks
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May 24, 2016

San Jose, CA – May 24, 2016 Cisco (NASDAQ:CSCO): $405.3 Billion. That’s the Digital Value at Stake (VaS)[1]  retail banks have the potential to realize from 2015 to 2017. Yet, in 2015, financial services as a whole captured just 29 percent of that opportunity. Of the challenges slowing growth and innovation, cybersecurity weakness is certainly at the forefront. Cybersecurity concerns have prevented retail banks from adopting digital technologies and business models. And this has contributed to them missing out on more than 70 percent of the potential revenue opportunity.  

In light of this, and with the pressing realities of agile “fintech” disruptors, digital consumer demands, and complex regulatory hurdles – how do retail banks compete and capture the revenue opportunity at hand? As the largest segment of financial services, how do they grab their fair share?

 

Today, Cisco announced new research. The “Roadmap to Digital Value in the Retail Banking Industry” outlines the Digital Value at Stake for retail banking – as well as a digital roadmap for success. The study reveals digital use cases that drive the fastest value and return on investment for retail banks. With the right technology investments such as analytics, mobility, video, and virtualized delivery models – and with a plan for navigating security risks – retail banks can create a blueprint for capturing their share of the hundreds of billions in Digital Value at Stake.

 

“The ability for digital technologies to create and drive new revenue opportunities, combined with the ability to lower operational costs through digitized business processes, brings tremendous opportunity,” said Jason Bettinger, Director of Financial Services for Cisco’s Business Transformation Group. But, too many banks are moving slowly or not at all. By waiting to digitize their businesses, or by delaying new technology initiatives, banks risk not only missing out on the potential Value at Stake, but are actually at risk for being put out of business altogether.”

 

Cisco Roadmap to Digital Value in the Retail Banking Industry

 

Retail Banks Must Accelerate Digitization or Risk Extinction: “Fintech” startups are disrupting retail banks by unbundling their products and services. By doing this, they’re able to seize a share of the banks’ most profitable business while avoiding the barriers to entry that naturally come with being a full-service bank. These start-ups are digitizing their offerings. Retail banks that fail to drive their digital transformation may be put out of business completely. According to a 2015 study by the Global Center for Digital Business Transformation (DBT Center), an IMD Business School and Cisco initiative, 4 out of the top 10 retail banks will be displaced by digital disruption in the next three years. However, only 27 percent are taking a proactive approach by disrupting their own businesses. Cisco’s research identified key digital use cases in the retail banking industry that drive more than 90 percent of the $405.3 billion opportunity. These digital solutions include video-based advisors, workforce transformation, mobile payments, virtual tellers, information-based consulting, white-label services, connected ads, marketing, and more. A critical foundational element across all the use cases? Cybersecurity.

 

Cybersecurity Weakness is Slowing Digital Innovation in Retail Banking: Despite the tremendous opportunity and competitive pressures that come with digital transformation, retail banks are still slow to digitize. A recent Cisco study, “Cybersecurity as a Growth Advantage” surveyed 1,014 senior finance and line-of-business executives globally and found that 71 percent agreed that cybersecurity risks and threats hinder digital innovation in their organizations. Another 39 percent of respondents said they’ve halted mission-critical initiatives due to these concerns. Sixty percent admitted their organizations are reluctant to innovate in areas such as digital products and services because of the perceived risks. Specific digital initiatives delayed potentially include omnichannel capabilities, wealth management and asset transfers, mobile banking and mobile payment capabilities, self-service and virtualized delivery models. Cisco’s economic analysis estimates that by not digitizing more fully, incumbent retail banks missed out on $144 billion globally from 2011 to 2015.

 

Bottom line – cybersecurity concerns do not need to be a hindrance to digital innovation. Retail banks can transform cybersecurity from a liability into an asset that supports customer trust, innovation, and growth. All of these digital solutions depend on a robust cybersecurity foundation.

 

“By assessing, adopting and combining the right digital use cases for their needs, and doing it securely, retail banks will capture their share of the Value at Stake and be in a position to operate more agilely and compete,” said Bettinger. “By innovating and driving relevant new products and experiences to the market quickly, they can be the new disruptors.”

 

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To calculate Digital Value at Stake, Cisco conducted the industry’s most comprehensive economic analysis. Spanning across the private sector, it includes 16 industries – financial services being one. The analysis is rooted in customer engagements and evaluation of 350 private sector digital use cases. Thirty of those are focused on financial services. Read the full report, including the key digital use cases recommended for retail banks.

 

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

 

 

 

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About Cisco

 

Cisco (NASDAQ: CSCO) is the worldwide leader in IT that helps companies seize the opportunities of tomorrow by proving that amazing things can happen when you connect the previously unconnected. For ongoing news, please go to http://thenetwork.cisco.com.

 



[1] VaS is a measure of financial gain or loss based on two components – entirely new sources of revenue or savings derived from digital investments and innovations, AND value shifting among players within industries based on how their respective digital capabilities equip them to steal value from rivals.

 

 

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