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Monday 30 January 2023 7:26 pm  |  Updated:  Monday 30 January 2023 7:28 pm

Banks struggle with digital transition as new data shows 10 per cent of customer records are duplicated

By: Chris Dorrell

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The FCA ruled out major interventions due to potential unintended consequences but admitted that some areas of the market do not "work well".
The FCA ruled out major interventions due to potential unintended consequences but admitted that some areas of the market do not "work well".

Major banks are struggling to manage their digital records as new data shows that around ten per cent of customer records are duplicated.

Quantexa, a data analytics firm, asked 356 IT and data experts working in the UK, USA and Canada how many customer records were duplicated in their respective sectors. In the banking industry, the average response was ten per cent. 

However, the number could be even higher with 29 per cent of respondents estimating that between 11 and 15 per cent were duplicates and 15 per cent estimating it was between 16 and 20 per cent. 

When asked about the impact of duplicates, 41 per cent of respondents said it increased exposure to risk.

A third of respondents said it made data reconciliation and remediation time-consuming while 23 per cent said it made making “timely and accurate decisions” more difficult.

Quantexa’s chief product officer Dan Higgins said: “Duplicated records are a growing reason why banks are questioning the overall data quality available to them.”

“Different iterations of a name, changes in address or multiple phone numbers can all harmlessly create these replications. This becomes a costly waste of resources across data, IT, and business teams, hampering digital transformation efforts,” Higgins continued.  

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Only 27 per cent of respondents felt that all divisions across the organisation trusted the accuracy of data to make decisions, although 60 per cent said most divisions did. 13 per cent said only a few trusted the accuracy of the data.

The data raises questions about the success of banks at implementing digital policies. 

Last October, 81 per cent of respondents in an report by digital consultancy Elsewhen on financial services said their senior leadership team did not understand how to use emerging technologies such as AI and Machine Learning.

“Banks are ambitious to use digital to continuously improve the experience for customers and staff. Yet all too often they are hampered by a lack of digital literacy and leadership at the very top of their companies,” Leon Gauhman, Elsewhen’s chief product officer, said.

Cognizant’s John da Gama-Rose also identified shortcomings in bank’s digital transformation efforts. 

“Leading players in the banking industry have made notable progress in key areas, such as modernisation of their core and personalisation of services. These are positive steps in the right direction, but the banking and capital markets industry as a whole still has a lot to do to build on these initial successes and continue on its modernisation journey.”

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