Financial services firms have often been at the forefront of security since the inception of the first Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) in the 1980s. Why? For the same reason people rob a bank - they are where the money is. The financial sector has historically been an epicenter for cyber attacks. The byproduct of securing a society’s currency is a consistent aversion to unnecessary risk, which has resulted in a longstanding delay in adopting new technologies, leaving the financial services industry open for disruption by smaller players in the long term.
With the announcement of the new SEC cyber regulations, increased transparency and reporting will now be required from all relevant businesses. The new rules set a precedent for financial institutions as they come face to face with cyber in finance. From reimagining products and services around customer-centricity to developing new business models to meet customer behavior, banks, and financial institutions have gone from laggards in the digital transformation front to potential leaders. Here we will dive into three ways these organizations are leading digital transformation in banking and financial services.
When faced with smaller organizations capable of shouldering larger amounts of risk to achieve business goals, enterprise-level financial institutions have had to take a hard look at their perspectives on risk as a whole. A defining element in the conversations we are seeing is how a large enterprise that is relied upon in the financial markets can manage the same amount of risk as a smaller company that is not as relied upon by the ecosystem at large.
Risk managers and officers are reengineering their risk appetite statements and devoting new resources to innovation groups dedicated to furthering the organization’s digital transformation journey. While these innovation groups are often operating in a microcosm to develop and refine these new digital technologies into a cohesive experience, we see companies digitize much faster as a result.
A key element of digital transformation within financial services institutions has been the rapid evolution of processes, especially as it relates to IT and cyber risk. Given that these two groups are often at the forefront of digital strategy, they must be appropriately calibrated and enabled to execute the business strategy.
People and business processes are too often sidelined when talking about digital transformation. Although, as we saw in the previous section, they are often the precursors necessary for successful digital transformation initiatives. Technology, though, is often the hallmark and the essential element of digital transformation.
CyberSaint offers a unique partnership with IBM Security Cloud and Compliance Center to streamline third and fourth-party risk management. Learn more about our unique approach here.
The digital era is upon us. Be prepared for digital transformation in this critical sector by ensuring your organization is not spending precious time on menial, manual efforts where automation can accomplish it in half the time. CyberStrong is saving enterprise organizations millions of dollars by automating risk and compliance assessments and transforming risk programs. If you’d like to learn more, schedule a demo or access our webinar on the subject here.