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The Financial Services Industry Looks to the Cloud

By 2020, Gartner analysts say that almost 40 percent of enterprises will use the cloud to support more than half of transactional systems of record.

Matt VanderZwaag is Director of Product Development at US Signal.

When it comes to the public cloud, the financial services industry has shied away from adoption for many years. It’s not that the financial services industry is not accepting of new technologies. This is the industry, of course, that first introduced ATMs in 1969 and is driving today’s proliferation of mobile payment options.

Understandably, these companies are cautious and rightfully so. Financial services are one of the most heavily regulated and frequently scrutinized industries, in terms of data privacy and security. The list of regulations is long, and includes Dodd-Frank, FFIEC, PCI DSS, GLBA, SOX and the USA Patriot Act, not to mention the impending GDPR.

As multi-cloud adoption has grown, the financial services industry has steadily begun turning to the cloud. In fact, according to a 2017 survey, 72 percent of US finance executives said they are either using cloud-based solutions or plan to do so in the future, which is an increase from 62 percent in the 2016 survey.

By 2020, Gartner analysts say that almost 40 percent of enterprises will use the cloud to support more than half of transactional systems of record.

A Case of Survival

More companies in the financial services industry are adopting the cloud as a means of survival. Like companies across every industry, those in financial services must undergo a digital transformation if they are to stay in the game. They must leverage the wide array of data analytics and artificial intelligence tools to help them gather customer insights, drive innovation and open new market opportunities.

They must implement on-demand, easy-to-use services to meet the demands of their tech-savvy customers. They must transform delivery strategies and their customer relationship management approach to drive customer acquisition and retention. They must employ and support productivity, social, collaboration and unified communication tools that enable their employees to work effectively and efficiently wherever they are and on whatever device they are using.

The Proof is in the Cloud

Financial services companies have seen the results and heard the praises of IT leaders in other industries, including those in highly regulated industries like healthcare. They’ve done their research, and know that the necessary controls are in place in the cloud to ensure data integrity, compliance and availability.

They also realize that cloud vendors want their business, and are taking the extra steps to understand and support their unique needs. Outsourcing infrastructure management to a cloud services provider relieves organizations of having to build and maintain their own data centers or collocated hardware. Cloud solutions can be used to automate manual tasks, freeing up employees to focus on more value-added endeavors.

Cloud Service Providers Respond

In recent years, AWS has heavily promoted its cloud services to the finance and insurance industries. It now counts Capital One, FINRA, Nasdaq and Pacific Life among its customers. Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform are also attracting their share of financial services companies.

Organizations are finally becoming comfortable with the cloud services providers (CSPs) now understand their concerns and requirements, and have tailored their cloud offerings accordingly.

They’ve invested in leading-edge security and implemented data privacy best practices such as file- and volume-level data-at-rest encryption, secure key management and access controls. In most cases, they offer levels of security that most companies lack the expertise or resources to implement and manage on their own.

Some have also gone the extra step to achieve HIPAA and PCI DSS compliance. Doing so demonstrates they can meet the stringent security requirements, enabling their customers to leverage security protocols to meet their compliance requirements.

The Importance of Strategy and Service

In contrast to AWS, Microsoft, Google and other big-name providers, CSPs that cater to mid-market businesses offer personalized, concierge-type services to their customers in the financial services industry with greater peace of mind and return on investment (ROI).

For example, rather than pushing a one-size-fits-all cloud service, CSPs engineers take the time to understand their customers’ current IT environments and their short- and long-term goals. This approach enables them to help customers put an IT strategy in place that considers and optimizes their current IT investments and legacy systems. It helps them achieve leaner operations and a stronger focus on core business, and it enables them to leverage technology in the most effective and efficient ways — all while meeting compliance requirements. 

The Time for Action

It’s time for the financial services industry to leverage the power of the cloud to make it all happen. The opportunities and capabilities are out there. So are the data privacy and security protocols.

Opinions expressed in the article above do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Data Center Knowledge and Informa.

Industry Perspectives is a content channel at Data Center Knowledge highlighting thought leadership in the data center arena. See our guidelines and submission process for information on participating.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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