Tamr Insights
Tamr Insights
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May 28, 2020

Fear of data readiness is slowing the progress of digital transformations at Financial Services companies

Fear of data readiness is slowing the progress of digital transformations at Financial Services companies

Despite universal advanced or expert data management expertise in large U.S. financial institutions, more than a third (thirty-five percent) that are pursuing digital transformations with less-than-anticipated impact are not expecting results for three to five years. Further, nearly half of survey respondents say they can’t keep up with competitors nor service customers in an optimal way, according to a new survey from Tamr, the data mastering company, on the state of data and digital transformation.

Tamr conducted the survey of 300 C-suite executives in United States financial institutions with revenue of $1 billion or greater.

The importance of delivering successful digital projects – be it in retail banking or institutional –  is only heightened by our changing behaviors forced by Covid. One example, a BCG survey this month found one in four customers is planning to either use branches less or stop visiting branches all together after the crises. So whether it’s making it easy to digitally onboard customers, tackle reference data, or leverage machine learning for enhanced compliance and monitoring, leaders are under immense pressure to deliver results. So where are they falling short and where do they need help?

Key findings from the survey include:

Desire and willingness to invest in digital transformation is near universal

  • Only one percent of those surveyed are not pursuing digital transformation.
  • The main drivers of digital transformation are keeping up with/staying ahead of competitors (cited by forty-seven percent) and moving faster than competitors (cited by forty-five percent).

Data and data management are drags on digital transformation

  • Sixty-three percent of those that report that their data is insufficiently supporting their efforts say it’s because their data is too vast to analyze.
  • In fact, twenty-eight percent identify unreliable data as a motivator for digital transformation, with sixteen percent describing their data as disorganized (nine percent) or unusable (seven percent). This despite the fact that ninety-three percent of respondents report having either advanced or expert data management expertise.

There are notable impediments to managing data

  • Nearly a quarter of respondents are dissatisfied with their methods for managing data velocity, volume and variety.
  • Common obstacles include: Data volume (fifty-one percent), data management methods unaligned with digital transformation initiatives (forty-four percent), outdated data management methods (forty percent), data variety problems (thirty-six percent) and data velocity problems (twenty-nine percent).

Weaknesses cited

  • Seventy-five percent can’t keep up with constant data changes over time.
  • Fifty-five percent of those reporting non-scalable data management practices say they are choking on too much data.
  • Among weaknesses, fifty-four percent cite speed to insight, forty-seven percent having to unify hundreds – even thousands – of data sources across the enterprise, and thirty-nine percent labor-intensive processes for data wrangling.
  • Only two percent reported no areas of data management practice as needing the most improvement toward digital transformation initiatives.

A strong desire for solutions to data volume, variety and velocity

  • More than half of respondents involved in digital transformation initiatives (fifty-two percent) say they are ready to purchase a solution to assist with data volume, variety and velocity because more than half (fifty-four percent) have solutions that don’t scale or provide a complete, accurate view of data.
  • In addition, fifty-three percent say that they aren’t utilizing their current data to its full potential because it’s siloed throughout the organization; fifty-one percent report needing help with the constantly changing state of their data; and forty-six percent say their digital transformations are slow and not delivering the impact they should.

Download the complete survey report for a comprehensive breakdown of our findings, as well as suggestions about how to accelerate digital projects and ensure success.