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by Tom

Out and about – how much Time & Effort do you spend on Partners

Januar 25, 2011 in Help Wanted

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So it’s my favorite little spot behind the money facades just off of Zurich’s Paradeplatz. And it’s yet another evening I spend with business partners that harbor the same dream as anvalad’s partners. Creating a mutually and financially beneficial business relationship with complementary products, skills and networks. Most likely you have spend enough hours planning and executing similar strategies and implementing co-operations that followed parallel hopes. The following best practices I have summarized over the past three years, after many such co-operations loosing their charm or never ever getting off the ground in the first place:

  • Do you like the people involved – if the answer is “no” you might stop right away. Though I have tried for three or four times it never actually worked out even though our mutual products seemed more than fit for a joint marketing and sales strategy
  • Do you really! know the product – if the answer is “no” you might stop again. And I didn’t put that exclamation mark in for good measure – you really have to spend more time with the product or service that you going to pitch to your trusted customers than with the people involved. So any partnership really is more of an investment than a couple of dinner checks and some happy hour shouting over the crowd.
  • Do you see any results hands-on – this one I usually give 30 – 60 days depending on the product complexity or service turnaround involved. But if you don’t have some promising leads or a true project after the first working sessions it is not likely that your client roosters are going to help you in a partnering context.

I’d be glad to hear from some fellow readers out there, what their best practices sound like. When have you made a business partnership a true commercial success? I’ll keep you posted on ours…

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by Tom

Over the Hill yet – or Already Going Down?

Januar 21, 2011 in Financial Services

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Bankers prophets are doing the roller-coaster again – or still. First we are drowned in messages claiming the end of the biggest crisis in modern day Financial Services. Drowned in weather changing fairytales of re-newing and changing the global financial systems to be more responsible, better governed and tightly regulated in order to avoid the next and bigger systemic earthquake. And just as we start to trust these news and start to question our common sense and even more the meaning of the economic figures we are shown the tide starts to turn again. So what is your take on the status and mid-term direction of the financial services industry? Have bankers learned their lesson?

  • Investment focus says ‘No’ – many of the banks hit hard during the last crisis have shortly shyed away from the volatile Investment Banking business. But most or all of them openly proclaim that they are getting back into the game now. And spending analysis underlines that statement. For some global universal banks we know the Investment Banking business takes 2/3 of all new spend.
  • Bonus & Salary figures say ‘No’ – when looking at the job openings and the managerial levels sought after it becomes obvious, that many of the jobs slashed during the crisis are being re-staffed, and often on the next level of the corporate hierarchy. So it has become appropriate again to talk about sign-on bonuses and about salaries at the right hand end of the Gaussean distribution curve.
  • Regulatory pressure says ‘No’ – while both in Europe and the US there will be after-shocks that lead to tightening of the regulatory oversight all-in-all the rules haven’t changed dramatically. All banks seem to invest in better risk management, both with an operational risk as well as a market risk focus. But the reasoning for most of these investments is self-preservation rather than regulatory mandates.

So looking at the post crisis situation bluntly you could become somewhat of a zynic. Yes, the bankers have learned their lesson: “Let’s make sure we don’t get caught next time round…”

Article first published as Are We Over the Hill Yet – Going Down…. on Technorati.

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by Tom

Now writing on Technorati

Dezember 27, 2010 in Financial Services

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As of today anvalad will be also featured on Technorati for
all our original content referencing Financial Services and the
Business Intelligence space… Be sure to check out Technorati
regularly…

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by Tom

De-central centralization in the Finance Industry?

November 21, 2010 in Asset Management, Financial Services, Investment Banking, Private Banking

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The pendulum usually swings in close relation to the economic phase – while de-central strategies usually boom in expanding growth markets most down-turns bring along a re-discovery of centralization strategies. So what effects are to be observed in the post crisis era the financial services find themselves in currently?

Many of our European clients still recover from the shock and are quite focussed on cost- and headcount management. This usually correlates closely with centralization strategies. Funny enough however many large banks have experienced large and expensive consolidation projects in the years gone by and have never actually achieved the intended synergies. Either because the business models changed faster than the administration was able to synchronize processes, data and systems or because internal politics never got over the departmental kingdoms. As a result of these failed consolidation attempts many clients now aim at achieving de-central approaches to a central policy. What sounds confusing or even paradox at first can be achieved with a clever performance management framwork and some up-to-date integration technology.

Let us look at two examples we have supported during the past months:

  • Client Management – a globally operating European universal bank has suffered from redundant and inconsistent client data processing accross its functional and geographic borders. Instead of mobilizing a multi-million Swiss-Franc initiative the firm achieved a common and central policy and spread its implementation accross many different systems. We have managed to hook up the operational CRM and client master systems to a centralized master data management hub that applies de-central (localized) rules to syncronize the local repository with its global counterpart. Applying a multi-level data stewardship concept and a stringent data-quality management the consistency has clearly improved and the implementation didn’t have to follow any big-bang risks but was able to integrate each department and country on a case by case basis. And while the results can be used and measured centrally (thanks to the central integration hub) the operational handling and ownership can remain locally.
  • Financial Instruments – Another European client was used to an out-dated financial instruments master data repository and  accepted change cycles of 18 to 24 months whenever business users requested new information. That this time and information gap can result in serious compliance issues became obvious during the initial Lehman Brothers impact analysis. More than 20 people had to manually consolidate different reositories and the resulting portfolios. After implementing a business rules based classification system, the divers requirements of Portfolio Managers, Sales Managers and Risk Managers could be integrated into single classification system. And instead of changing all the operational systems in an investment intensive, time-consuming program the centralized infrastructure combined central policy with de-central execution.

These two examples cleary illustrate, that de-central centralization no longer is an oxymoron. For more use-cases or a deeper dive in the examples listed, just add your thoughts and your own experience…

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by Tom

X-Mas Wishes for the Finance Industry

Dezember 23, 2009 in Financial Services, Private Banking

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It’s a jolly good time to prepare another wish-list; one for banks, wealth managers and other financial services. Although it might be a little late for Santa, I’m sure it’s not yet too late for the new year resolution call:

1) Bring about risk-aware incentive- and bonus-frameworks

While I subscribe to a liberal market stance and always have spoken out against harsh regulatory & governmental control over market matters, I do think that the timing of shareholder, client and manager thinking are not aligned. And since these time-gaps have shown to be elementary in the latest crisis origins, we certainly need better frameworks to counteract and regulate them. One of the most influential effects would be to determine the long-term effects in a rather sceptical and pessimistic way using Value-at-Risk baselines and only pay-out incentives and bonuses based on these sceptical terms. And after a 3 to 5 year proof period the real effects could be measured and compensated accordingly. This would mean a sharp decline in bonus volume during the initial years with a moderating effect in the years that follow.

2) Bring us transparency on investment products

It is true that in Europe MIFID has aided the customers in creating more transparency on the risk level and downside aspects of all complex Investment Products. To take this positive trend to the next level and to a global reach it would be helpful to demand for every product which kickbacks and provisions are paid out by the provider of the various products.

3) Demand full clarity on client- vs. 3rd party revenues

Recent studies have shown that banks often generate 25 – 30 % of their revenues with provisions and Kick-Backs. And if those hidden cost would be attributed to the clients and their portfolios an average performance increase of 8% p.a. could be achieved. While market advocates argue that pure performance oriented wealth manager could offer this model without any regulatory change – and some, like the German Quirin Bank, really do – the clients would benefit stronger from a solid governmental response. Why should the taxpayer money that has saved the financial system from total collapse not be worth enough to at least foster a more competitive marketplace.

4) Make the annual thinking cage vanish

Banks talk their clients into long-term thinking and investing and yet are ruled by quarterly reports and annual bonus payments. Just as clients like to take stock of their portfolios on an annual basis, the banks should honor their long-term responsibility and have long-term measures determining their medium-term success – these must be risk-based.

In this mind-set I whish all of our fellow readers a merry holiday season and that Santa has not overlooked your wishlist. Let’s jointly continue to change our profession and field of expertise to the better. Because not just during the Christmas spirit I’m convinced that only banks acting true and fair and dilligently serving their clients will be truely successful in the long run.

Merry x-mas
-Tom

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by Tom

Conceptual waiting flashes

Juni 26, 2009 in Uncategorized

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Ever thought about the aggregated cost of unplanned waiting times?

My recent experience in larger financial services organizations claims another victim of the current crisis: Punctuality – always a rather big theme in the banking industry seems to erode alongside client trust, margins and capital. Actually when waiting for a long planned for and unplanned for delayed meeting the following conceptual flashes crossed my brain:

(1) How could we charge unproductive and unfullfilling waiting time at an higher rate than regular time?
(2) How could we define a KPI judging and measuring the quality of time spent in management positions
(3) Are the decisions taken, or at least invoked by cancelled or deleayed meetings not often better than the ones taken after debating for hours. Wouldn’t we therefor need to invent a strategy of decision making by delays and cancellation.
(4) Remember those last second changes in your spelling tests back in school, when not correcting would have got you a better grade? How often is this true for last minute changes in your presentations while you wait for the delayed meeting to start?
(5) What would you consider a reasonable time for an unplanned wait? The length of this entry, one Starbucks Grande Latte or one elaborate Tom Waits song? All of the above is true here.

Thank god blogging has gotten mobile at last….

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