The decisions that Cathy Bessant makes today in her role as global
Transcription
The decisions that Cathy Bessant makes today in her role as global
TALKING BUSINESS Tech that The decisions that Cathy Bessant makes today in her role as global technology and operations executive at Bank of America could shape the bank’s operations for the next 20 years, writes Tom Groenfeldt W ith nearly 100,000 employees and offices around the globe, Bank of America has one of the largest IT organisations in the world. Cathy Bessant, the bank’s CIO in charge of this global team, is pretty clear on her priorities. “The most important job we have every day is talent — the attraction, motivation and retention of worldclass talent. The simple answer, when people ask how you run an organisation of this size, is that I don’t. The people who work for me do, and the people that work for them do it in more depth throughout the organisation. “From day one, we have been focused on ensuring the right talent and the right people are in the right roles. If it is mission critical, we need to have one of the top five people in the world for that job for the scale at which we run.” Perhaps it helps that Bessant did not rise through the ranks of techdom. She started at one of the bank’s predecessors in Texas as a corporate banker, then served in several roles, including president of the bank’s operations in Florida, chief marketing officer and president of Global Corporate Banking before taking the CIO role. Marketing prepared her for a key part of her job — talking to strategic partners and suppliers about technology directions, learning how customer needs are changing and then sorting through what the businesses believe they want and need compared with what she understands about customers and clients. “We must understand the business, the customers and the marketplace. My experiences managing the bank’s business in the state of Florida where we had more than 800 banking centres, plus working in the domestic and global corporate markets helped me understand the end users.” In today’s world of social media and widespread availability of sophisticated technology, market tolerance for poor service or substandard capabilities is low, she says. “One thing we focus on constantly is how to be nimble enough and quick enough in a world where failure to be quick risks disintermediation.” This being banking, Bessant spends “a lot of time externally with regulators and others who influence the way we do our work because you can’t figure out everything you need to know by reading regulators’ circulars”. Rules on data protection and cross-border datasharing vary country by country. The bank’s focus internationally is to make its processes work for customers. “Our presence outside the US is not heavy on policy influence; we are more focused on how to make it work than on how to change it. We are focused on our customers’ commerce.” One aspect of the CIO’s role that differs from others in the C-suite is that while her colleagues are looking at a three- to five-year horizon, in technology the decisions made today could shape the bank’s operations for the next 15 to 20 years. “We are in the process of replacing our core credit card processing platform,” she says by way of illustration. “It is 30 years old and has performed really well for that time.” The new one may not last for 30 years, but part of Bessant’s job is to make sure it is flexible enough that it does not freeze the bank into rigid business processes. The team historically inherited more than a few outmoded systems through mergers and purchases, but has aggressively prioritised work to replace, integrate or improve. Through its acquisitions the bank gained some technology silos structured around products, rather Photography: Jeff Cravotta If it is mission critical, we need to have one of the top five people in the world 8 Spring 2014 Spring 2014 9 BoA’s evolution Bank of America’s predecessor, NationsBank, grew during the 1980s and 1990s through a slew of acquisitions across the country from its headquarters in Charlotte, North Carolina. Among its larger acquisitions were Bankers Trust, First RepublicBank, C&S/Sovran, MNC Financial, Barnett Bank and Boatmen’s Bank, as well as some significant regional and super-regional players. In 1998 NationsBank bought San Franciscobased BankAmerica, which itself had acquired several large banks in the West, and then adapted its name for the new company, Bank of America. After that, the combined entity went on to buy several more large financial institutions including FleetBoston, credit card issuer MBNA, US Trust and LaSalle Bank. At the top of the subprime mortgage bubble it bought Countrywide Financial, one of the largest players in the mortgage market. Then, during the financial crisis, it turned down the acquisition of Lehman and, with federal support, bought Merrill Lynch, which had also made huge investments, and suffered huge losses, in the subprime market. Bank of America Headquarters; Charlotte NC than clients or customers. Replacing them, or making them work together, has kept Bessant and her team busy. “Now much of our work is focused on simplification. If we have one process, we are going to use one platform. We must have one way to open an account, although that is different in corporate banking and retail. But we are adamant about integration and horizontal design as much as possible, because we live with the results [of vertical solutions] every day.” The bank has been good at integrating its client-facing technology, she adds, and now it is catching up in the middle and back office with a target date of 2015. One of the things required of a successful CIO is setting a technology strategy and holding focus. “Setting a technology strategy, and sticking to it, is innovation in and of itself,” she says. “It is very easy to get distracted by shiny objects and by the individual capability you are trying to create on any given day.” Project management One result of dealing with the disparate IT systems that grew out of the bank’s mergers and acquisitions is that the tech team has become very good at project management. “The discipline it takes to merge companies effectively is the same it takes to execute large, complex projects. We have had to build that as a core competency since the early 1980s. Now project management is a defined role, and some of our very best leaders do it. We hold with great discipline to our tenets of project management, including a massive amount of inspection. It also helps that we are an organisation where people have grown up with the notion that change must be managed, and it is not something to run from or ignore in the hope 10 Spring 2014 everything will just work out.” Underway over the next several months at Bank of America is the conversion of the bank’s credit card payment system, which will be the largest ever card platform conversion, Bessant says. Bank of America is also replacing its general ledger with SAP, once again the largest ever such implementation SAP has done. Buying technology, when appropriate, is a key part of the bank’s drive towards simplification, one of Bessant’s key goals. “In the past, our strong bias was to build our own, and that was also the bias of a lot of the companies we acquired. The challenge of proprietary platforms is the cost of investment, the cost to maintain them and the cost to implement new regulations and make them contemporary for a changing marketplace.” It is often far more cost effective to buy a system whose development and maintenance costs are spread across multiple clients. The bank will still develop its own solutions, but only if they will provide significant differentiation, or when building is faster or cheaper. Security is a constant concern for the CIO. “Information and data security are causing us to rethink what we do in-house and what we do with third parties,” she says. Given the bank’s size, third party data hosting can be complicated. The bank is very careful about third-parties that access its data and it has strict rules about data leaving the bank. “We have implemented a process, called ‘permit to send’, under which no data leaves the firm without a deliberate, risk-based decision made about the prudence.” The technology and operations organisation is in charge of data management at the bank. “There is negligible data flow that we don’t touch or manage, and the fact that we see it all is the first step in managing it and enforcing really strict protocols. Technology now makes a lot of that easier than it TALKING BUSINESS would have been five years ago when aggregated data warehouses were clumsy and slow. Now architectural capabilities make it possible to aggregate data in ways that are efficient. We can secure our clients’ and our own data without degrading the customer experience. Customers want us to protect their information and technology enables us to do that without creating performance problems.” With operations around the world, the bank and its IT staff can learn from other countries. For example, it is already familiar with chip credit cards, since the bank has issued them in Europe for quite some time, but just began offering them domestically in 2012. think going to the bank to make a deposit is a hassle.” Bessant serves on the board of trustees at the University of North Carolina Charlotte (UNCC), which she says is one of the premier big data universities. It keeps her abreast of technology education, while she no doubt offers some advice to the school on what skills are important. Great technologists are problem solvers, she says. “Code writing and technical creations are important, but they are not the skills that will cause someone to rise to the top of a technological organisation. The great technologist can anticipate or foresee opportunities and design to meet them.” Now some of those technologists at Bank of America are women. Bessant says the CEO, Brian Moynihan, challenged her for being a believer in diversity but with no women in top positions on her team. “Women are underrepresented in technology as they are in science, math and engineering,” she says. She developed a plan to promote women to top posts and added three women to her leadership team, but her efforts have not stopped there. “We are doing a lot of work in our firm, and a lot of work in my organisation, to increase the representation of women in the highest levels. We are really going about a fact-finding qualitative and quantitative analysis to identify root causes and then attack them with vigour. There’s no reason women can’t be great technologists.” Since 2009, Bank of America has doubled the size of its IT innovation development budget, she says. The overall technology budget has grown slightly, and Code writing and technical creations are important, but they are not the skills that will cause someone to rise to the top of a technological organisation As a global business, Bank of America operates in more than 40 countries “because that is where our customers are. We may win a piece of business from a US customer, but it could be to provide payment services in Asia. We are global because our clients and customers are global.” Corporate customers are on the cutting edge of wanting new capabilities from the bank, says Bessant, while in retail banking, marketing expertise is needed to create products that customers will want. “We weren’t sure that customers knew they wanted the ability to take a photo of their cheque to make a deposit, but it doesn’t take long to find out that some customers 20 The number of years in an IT investment timeline Spring 2014 11 TALKING BUSINESS Tech that Bank of America’s technology group has four goals, says Bessant. The first is to enable the business of the company – to know that technology is not an end in itself. A second goal is to reduce risk, including operating risk and cyber risk, “but also ensuring that what we do is both conceived and performs in ways that reduce risk, such as providing speed for real-time analysis and decision-making.” A third aim is to improve the bank’s competitive cost position. And the fourth goal is simplification and modernisation. “What I love about the technology business is that these are not competing priorities and are wholly integrated. Simpler is always better, and better is always cheaper and lower risk.” 12 Spring 2014 it is always a trick to balance remediation, maintenance and the business-as-usual work with innovation. She is fortunate to work for a CEO who understands and pushes technology, she adds, and who believes that digital transformation will be part of his legacy at the bank. Bessant knows to expect tough, intelligent questions from her colleagues when she presents the strategic plan. While five years ago many bankers might not have been very tech-savvy, that is no longer true, which creates its own challenges for a CIO. “Today most of the line bankers I work with — and I used to be one of them — are so much more adept at their own personal technology than they ever were, so it is much harder to manage the pace of change because the pull is so aggressive.” Part of Bessant’s job is educating people, sometimes on the limits of what technology can do, sometimes on the risks, and sometimes on the opportunities that technology opens up for the business. IT has to provide what the business needs, and it also has to help business users understand what is possible, because they might not have seen the latest in what technology can do. However, the bank is not in the habit of throwing money at IT uncritically, as she learns at budget time. “The budgeting and prioritisation process is inherently one of the toughest things about being a CIO.” Those who do it well find they are well received, rather than hated, by the business, she adds. The process requires openness and candour, sharing prioritisation and reasoning, while making the tradeoffs transparent to the entire management team, she explains. “Done well, it accelerates great outcomes and integrates the technology into the business.” She gets frustrated at technology conferences where she hears CIOs say they should be left alone to make the decisions without end user participation. Part of what makes a good technology organisation, after all, is consistency of strategy and consistency of leadership. That requires gaining and keeping the trust of the business users, and shared ownership of technology decisions across the management team. Trust does not develop with black box decisionmaking, which she thinks is one reason the tenure of CIOs is shorter than their technology. “In some disciplines it matters less, but we are making 10, 15 or 20-year bets. You can’t change your point of view every four years when you are making 20-year decisions. Shared ownership of decisionmaking is better because it creates a more sustainable long-term result.” While the banking industry has been through some difficult years and faces challenges in public credibility, regulation and legislative changes, another threat to Bank of America lies in the emergence of competitors that are smaller, more nimble and often less regulated than the banks, or not regulated at all. “I can understand the mentality of people who say let’s just hold on and let things settle down”, says Bessant. “But the moment we are in right now is the moment that will define our industry. We should own our destiny.”