December 02 - 03, 2025
ExCeL, London, United Kingdom
London,
June 2018 – In the latest Rebank podcast, Louise
Beaumont, Co-Chair of techUK‘s Open
Banking & Payments Working Group and a member of the Open Banking
Implementation Entitiy Working Group, Megan
Caywood, Chief Platform Officer at Starling Bank, a UK
digital bank differentiating through Open Banking, and Jamie
Campbell, Head of Awareness at Bud, a
fintech leveraging Open Banking to create new revenue streams for banks talked
to Will Beeson.
Here are the key takeaways
from that conversation:
The expansive view of Open
Banking is around driving innovation in financial services to create a stronger
economy, more choice and better outcomes for customers, both retail and
business.
Right now, we’re in the midst
of a compliance-driven reaction, in which bank compliance teams are setting out
minimum regulatory requirements and passing instructions to IT to build
compliant APIs. This falls fall short of what Open Banking enables and puts
incumbents at risk of disruption by new players, who embrace the business model
changes that Open Banking enables.
Big banks see Open Banking as
a way for small companies to steal their data and their customers. In reality,
Open Banking is about customers and their freedom of choice.
Banks’ reactions to Open
Banking make it clear who will succeed and who won’t in a rapidly changing
industry.
In the panel’s experience,
when you explain to bank executives the implications of Open Banking and what
it enables, they think you’re describing a sci-fi view of the future, when in
fact you’re describing the present. Open Banking is already here, and it’s
starting to drive customer experiences.
Open Banking is not about aggregation.
If you wanted aggregation, you’d already have it via previously available
technologies. It’s about what you do with all the information after you’ve
aggregated it. You need to understand the “why?” behind what you’re trying to
do.
Hailo, the London taxi
industry’s answer to Uber, mistook Uber for a ride hailing app when really it’s
a logistics platform supporting people and businesses. Hailo tried to compete
by building a taxi hailing app, totally missing the point, and failed
miserably. Banks are doing the same thing in relation to Open Banking and the
fintechs that are building on it.
Step 1 in developing
strategies for the new world of financial services is understanding the
customer and what they’re trying to achieve. Only then can you ever start
thinking about banking.
Banks can’t own customers
anymore, and they need to translate that fact into their business models.
Open Banking as implemented in
January 2017 is a simple legal requirement around the structured sharing of
customer transaction data. Much more powerful is informal “open banking”: using
tech industry best practices around public API usage and richer data collection
and compilation to create personalized, contextual experiences, tying together
once-disparate pieces of peoples’ lives in new, powerful ways, often without
even necessitating their involvement.
Open Banking is moving the
industry from products to services. It’s no longer about loans and deposits,
it’s about creating services that progress people through their lives, taking
care of their financial needs for them in the process.
There are three drivers of
change in banking right now: changing customer expectations, technology and
competition from outside the industry. Prior to very recently, banks had
ignored all three of these factors. In a way, Open Banking forces banks to stay
relevant – or at least gives them a shove in the right direction.
What you don’t want to be left
with if you’re an incumbent bank is the back end only – the worst part of the
ROE equation. It starts with how do you keep customer attention. It has to
happen by embracing Open Banking and the new experiences it creates, not by
trying to smother it.
To discuss this topic further, please contact Will Beeson on +44 (0)7570 220040
will.beeson@bankingthefuture.com
Rebank: Banking
the Future