About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Counting the Costs and Constraints of Building In-House Solutions

Subscribe to our newsletter

Research commissioned by Asset Control highlights the pain points of updating or replacing in-house solutions, including cost, skills and resourcing, and the difficulty of deploying solutions to the cloud.

Headline statistics from the research show 94% of respondents expecting to encounter challenges of some sort when building a solution in-house, and 52% of senior decision makers in financial services organisations across the US and Europe looking to update or replace in-house solutions because they have become technologically outdated. Some 49% are pushed to schedule changes by increasing digitalisation within the business and 48% by the need to keep pace with the competition.

The survey underpinning the research was carried out by One Poll among 100 decision makers in financial firms with over 50 employees. Fifty of the firms are in the UK and 50 in the US.

According to the research, the challenges of building in house often lead, directly or indirectly, to greater costs, with skills and resourcing the biggest challenge of building a solution in-house, followed by staying within budget and having to adapt the solution to meet changing regulations or business requirements.

Martijn Groot, vice president of marketing and strategy at Asset Control, says: “The gradual accumulation of additional costs is one of the biggest problems with the in-house approach to technology development in financial services. Internal solutions are often approached as a project, a one-off cost, and are not regarded, and consequently budgeted, as an ongoing concern. This is unrealistic in a fast-changing financial services landscape.”

The ongoing costs of internal solutions tend to come from additional costs after implementation and hiring new developers after previous developers leave the business.

Groot comments: “The one-off approach, if executed well, may look attractive given that the firm is best placed to cater to its own specific requirements. However, the subsequent maintenance costs to keep the lights on and evolve the feature set to cope with emerging requirements are large.

“Also, with costing often done as a project, some operational costs tend to be hidden until an organisation wants to change something. This can be a challenge, particularly if the original developers have moved on, the platform is technologically outdated or does not lend itself well to cloud deployment. Unfortunately, the true costs and constraints of an internally developed solution often only become clear when firms need to change things.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: End-to-End Lineage for Financial Services: The Missing Link for Both Compliance and AI Readiness

The importance of complete robust end-to-end data lineage in financial services and capital markets cannot be overstated. Without the ability to trace and verify data across its lifecycle, many critical workflows – from trade reconciliation to risk management – cannot be executed effectively. At the top of the list is regulatory compliance. Regulators demand a...

BLOG

Snowflake Retools Cortex to Offer FSI Tailored AI Capabilities

Snowflake’s Cortex AI features has been enriched to provide financial services companies with agentic artificial intelligence capabilities honed to their specific needs, the first of a planned suite of editions focused on individual industries. Cortex AI for Financial Services will feature all the functionality of the platform’s Cortex features but will offer clients large language models that...

EVENT

Buy AND Build: The Future of Capital Markets Technology

Buy AND Build: The Future of Capital Markets Technology London examines the latest changes and innovations in trading technology and explores how technology is being deployed to create an edge in sell side and buy side capital markets financial institutions.

GUIDE

Practical Applications of the Global LEI – Client On-Boarding and Beyond

The time for talking is over. The time for action is now. A bit melodramatic, perhaps, but given last month’s official launch of the global legal entity identifier (LEI) standard, practitioners are rolling up their sleeves and getting on with figuring out how to incorporate the new identifier into their customer and entity data infrastructures....