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

A-Team Webinar Discusses Next Generation Enterprise Data Management

Subscribe to our newsletter

Technology options including cloud solutions, managed services and data utilities can take enterprise data management (EDM) to the next level and deliver business benefits, but there are challenges along the way as firms contend with legacy systems, increasing regulation and the ongoing divide between business and IT.

The challenges and opportunities of emerging EDM solutions were discussed during a recent A-Team Group webinar entitled Enterprise Data Management – The Next Generation. A-Team editor Sarah Underwood moderated the webinar and was joined by expert speakers Darren Peirce, vice president of products and chief technology officer at Magnitude Software, and Brian Sentance, CEO at Xenomorph.

If you missed the webinar, you can hear a full recording here.

Underwood set the scene, noting the role of EDM in helping firms drive up efficiency, drive down cost and meet regulatory and changing business requirements, before asking the experts for their views on how best to develop and implement EDM.

Peirce started with a quick definition of EDM, saying: “EDM is about processes that identify, govern, retrieve and integrate data from internal and external applications that business depends on. Integration should bring internal and external data into a single system.” Sentance concurred, saying: “EDM should encompass all types of data and processes.”

Drivers for change

Considering the scope of EDM, Peirce and Sentance focused on the drivers behind next generation EDM and the benefits they can deliver. Peirce suggested the CEO acronym, but in this case standing for compliance, efficiency and opportunity. He explained: “Compliance is about regulation and fear is a great motivator. Efficiency is increasingly required in an era of digital banking that uses the cost to serve a customer as an essential metric in measuring the overall efficiency of an organisation. Opportunity is driven by organisations recognising they can use new technologies to get a single view of data and then access opportunities such as omni-channel marketing.”

Sentance identified the drivers he sees behind EDM as regulation, cost control and changing business models. He said: “Data management is important for all these drivers. The BCBS 239 regulation on risk data aggregation and reporting supports good data management to meet regulatory reporting mandates. Knowing what data you have and how it is used is a starting point towards efficiency and cost control, and data ownership supported by chief data officers is a requirement to meet changing business models.”

On the potential benefits of EDM, Sentance noted reduced risk and cost, including reduced regulatory capital requirements, and improved profitability. He went on to outline Xenomorph’s view of elements required for EDM including agility, in terms of ease of deployment, quick wins and being cloud ready; adaptability, to support different asset classes and data types; timeliness, and the need to move data management away from overnight batch processes towards intraday and real-time processing; variety, to support both structured and unstructured data; analytics, to ensure data lineage for audit and regulation; and governance and people supported by connectivity and tools including business intelligence and visualisation.

Tackling the challenges

Turning to the challenges of EDM, Peirce said legacy systems are the toughest challenge, but can be eliminated on an ongoing basis as investment in EDM is made. He also cited problems that arise from the gap between business and IT, and suggested a framework for communication and collaboration could ease this. On the challenge of a changing banking market and the expectation that the cost to serve customers can be reduced, he said: “This can be difficult to achieve in a traditional IT environment. What is needed here is automation and technology that can meet business requirements at a lower price point.”

Explaining Magnitude Software’s approach to EDM, Peirce described the company’s Kalido Business Information Modeller, which uses a graphic tool to show data that needs to be managed for specific application purposes. The tool is designed for both business and IT users, and provides a common understanding of data. When a model is complete, it can be used to automate and create a solution. It can also be applied to new classes of data, offering agility and relatively low-cost development.

Looking at generic technologies that are emerging to support EDM, Sentance noted cloud solutions, managed services, data utilities, semantic technology and noSQL. Peirce commented on the need for EDM solutions to focus on automation and governance with a view to accelerating value creation. He concluded: “We are on the journey with these technologies, but the journey is not yet complete.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Best Practices for Managing Trade Surveillance

1 July 2025 10:00am ET | 3:00pm London | 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 Minutes The surge in trading volumes combined with the emergence of new digital financial assets and geopolitical events have added layers of complexity to market activities. Traditional surveillance methods often struggle to keep pace with these changes, leading to difficulties in detecting...

BLOG

Ensuring AI-Focussed Institutions Take out the Garbage: A-Team Group Webinar Preview

As data quality rises up institutions’ AI-implementation agendas, the next A-Team Group Data Management Insight webinar will take a deep-dive look into how they can ensure the information they feed into their models will give them accurate and valuable outputs. Avoiding Chaos The data management maxim of “garbage in, garbage out” can’t be more appropriate for artificial...

EVENT

RegTech Summit London

Now in its 9th year, the RegTech Summit in London will bring together the RegTech ecosystem to explore how the European capital markets financial industry can leverage technology to drive innovation, cut costs and support regulatory change.

GUIDE

AI in Capital Markets: Practical Insight for a Transforming Industry – Free Handbook

AI is no longer on the horizon – it’s embedded in the infrastructure of modern capital markets. But separating real impact from inflated promises requires a grounded, practical understanding. The AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2025 provides exactly that. Designed for data-driven professionals across the trade life-cycle, compliance, infrastructure, and strategy, this handbook goes beyond...