About a-team Marketing Services

A-Team Insight Blogs

Insight: How to Adapt your Data Strategy to Changing Times

Subscribe to our newsletter

As the debut Data Management Summit Europe Virtual from the A-Team Group fast approaches (book your place here), and as the ongoing complexities of operating in a post-COVID 19 world start to become clear, it is imperative that firms evaluate their current approach to data management in order to identify the emerging gaps in their current provision, and make the crucial changes they need in order to stay competitive. We speak to Linda Coffman, EVP of SmartStream RDU, to learn how a proactive strategy can pay off.

“Firms find themselves in a constant tug-of-war between offensive and defensive data initiatives,” explains Coffman. “Decisions needs to be made and trade-offs need to be considered between allocating budget to those initiatives which protect a firm and minimize downside risk, and those that will encourage and support business opportunity. New regulations and regulatory enforcement make ‘defensive’ spend an easy decision. However, there are other defensive drivers that are less obvious, in particular around the cost of poor data quality. Understanding the true cost and risk of distributing incorrect data throughout the firm requires a true understanding of the data and downstream usage. Firms need to ask themselves “Do I truly know how many employees are actually cleansing data”? It is often much broader than just a firms assigned operations team.”

The decision to spend budget on the “offensive” business case can be driven by a wide population of users and across a number departments. Often, the offensive decision is less about the scope of the data and more about how that data is distributed and presented. Understanding what data is available and allowing downstream users easy access to that data via channels such as APIs and dashboards can give users the flexibility to drive their own offensive needs. “If an infrastructure can limit additional technology costs by cataloguing and making the data easily available to downstream users, data can readily be available to use for offensive activities,” agrees Coffman.

The strategy of Smartstream RDU, therefore, is to focus on the defensive aspect of data management in order to let its clients focus more on the offensive. As the world of data continues to evolve and get larger and larger, firms need to focus on the value they can derive from the data.

“Data is not valuable if it is not timely, complete and accurate,” emphasises Coffman. “The goal of RDU is to provide worry free data in order to give firms the confidence that the data they are consuming and using to make business decisions can be trusted. The competitive edge firms are looking to gain in the data space is not driven by all the activities needed to gather and onboard huge amounts of data but rather by the accuracy of that data, the efficiency of accessing that data and finally by how they use that data to drive business opportunities.”

But given the current circumstances due to coronavirus, how can firms ensure they are doing their best to operate under ongoing restrictions and futureproof against the rest of what is looking increasingly to be a challenging year?

“It appears that firms have taken the current crisis in stages,” thinks Coffman. “Initially the focus was primarily focused on business continuity plans and making sure all systems were running without interruption. I would say that overall, most firms fared quite well making this transition. The second phase, which I believe most are in now, is evaluating what BCP operating models are not sustainable for long-term implementation and identifying where there are gaps leading to very cumbersome manual processes. It’s a great opportunity to leverage third-party providers, such as RDU, to streamline and manage those gaps.

“The final stage will be the implementation, whether it be by internal build or by partnering with a solution provider, to ensure during the rest of this crisis or when the next hits, that firms don’t only keep business running as usual but that they do so efficiently in order to keep the focus on the business and not the management of their day to day data needs.”

To hear more from SmartStream RDU, and a wealth of other industry experts and technology providers, join us at the Data Management Summit Europe Virtual on 22-24 April.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Strategies and solutions for unlocking value from unstructured data

Unstructured data accounts for a growing proportion of the information that capital markets participants are using in their day-to-day operations. Technology – especially generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) – is enabling organisations to prise crucial insights from sources – such as social media posts, news articles and sustainability and company reports – that were all but...

BLOG

Making the Most of Mainframe Structured Data: Webinar Preview

Mainframes still provide the data and computational backbone of many financial institutions but some organisations are encountering challenges as they try to integrate them with newer architectures. Many are incompatible with cloud and server-based architectures as well as APIs. Work-arounds can be achieved but they require middleware that can be costly and time consuming to...

EVENT

Data Licensing Forum 2025

The Data Licensing Forum will explore industry trends, themes and specific developments relating to licensing of financial market data from Exchanges and Data Vendors.

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...