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

SunGard Measures the Gap Between Data Reporting and Business Intelligence

Subscribe to our newsletter

The gap between financial data reporting and business intelligence has still to be closed at many firms as they struggle to move away from after-the-fact reporting and adopt proactive and investigative reporting strategies. The gap is often exacerbated by the use of multiple systems, but it can be narrowed by improving data management, automating reporting and implementing enterprise-wide business intelligence tools.

Research conducted by SunGard Consulting Services in April 2014 among 202 senior executives at 93 financial services firms and 74 energy companies, suggests that while the importance of business intelligence is increasing, many organisations cannot deliver it successfully without improving data management, reporting techniques and business capabilities.

Headline statistics from the research survey show 51% of respondents using periodic reporting techniques and 29% making after-the-fact reports. Some 45% report using manual data extraction and data cleansing tools, and present data in spreadsheet or PDF format, and only 13% use techniques such as predictive analytics and alerts. Looking at the adoption of business intelligence, 53% of respondents take either a tactical approach or manage projects at department level, while 22% say that although projects appear to be managed at department level, they do have links to enterprise goals.

Michael Wolk, a partner in SunGard Consulting Services’ information management practice, says: “Firms should look to enhanced information management tools and methodologies to help strengthen the quality of data and analytics, as well as preempt what-if scenarios that may affect parts of the business. Incorporating a deeper level of business intelligence into business strategy and investing in the right technology can help firms move from what-happened reporting to proactive analysis, and help maximise performance.”

If this is a desired end result, many firms are just beginning on the journey, although Wolk reports positive trends along the way including good alignment between business and IT that supports joint interest in assessing how to improve data management, successful departmental business intelligence projects that act as a catalyst for broader enterprise projects, and momentum to improve data governance through activity such as the appointment of chief information officers and data owners.

Wolk says: “Developments in data governance are largely driven by regulatory requirements, but they are improving data quality and supporting better business use of data.” From a practical point of view, he concludes: “Data in multiple systems needs to be centralised in a data warehouse and it needs to be clean and consistent. Many firms have enterprise licences for analytics software such as BusinessObjects, but the analytics will only be as good as the data that is gathered and analysed.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: Managing Non-Financial Misconduct Under SMCR

Non-financial misconduct – encompassing behaviours such as bullying, sexual harassment, and discrimination is a key focus of the Senior Managers and Certification Regime (SMCR). The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has underscored that such misconduct is not only unethical but also poses significant risks to a firm’s culture and operational integrity. Recognizing the profound impact on...

BLOG

Data Fabric vs. Data Mesh: 10 Companies Provisioning Modern Data Architectures for Enterprise AI

As institutions absorb ever greater volumes of data to meet their increasingly complex operational needs and those of regulators, they face a dilemma of how to store and distribute that critical information. Fragmented legacy systems have long been an impediment to the smooth management of data and now corralling multiple-cloud configurations can be added to...

EVENT

RegTech Summit New York

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

GUIDE

Fatca – Getting to Grips with the Challenge Ahead

The industry breathed a sigh of relief when the deadline for reporting under the US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (Fatca) was pushed back to July 1, 2014. But what’s starting to look like perhaps the most significant regulation of the next 12 months may start to impact our marketplace sooner than we think, especially...