Feature
posted 1 Sep 2000 in Volume 4 Issue 1
Profiting from knowledge?
KM in the financial sector
In a sector in which business is
fundamentally founded on knowledge-based intangible assets and competencies, a
more strategic approach to KM could reap significant rewards. Robert Taylor
reflects on knowledge management priorities in the financial sector.
Has the financial
sector got the knowledge message?
Cranfield’s recent survey The Business
Value of Knowledge Exploitation found that the financial sector appears to be
leading the way in knowledge management in terms of knowledge infrastructure and
working practices. The report proposes that the reason for this might be that
“differentiation of their products and services...almost exclusively hinges
on the continuous rejuvenation of the underlying knowledge base”.
We would not
disagree with Cranfield’s proposition about the critical importance of knowledge
in financial businesses. Our practical experience in Unisys Consulting, however
– where our knowledge management practice is entirely focused on the banking and
insurance sectors – is quite different to the Cranfield findings, a valuable
contribution though they are. In our experience:
In short, financial businesses are
not, broadly speaking, acting in a way that suggests that they really believe
they are knowledge-based businesses and that the practices of knowledge
management are a vital part of achieving their missions. In truth, this
observation holds for many types of business across all sectors. The reason is
simple: Knowledge is invisible and intangible, and, in any case, it’s free. Or,
at least, these are the unspoken beliefs that have been the norm up until the
current ‘knowledge awakening’.
So what are the issues facing
financial businesses that KM should be responding to?
Business drivers for KM in the
financial sector
Our main proposition is that knowledge management should be an integral
part of how a business seeks to meet its objectives, achieve its strategies and
fulfil its mission. This is fundamentally a matter of responding to business
drivers; changes in the market place, opportunities and threats. So what are the
main business drivers in the financial sector at the moment? Financial
businesses are beset with challenges on every front:
One
financial institution has developed models that reflect what customers’
financial issues are likely to be at different stages of their life or when
faced with various prototypical life events. This leverages, shares and applies
the collective real-life knowledge and original research of the institution to
both improve its sales and provide better customer service through more accurate
positioning and targeting of product and service offers.
Unisys has been
working with various financial sector clients in different aspects of customer
knowledge. The most interesting of these are approaches to modelling customer
behaviour, which can then be used to segment the customer base, anticipate
customer actions, or as a basis to making flexible decisions about customers
(for example, lending decisions that more accurately reflect what the
institution knows about a customer, taking into account both the business
development and risk factors in a balanced manner). One example application is
the development of models of suspicious transaction patterns that, we have
proved, can be used with a high degree of accuracy to point out potential fraud
early on in the processing cycle, and so reduce losses.
One financial
institution has captured the story of its demutualisation as just such a
knowledge artefact.
Unisys has been assisting another financial institution in the
development of a ‘knowledge centre’ on Euro issues (for example, systems
conversion) that could be available to all parts of that institution as and when
they make that transition.
Unisys has recently been advising
various financial institutions in different aspects of this, including
problem/event management where, for large global banks, there is significant
potential for a better quality of service from the IT department through the
global pooling and sharing of information on potential and actual system
problems, and their solutions.
So what should a financial business be
doing in respect of managing its knowledge assets?
Real KM objectives for financial
businesses
Financial businesses need to set KM objectives that are directly
relevant to the business issues, drivers and strategies specific to them. This
means asking a different question than ‘what is KM about?’ – it means asking:
‘What can KM contribute to supporting our real business issues, drivers and
strategies?’
But
what is a relevant KM objective for a financial business? Consider the following
– just three examples of potential KM objectives under the heading of ‘customer
focus’ for a financial business:
These sorts of (proposed) objectives
(which are only examples, and only from one small part of one particular
business issue) are markedly different from the kinds of objectives commonly
being set in nascent KM programmes today, which are often more infrastructural,
addressing such generic issues as:
Taking a more focused approach to KM
as proposed here may not mean that radically different solutions will have to be
investigated. Tools such as expertise directories, intranets, document
management systems, knowledge centres, corporate histories, and so on will still
be the relevant solutions. What will be different is the manner in which they
will be used and implemented. For example, an expertise directory project may
not be about cataloguing many and various sorts of people and their interests
and skills. Rather, there may be a more deliberate focus on capturing
information about the specific subjects, skills and people relevant to a
particular business strategy – for instance, the Euro expertise directory.
Community development initiatives, rather than supporting natural communities
(or just those who are interested in taking part) may have to invest more effort
in getting together the people the company needs to have work together – perhaps
the suppliers and consumers of expertise on the Euro, in this case.
Just think – would you
say that the financial institutions that you deal with (on a personal basis) are
trusted advisors, knowledgeable in the financial issues that concern you?
Couldn’t the tools and techniques of a broad practice like KM help them be ever
more like that? And wouldn’t the business advantages be worth it?
The ‘new
KM’
Many
organisations – not only those in the financial sector – are still at the
evaluation stage of the knowledge journey and asking themselves how all the
generic things they have read, heard and seen in the hype of KM relate to their
businesses and to their situations. These same organisations are wrestling with
the issues of how to work out the business case for KM, how to get senior
management support for KM and how to get staff buy-in to KM programmes.
This is a case of ‘the
clue is in the question’. The answers to these issues and problems are tied up
in the question itself – the question of ‘what does KM mean to us, to
me?’.
If KM
initiatives are planned so as to directly address the real issues and support
the real strategies of the business then the business case will be clearer and
they will be more readily supported. Many of the same types of solutions will be
implemented; many of the same approaches will be taken as are currently being
trialed today. What will be different will be the focus put on those solutions –
they will be less infrastructural and more purposeful and specific.
The financial sector,
beset with so many issues and challenges, is ripe for this ‘new KM’ approach.
© Unisys,
2000. The opinions expressed in this article are not necessarily those of
Unisys.
Robert
Taylor is a knowledge management specialist with Unisys Consulting. He can be
contacted at: robert.m.taylor@gb.unisys.com
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