
Introduction The
exponential growth of data across the financial services environment is
providing both numerous opportunities and numerous challenges for established
Financial Services Industry (FSI) businesses, including challenges for
traditional approaches and IT infrastructure. The financial services space is
underpinned by a huge number of transactions of many kinds, with research
estimating that, worldwide, non-cash B2B transactions will increase to
200billion per year by 2025 from 121.5billion in 2021 . These transactions
generate data. It is estimated that 1.7 MB of data is created every second for
every person worldwide2 , and a considerable proportion of data generated and
collected by organizations is unstructured (with the global datasphere
estimated to be 80% unstructured data by 20253 ). With the wider adoption of
digitalization ongoing, and data being generated in more locations in a wide
range of formats, organizations are facing the reality of needing to collect,
collate, clean and format fragmented data before they can even begin to drive
value and insight from it. Hybrid Cloud solutions are increasingly providing
FSI organizations with the flexibility to store and manage this data according
to their specific needs and requirements.
The amount of
data that exists across all parts of the FSI ecosystem offers opportunities to
improve risk management and drive operational efficiency. FSI organizations are
shifting towards Machine Learning (ML) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) in
order to better leverage this data in privacy-centric and fully compliant ways.
Traditionally, this has been done using on-premises based solutions. However,
these solutions have increasingly caused challenges, including cost of
operation and ongoing upgrades combined with technology debt, and less scalable
deployment models.
Across the
FSI space we are seeing a shift towards hybrid, flexible approaches that give
users access to all the power of public Cloud without giving up control of the
data centre, which is vital in privacy-centric financial organizations.
This shift is
illustrated by IDC research, which predicts that by the end of 2022 over 90% of
enterprises worldwide will be relying on an infrastructure mix of on-premises private Clouds, public Clouds, and legacy platforms to meet their
infrastructure needs.