Subscribe to Updates in Financial & Business Services

RSS By Email

RSS By RSS

Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Subscribe in Bloglines


The Expertise Imperative and Compliance Technology
Access to a diverse array of specialized expert inputs drives superior decisions in every organizational context: within corporations, by investors and consultancies, and within nonprofits. When decision makers are confident of their decision inputs, they can respond more quickly and creatively to challenges and opportunities.




This page may include content provided by Council Members, your access to which is subject to the Terms of Use.
Find Out More

October 10, 2007

Signs of entrepreneurship are appearing in the bank tech world

This analysis is solely the work of the author. It has not been edited or endorsed by GLG.
Analysis By:
Art Gillis, President, Computer Based Solutions, Inc.Art Gillis 
President, Computer Based Solutions, Inc.
Implications: Bank Technology has seen an expansion in new technology that has been built on old technology. It is not just the bigger organizations but the smaller entrepreneurs that are in the running.

Analysis: Fifteen to twenty years ago, it would have been quite ordinary to observe the large number of start-up companies based on a single-product offering under the broad heading of bank tech systems. Major events fed that creativity, including the availability of PCs, document imaging, Internet banking, check clearing legislation, telecom speeds and powerful database management systems. In recent years, however, the scene switched to a different kind of world - that of consolidation. Big companies got bigger, while small privately owned companies disappeared, at least in name. Now, in my view, there appears to be a resurgence of new companies entering the marketplace, so new that some of them are hitting “my shores prior to taking the beach.” Sorry for that weak analogy, but I’ve been glued to the TV watching “The War” these days. There’s an interesting characteristic describing the new start-ups these days that sort of satisfies a general observation that describes technology as, “We’re done.” Today’s entrepreneurs are responding to better ways of doing the old stuff rather than creating products to address first-time situations. Stay tuned. Automation in Banking - 2008 (now in the planning stage) will have more than 92 companies in it. The giant will still have 26,000 or more employees, but there will be a few companies with 6 employees.


Report a Concern

GLG News: What Experts Think Is Important





Analytics