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Analytics alone wonโ€™t spot bad customers: Expert

Analytics software companies will tell you their solutions can show almost everything about their customers โ€” and the more data the better.

But senior executives from Canadian financial institutions were warned Thursday that IT alone wonโ€™t stop con artists, thieves and possibly terrorists from ruining companies.

People still have to look at the data and spot suspicious behaviour, Dan Soto, chief compliance officer of North Carolina-based Ally Financial, told a customer conference in Toronto put on by business intelligence software company SAS Institute.

โ€œIt only takes one customer to bring down an organizationโ€ by laundering money, he said, citing scandals in banks in the U.S., Mexico and Russia.

And he admitted that Ally, a SAS customer which needed a US$17 billion bailout from Washington when financial institutions there took a bath, is no exception to problems. SAS sells business analytic software to major banks and insurance companies.

โ€œWhile youโ€™re gathering all that customer data one of the things we need to thing about how do we become integrated with what youโ€™re selling to how we make sure we understand who our customer is.โ€

And to prove his point he showed a Minnesota driverโ€™s licence with a womanโ€™s name and address. The photo on the licence, however, showed a man and a woman. An obvious fake, yet a bank employee accepted it as ID and gave the woman an account.

Soto also noted that every presentation at Thursdayโ€™s conference was about how to get customers and watching their transactions,ย โ€œbut true good risk management starts at the forefront โ€” who are these individuals?โ€ he asked.

In an interview later he expanded on his warning, saying โ€œwe need to be diligent and not think that technology is going to be the answer for us in ferreting out risk. People still have to look at the information and make decisions.โ€

โ€œIts not just about buying technology. Itโ€™s still about understanding your business, your customers, your processes, who your people are, what their skill sets are in mining risks. Technology should be the enabler that helps you be better at everything from selling to the customer to having more risk management around that customer.โ€

By coincidence on Sunday he was at a conference where he recalled the U.S. comptroller of currency complained there were โ€œmassive failures in technology. IT, which should be in the forefront of risk management, isnโ€™t working. Weโ€™re fighting the last war, not the nextโ€ because the massive amount of data being collected forces financial institutions to look back into the information they have, not look ahead.

Financial institutions should be thinking about the possible threats from digital currencies like Bitcoin, Soto quoted the official as saying. He also quoted the U.S. deputy attorney general at the some conference complaining that risk management programs of financial institutions not being well-funded. Financial institutions have to integrate risk management into their marketing divisions, Soto said.

Instead governance, risk and compliance software platforms often sit isolated, which doesnโ€™t help find dangerous customers. Compliance and marketing departments often analyze the same customer data, he said. So on behalf of compliance departments, he urged marketers to โ€œlet us in with you.โ€

โ€œI heard a lot today about the uses of technology to sell. But I think really we need to focus technology for to understand our customers and what theyโ€™re doing โ€ฆ We have to keep testing and searching for new patterns in banking.โ€


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