One of the greatest changes ever seen within the global financial services industry is taking place at this time. Digital transformation, artificial intelligence technology developments, changes in customer expectations and growing regulations are compelling banks and financial companies to transform themselves and innovate. The key point of this transformation is becoming an unusual yet very important aspect for the industry, Global Capability Centres (GCCs).
For many years, BFSI GCCs were perceived as support centres performing such functions as transaction processing, customer service, finance operations, etc. Their main aim was efficiency and cost savings. Today, this idea has undergone a complete change.
Contemporary BFSI GCCs have become innovation centres defining the future of global finance.
Now, all financial organizations from India such as global banks, insurance companies, investment firms, fintech players, and payments systems utilize GCCs to perform core operations. They do not implement existing processes anymore, but they create digital banking platforms, develop artificial intelligence-based risk models, enhance cybersecurity strategies and design next-generation financial products used by millions of customers around the globe.
This shift is indicative of a larger change in the way global financial services and investment firms perceive their India operations. No longer merely serving as extensions of headquarters, BFSI GCCs are turning into centres of excellence tasked with innovation, product engineering, data analytics, compliance, and digital transformations at an enterprise level.
Mr. Alouk Kumar Founder & CEO Inductus Group quoted “The future of finance will not be shaped solely in global boardrooms. It will be built in innovation labs, AI centres, and GCCs where technology, talent, and transformation converge.”
The most prominent example of such changes includes the emergence of artificial intelligence. The application of AI in finance ranges from improving fraud detection and assessing credit risks to engaging customers and streamlining regulatory compliance. Quite a lot of innovations within the field of AI come from GCCs.
From machine learning algorithms that detect abnormal transactions in real time to generative AI applications that improve customer experience, BFSI GCCs help financial institutions become faster, more intelligent, and more resilient. Many AI projects initially implemented in GCCs later become scaled across the global operations.
Another aspect in which BFSI GCCs create a significant difference is cybersecurity. As financial institutions turn into fully digital organizations, the threat environment grows larger. Cyberattacks, fraud, data breaches, and financial crimes have become serious threats for businesses across the globe.
In order to solve such problems, many banks and Financial Services firms have set up sophisticated cybersecurity operations at their GCCs. The experts constantly keep an eye on threats, design the company’s security architecture, carry out vulnerability assessment and apply technologies to safeguard billions of dollars of financial assets and critical customer information.
Just as important is the part that GCCs play in ensuring compliance and managing risks. Firms in the BFSI sector are one of the most highly-regulated sectors in the world. Managing compliance with regulations in multiple jurisdictions requires an intelligent system.
More and more BFSI GCCs make use of modern tools for advanced analytics, automation and artificial intelligence for better compliance management and governance. This helps firms manage regulatory complexity better.
Thanks to the rise of digital banking and fintech innovations, the importance of GCCs has grown even higher. Customers of today want to enjoy the service that is seamless, personalized and available all the time. In order to fulfill this expectation, banks have to keep innovating. BFSI GCCs based in India are assisting in developing mobile banking apps, online payment systems, wealth management solutions, embedded finance products and customer-centric digital experiences. Not only are these GCCs innovating but they are spearheading innovation.
In addition to driving technological innovation, BFSI GCCs have started to play a critical role in talent development. Financial institutions now gain access to the vast pool of talented individuals with skills in such disciplines as data science, cybersecurity, cloud computing, risk management, financial engineering, and artificial intelligence.
In the coming years, the strategic importance of BFSI GCCs is only expected to grow. In their efforts to leverage such cutting-edge technologies as AI, open banking, block chain, digital assets, and real-time payments, GCCs will play a critical role in designing and implementing innovative solutions.
In sum, BFSI GCCs have changed from simply increasing the operational efficiency of financial institutions to innovating and transforming the way in which banks conduct their business.
The future of finance may be global, but increasingly it is being built from India.