BIAN finalises Service Landscape 4.0 — a worldwide standard for core banking technology

Combined work of over 50 international banks and tech experts now ready for implementation in global banks

Frankfurt am Main — May 12, 2015 — Independent not-for-profit association, the Banking Industry Architecture Network (BIAN) has completed the development of a globally standardised IT architecture design for banks.

Following seven years of collaborative work between international banks, vendors, service providers and academic institutions, BIAN’s banking technology framework is ready to be put into practice at banks around the globe.

Designed by members including SAP, Microsoft, IBM, UBS, PNC and ABN-AMRO, BIAN’s Service Landscape defines the standard business capabilities that make up a bank — grouped into Service Domains. By identifying the information dependencies (known as Service Operations) between these business building blocks, BIAN is creating a simplified solution to update / replace core IT systems and overcoming banking legacy issues.

Service Landscape 4.0 finalises the identification of Service Domains and takes the number of defined Service Operations from 375 to nearly 2,000. BIAN anticipates that more Service Operations will come to light as banks put the framework into practice. The model moves away from the traditional siloed approach to core banking, which relies on distinguishing between capabilities such as consumer, corporate and capital market products. With consumer demand for ‘always on’ banking technology moving into the business sector, BIAN’s model emphasises that technology capabilities need to be shared across corporate, business and consumer functions.

The Service Operations will provide building blocks for categorising Application Programming Interfaces (APIs). A set of functions that allow two different pieces of software to interact with one another, APIs have been a hot topic in the banking industry since Chancellor George Osborne announced an initiative to encourage banks to open their APIs in the pre-election Budget — with the aim of encouraging technology collaboration across banks and alternative financial technology players. BIAN members will now turn their attention to identifying how the Service Landscape can support this from a core banking perspective.

Hans Tesselaar, executive director BIAN commented: “BIAN members have worked tirelessly to develop this global banking IT standard that will support banks to overcome legacy IT issues and drastically cut the cost of technology integration. To have finalised the model ready for implementation into banks around the globe is a momentous occasion.

“By implementing this on an industry and world-wide scale, banks will be able to develop and on-board innovative technology offerings without battling through aging or tangled enterprise architecture and at lower integration costs.”

Steve Van Wyk, CIO PNC Bank commented: “We understand that to compete in the future we are going to need a core banking platform with agility, speed to market and speed to adapt. The only way for that to happen is if we collaborate on an industry standard such as BIAN.”

About BIAN
Established in 2008, the Banking Industry Architecture Network (BIAN) is an independent, member owned, not-for-profit association, designed to build and promote a common architectural framework for banking interoperability issues. BIAN’s goal is to define SOA and semantic definitions for IT services in the banking industry. The community focuses on creating a standard semantic banking services landscape, while ensuring consistent service definitions, levels of detail and boundaries. This will help banks to achieve a reduction of integration costs and use the advantages of a service-oriented architecture.

Financial institutions, software vendors, and system integrators, along with technology partners, are invited to join the association and play a collaborative role with other industry leaders in defining, building and implementing next-generation banking platforms.

Members: ABN AMRO, ACI, Achmea, Advance Banking Solution Emirates, Allshare, Asseco Group, Atos, Axxiome, Banco Galicia, Bangkok Bank, Capgemini, Capital Banking Solutions, Carnegie Mellon University, CIBC,  CGI, Cognizant, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Commercial Bank of Qatar, COREtransform, Credit Suisse, CSC, DBS, , Deutsche Postbank, Diasoft, Erste Group, Digital Payment Partners, EVRY, EY, FERNBACH, First Niagara Bank, FIS, HCL, IBM, IDRBT, ifb group, Infosys, ING, innobis AG, KB Bank, KfW Bankengruppe, Microsoft, NOMURA, Nucleus Software, PNC Financial Services Group, Rabobank, SAP, SCI Tanzania, Singapore Management University, Société Générale, Sopra Banking Software,  SunGard, SWIFT, TCS Bancs, Temenos,  UBS, UniCredit Group, University of St. Gallen, Zafin.