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Masters of Understatement

Masters of Understatement

By:  Lawrence Moule  On: 31 Oct 2007 For: CIO Canada Creator

When it comes to providing account statements to its personal deposit customers, RBC Royal Bank would rather not put it in writing – writing on paper, that is. Instead, they’re doing it electronically, saving the company over ten million dollars annually, and keeping a mountain of paper out of the nation’s landfills. Here’s an inside look at the bank’s PDA Paper project, winner of a 2006 Canadian Information Productivity Award.

Improving the customer experience, making it easier to do business, reducing operating costs – accomplishing any of these things would usually qualify an IT project as a success. It’s rare that one project can do all three, and rarer still if the project creates unexpected benefits throughout the organization.

RBC Royal Bank had the extraordinary good fortune to see one of its IT projects become its own multiplier effect. The bank’s original intention was to improve the automated production of clients’ personal deposit account statements. But the project produced so many benefits that it has changed the bank’s IT culture and revolutionized the way it delivers information to clients.

Implemented between December 2004 and January 2006, the Personal Deposit Account (PDA) Paper Statements project was a make-or-break initiative for a new business architecture implemented throughout Royal Bank under the direction of Marty Lippert, vice chairman and group head, global technology and operations.

Development of that architecture began in 2003 and continues today. It was designed to improve the experience that the bank delivers to clients through the innovative use of technology.

The architecture follows the principles of a service-oriented architecture and is composed of distinct tiers – data, applications, and clients – permitting isolation of the business logic from database components and the presentation layer. This means that independent technology components can be created, distributed and reused, reducing development costs and cutting the time to market for new client services.

“This cross-functional initiative allowed us to create a technology environment that is more flexible and scales across the enterprise, through the use of IT best practices, to deliver an enhanced client and employee experience,” Lippert says.

The first test for this new architecture was to improve communications with RBC’s personal-deposit clients, and particularly to reduce the amount of paper they receive.

Before the project, RBC produced and mailed more than 60 million statements to personal-deposit account customers every year. The inclusion of cancelled cheques in each statement added to the administrative burden. Customers with more than one account received multiple, separate mailings.

Today RBC offers these customers the option of receiving their statements in a way that reduces the environmental burden and increases convenience. Clients can choose to sign up at www.rbcroyalbank.com to receive electronic statements. They can also choose whether or not to have multiple account statements consolidated on to a single statement.

Cancelled cheques are no longer returned with mailed PDA statements. Clients can choose, however, to have paper images of the cheques included with their statements. Through an “electronic filing cabinet” capability, clients can store images of statements and cheques in an electronic archive for up to seven years.


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Lawrence Moule Lawrence Moule is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
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