At large U.S. banks that disclose technology spending data, “run the bank” and mandatory change initiatives consume up to 70% of technology budgets. That leaves little to no room for building new capability from scratch.
The in-house case management solutions typically take 12 to 24 months to reach production, before accounting for integration delays, change management, and expanding project requirements. While delivery is delayed, case backlogs grow, teams remain dependent on manual processes, and regulatory risk continues to rise.
When a financial institution buys a solution, it goes live in weeks. Teams can begin processing cases on day one, enabling faster resolution times, fewer regulatory issues, and earlier return on investment.
Purpose-built platforms come with compliance requirements already embedded and aligned with how U.S. financial institutions operate. They are designed based on years of implementation experience across similar institutions, ensuring they reflect real-world practices. As a result, they are better equipped to support day-to-day operational needs.
Replicating this internally requires hiring compliance and engineering specialists or bringing in consultants, who can translate regulatory requirements into technical specifications. Most institutions lack both capabilities in-house, which slows development, increases costs, and makes long-term sustainability more challenging.
When an institution builds internally, there is no external partner accountable when systems fall short, break, or need to adapt. The responsibility rests entirely with the institution.
With a purpose-built platform, that dynamic changes. The vendor carries contractual obligations, dedicated support structures, and a direct reputational stake in the institution’s success. This also allows internal teams to stay focused on higher-value strategic priorities, such as product development or customer escalations, rather than maintaining systems that were never their core competency.