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The cost of doing bare minimum in digital banking

Banks that stop at digital access lose more than efficiency. Customers disengage, journeys break, and growth opportunities slip away.

by Shyam Mohan

5 mins read

Introduction

In the Middle East, mobile penetration exceeds 90% and customers live in one of the most connected markets in the world. Governments are pushing ambitious transformation agendas, from Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 to the UAE’s Smart City strategies. 

Most banks in the region have made the right first move: digitizing access through apps, portals, and online forms. But expectations have outpaced interfaces. 

Customers now expect seamless, personalized experiences that anticipate their needs and feel effortless across every channel. For CXOs, the question is no longer whether to modernize. The real challenge is doing it before costs compound and competitors take the lead.

 

The hidden cost of standing still

On the surface, maintaining layered front ends and aging back ends looks cheaper than investing in a full modernization. In reality, every “quick” integration and customization adds complexity and creates technical debt. Over time, this burden erodes agility, drives up costs, and traps IT teams in maintenance mode instead of innovation.

It is not only the systems that suffer. The best talent wants to design the future, not keep patching the past. In a competitive market for tech skills, that matters.

 

Technical debt grows with every added point solution or customization, increasing costs and reducing agility. Discover the composable approach.

Where the money really leaks

The cost of doing the bare minimum is not just in operating expenses. It is also in missed opportunities. Here is where GCC banks feel it most:

  • Integration tax: Tool sprawl and channel silos drive up cost and slow every change.

  • Journey friction: Customers drop off when journeys are non-intuitive, disconnected, and cannot be resumed across channels. Too often they are forced to re-enter the same data every time, leading to frustration and abandonment.

  • Missed moments: Without contextual, data-driven journeys, banks fail to activate the right product at the right time. From a customer perspective, this creates disengagement since the bank feels like just another utility rather than a trusted partner.

  • Innovation throttle: AI stuck in pilots never scales to improve KPIs, keeping time-to-market long and conversion low.time-to-market long and conversion low.

     

Customer expectations have moved on

Today’s customers expect experiences that are personalized, continuous, and relevant. They want to manage life, not just money: saving for a trip, running a business, or investing for the future, often all at once. They want to be understood in every role they play, not treated as separate identities. They want services that adapt to their goals and journeys that do not restart when they switch from mobile to branch.

Meanwhile, fintechs, telcos, and digital-first banks are delivering exactly this: faster onboarding, embedded finance, and lifestyle-aligned services that make traditional banking feel outdated.

73% of banking customers expect personalized support (Source: Salesforce).

From access to intelligence

The first wave of digital transformation was about access. The next wave is about experience that is intelligent, orchestrated, and consistent across every line of business.

Right now, only 10–20% of banks have scaled AI beyond pilots (Source: McKinsey). That means valuable customer insights are trapped in isolated systems and never activated at scale.

A modular platform architecture changes this equation. It simplifies the technology landscape, allows flexibility and reuse, and creates long-term innovation potential. It brings together:

  • Engagement Fabric:  Prebuilt, reusable journeys that work seamlessly across mobile, web, and branch.

  • Intelligence Fabric: AI that personalizes, predicts, and acts in real time.

  • Integration Fabric: Unified connections to your existing core, without costly rip-and-replace.

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Quick fact: In many banks, a significant share of IT capacity, often more than half, is spent on meeting regulatory requirements. The right platform can take on that burden, freeing your teams to focus on innovation.

The takeaway for banks: the cost of waiting keeps rising

Every year spent maintaining the “minimum viable” approach compounds the expense. Operating costs increase. Customers drift. Competitors launch the experiences you could have built.

Modernization is more than a technology refresh. It’s an investment in agility, relevance, and growth. If you’re ready to stop paying the “minimum digital” tax, now is the time to start shaping what comes next.