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18447913809_eb05a52028_mWe live in times of disruption. Studies show that by 2020 nearly all the world’s adult population will be connected, with each person having dozens of sensors and other devices. Hand-in-hand with this phenomenon, we will see the emergence of tools such as big data, cloud computing, IT and network virtualisation that not only substantially reduce the cost of data handling and storage, but, perhaps more crucially, will provide the tools and the means to extract new value out of data, triggering all types of digital services.

picture_joao_resende_article_2016No industry will be left untouched - from the traditionally “high tech” sectors such as telecoms, finance, retail or healthcare, to other sectors such as transportation, agriculture or mining, to name but a few. This is because we are fast reaching a full ‘digital world’, with increased blurring between the digital and the physical. As BCG * aptly describes, we are rapidly approaching the celebrated Borges Map; a fictional map conceived by the Argentinian writer Jose Luis Borges in 1946, designed with such painstaking detail that its scale was 1:1. Similarly, every entity in the physical world will soon be represented in the digital world. The fact that this utopian ideal is being approached tells us how disruptive, transformative and far-reaching the digital world and the digital transformation we are living through is.

This brings tremendous opportunities for companies, but also generates new threats, risks and unknowns. Indeed, shareholders want companies to exploit these opportunities, engage with disruptive innovation, while simultaneously, wanting the businesses to stay predictable, profitable and reliable. In short, shareholders want clean and tidy innovation!

This is a tremendous opportunity for areas such as Revenue Assurance (RA), Fraud Management (FM) or security to step up, ensuring companies are able to reinvent themselves, while coping with the new risk profile and not losing control of their businesses.

Companies can no longer afford to reduce assurance to a purely RA or FM function. They need wider and stronger competencies to protect customers, assets, contracts, processes and also revenues and margins!

This has implications on the company culture and strategy, and requires an empowered and skilled team alongside three axes:

Firstly, data driven digital services teams need to master their skills and tools to make sense of data, exploiting and extracting the most value out of the data. They also need to leverage all the data available within, or external to, the enterprise. This includes data lakes or storage repositories with interesting analytics such as customer interactions through different channels, call signaling, routing and DPI information, systems access logs, competition public data, social networks and forums data, security and fraud intelligence shared data etc.

Teams need to adapt to the new challenges that the all-IP paradigm brings, by increasingly thinking in innovative ways and collaborating within departments (e.g. security, fraud and RA), or between different companies (e.g. sharing fraud intelligence), to be able to grasp the new exploitation and arbitrage schemes that appear (e.g. OTT bypass). They must also not forget the speed and exponential nature of digital services and data enabled processes, where detecting, diagnosing and predicting quickly rightly becomes critical.

Secondly, as digital services diversify into mobile money, cloud services and M2M, more and more information needs to be gathered from the customer, thus increasing the risks associated with data protection and privacy management. In many cases, these offerings become more complex and rely on more intricate supply chains, with several different parties involved, again, raising complexity and risk. Noting that many digital services no longer hold low or zero marginal costs, margin assurance becomes more and more important.

Third and lastly, the digital transformation requires a holistic approach to the enterprise, the ability to bridge through business and system silos. Business segmentation alongside wholesale, residential, SME, corporate, several commercial-off-the-shelf and bespoke solutions at different stages of maturity, coverage and integration, all contribute to silos, segregated clusters of practices, systems, data and reporting. The need to bridge these silos and have a consolidated view of the whole enterprise becomes critical.

Customers increasingly expect to be able to do things quickly, simply, and on the move under an omni-channel paradigm, where they feel that the various channels’ experiences and processes are connected, continuous and consistent, not isolated realities. This requires additional attention to be given to each channel to ensure consistency and integrity of data, transactions and experience.

Indeed, as organisations grow and go through M&As, internal complexity tends to grow and more and more attention on the business processes is required across the enterprise: procurement and suppliers costs, HR, travel and benefits, partners and sales force incentives and workforce management. With all of this occurring under constant business reinvention, where transformational projects multiply and where strong change management monitoring is vital, control becomes paramount.

Digital transformation puts companies on the spot, as they need to reinvent and transform to innovate. For that, they need Enterprise Business Assurance (EBA) teams to step up their auditing, risk management and continuous control of their business and operations. This requires superb data skills, ability to cover a much wider range of risks, having the whole enterprise and all its business processes under control.

Are you ready for the challenge?

* BCG Perspectives April 2015, Navigating a World of Digital Disruption, by Philip Evans and Patrick Forth.

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