Regional banks are an essential part of the financial system, providing personalized services and supporting local economies. However, they also face many challenges in today’s competitive and dynamic environment, such as regulatory compliance, cybersecurity, digital transformation, and talent acquisition and retention. According to McKinsey, financial institutions can build their future workforce in many ways by upskilling, reskilling, building a scalable learning infrastructure, investing in a learning culture, and ensuring talent developers.
McKinsey fails to also consider leveraging talent resource sharing, which is a collaborative approach to accessing and utilizing human capital across multiple organizations. Talent resource sharing can help regional banks achieve operational efficiency, cost savings, risk mitigation, and innovation by pooling resources and expertise with other banks or external partners where workers share similar skill sets.
However, talent resource sharing also requires careful planning and execution to ensure alignment of goals, expectations, and incentives among the parties involved. Moreover, talent resource sharing may not be sufficient to meet all the talent needs of regional banks, especially in areas where specialized skills or experience are required.
To address concerns to meet rising costs associated with compliance related to the Bank Secrecy Act and anti-money laundering and economic sanctions regulations (BSA/AML), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB), the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA), the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and the U.S. Department of Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) published a joint statement in October 2018. The jist of their statement concluded that banks should consider entering into collaborative arrangements to share resources making their BSA/AML programs more efficient and cost-effective.
According to the interagency guidance, “Collaborative arrangements involve two or more banks with the objective of participating in a common activity or pooling resources to achieve a common goal. Banks use collaborative arrangements to pool human, technology, or other resources to reduce costs, increase operational efficiencies, and leverage specialized expertise.”
Renewed focus on this initiative could significantly reduce BSA/AML compliance costs. According to Stout, “Apart from the obvious cost benefits, resource sharing also allows access to specialized expertise that may be expensive or unnecessary for each bank to develop in-house.”
What is a Talent Community and how does it help?
Talent communities are networks of independent professionals available to place on a temporary assignment with an organization. Communities can be built and maintained through various platforms and channels, such as social media, online forums, events, webinars, newsletters, blogs, podcasts, etc.
Talent communities can offer many benefits to both regional banks and independent workers.
For regional banks, talent communities can help them:
For independent workers, talent communities can help them:
Talent resource sharing at regional banks using a dedicated Talent Community is a promising strategy that can help overcome some of the key challenges they face in today’s market.
To build effective talent communities, regional banks need to adopt a strategic and proactive approach that involves: