A Genai Roadmap For Fis
A Genai Roadmap For Fis
A Genai Roadmap For Fis
Institutions
NOVEMBER 13, 2023
By Stiene Riemer, Michael Strauß, Ella Rabener, Jeanne Kwong Bickford, Pim Hilbers, Nipun
Kalra, Aparna Kapoor, Julian King, Silvio Palumbo, Neil Pardasani, Marc Pauly, Kirsten Rulf, and Michael
Widowitz
In just a decade, artificial intelligence (AI) has transformed from a promising research topic into an
accessible and pivotal technology at the center of a new industrial revolution. AI is reshaping
fundamental processes and functions across entire industries, from drug development and airline
scheduling to supply chain optimization and medical imaging. AI is no longer a concept of the future—
it’s a game-changer today. And companies that move ahead decisively and strategically with AI will
gain significant lasting advantages within their industries.
The rise of generative AI (GenAI) has enriched the broader AI toolkit, accelerating opportunities for
financial institutions to create new value with AI. The ability of GenAI models to digest (understand)
and generate (converse) in plain language makes AI capabilities more universally accessible, extending
the reach of AI assets to nontechnical users throughout organizations.
FI executives should take the arrival of this new phase of technology as an opportunity to commit to AI
and GenAI as key drivers of the industry’s future direction.
In this article, we chart a roadmap for this journey, from integrating GenAI into existing frameworks to
reimagining traditional operations through a complete AI transformation. In the rapidly changing AI
landscape, establishing a firm people strategy is as critical as adeptly navigating the challenges of
governance and regulation. And because the technology progresses daily, a forward-looking AI vision is
imperative for financial leaders shaping the future.
Many people in the financial sector informally use the term AI to refer to a subset of AI techniques that
focus on predictive decision-making models. (See Exhibit 2.) Over the past decade, this form of AI has
risen to prominence in FIs primarily because it addresses various prediction and classification
challenges that are pivotal to banking and insurance, such as risk monitoring, optimal pricing, and
product propensity modeling. We refer to this form of AI as predictive AI.
GenAI and predictive AI are powerful tools, but they serve fundamentally different purposes.
Consequently, using them is not an either-or question. A bank’s AI strategy will need to include both of
them going forward, harnessing their respective strengths in different ways.
One way to think of how predictive and generative AI complement each other is on the model of the
two halves of the human brain. (See Exhibit 3.) Predictive AI is comparable to the left side of the brain,
Rather than negating the fundamentals of existing AI strategies, GenAI adds a new skill set to the mix.
Accordingly, leaders should lean in and consider how GenAI can enhance and extend their current AI
approaches by opening up new opportunities for AI-driven impact.
Many people may initially associate GenAI in banking and insurance with customer service chatbots,
but the technology’s versatility extends far beyond these applications to encompass tasks such as
automated financial analysis and AI-assisted code development. Numerous global banks are exploring
such uses for GenAI models (either built in-house or sourced as a service), and industry giants such as
Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, American Express, and Wells Fargo are already starting to go live
with their solutions.
To take full advantage of these new GenAI opportunities, financial institutions must sharpen their
methods for identifying, prioritizing, and incubating initiatives that are likely to have the greatest
positive impact on value generation, customers and employees, and quality. Two guiding principles
The same holds true for GenAI. A recent study by the BCG Henderson Institute, in collaboration with
leading academics, found that GenAI excels at tasks such as creative product innovation and that
human efforts to improve or enhance model outputs in these areas often backfired and led to worse
results. On the other hand, for tasks falling outside the technology’s current capabilities, such as
solving business problems, GenAI underperformed against humans, more often than not hindering the
performance of study participants who leveraged the technology.
In other words, GenAI performs best when humans act as complementors of GenAI output, taking over
tasks that fall outside AI’s domain of expertise (as in the predictive AI example of credit scoring). But
when humans act as enhancers—taking the output and trying to make it better—they can significantly
diminish the value of using AI. (See Exhibit 5.)
Experimental Discipline
However, the past decade of AI growth and AI experimentation has shown clearly that experimentation
can easily get out of hand. A broad “survival of the fittest” approach—that is, launching a large array
of small use cases to see which few succeed and flourish—often yields disappointing results. The most
effective AI strategies involve conducting selective experiments in controlled laboratory-style testing
environments. This approach enables leaders to use insights gained from the experiments to pinpoint
a small number of high-impact AI opportunities and rally the organization around them.
As GenAI solutions evolve rapidly, the need for continuous experimentation will remain critical to
harnessing their full potential. At the same time, though, a disciplined approach to experimentation is
essential.
Beyond Tweaking—Transformation
The big wins from AI consistently come from broad transformations that involve rethinking the way an
entire process works as part of an AI landscape. An end-to-end approach isn’t a matter of inserting AI
at every step, but rather of redesigning processes from the ground up with both AI and human roles in
mind for optimized value.
The vast operations of FIs contain a powerful synergy waiting to be unlocked. By leveraging predictive
AI and GenAI in concert with human expertise, FIs can achieve enhanced process efficiency and
effectiveness—an impact greater than the sum of the parts.
• Creative and Expressive Tasks. These right brain tasks, such as creating the content and
designing visuals for the customer offer, are better suited for GenAI.
These two simple examples can form the core of a modern hyperpersonalized product marketing
campaign. Predictive AI and GenAI work hand in hand to automate most campaign tasks end-to-end,
from selecting the target customer to deciding on the many parameters and variables of an offering to
writing a tailored message and inserting custom-generated images. But even as AI streamlines many
aspects of the workflow, humans remain integral as complementors, supervising the process and
dealing with exceptions that require human expertise beyond AI’s capability.
Golden Patterns
Although numerous constellations of AI use are possible, many big opportunities that lie within end-to-
end workflows—in particular, opportunities that marry predictive AI and GenAI in complementary
ways—follow basic patterns.
In legacy processes based on human expertise, a human sifts through the information, evaluates it,
comes to a decision, and then takes action. But each of these stages in the pattern is an opportunity
for predictive AI and GenAI to team up with the human.
Depending on the specific context, the first step (process information) might offer an opportunity to
use GenAI to synthesize and condense large amounts of information into easily digestible summaries,
or to engage the power of predictive AI to narrow the field of choices by extracting targeted insights
from large data sets.
In the second step (evaluate/decide), a predictive AI model can reliably make automated decisions on
cases that lie within its domain of expertise (typically the lion’s share of cases to be decided) and route
The third step (take creative action), whether it involves composing a loan rejection letter, a suspicious
activity report, or a response to a customer’s question, can often be turned over to a GenAI model—
for full automation of simple and/or non-mission-critical cases, or at least for preprocessing of
repetitive elements when the occasional imprecision of GenAI is a risk to full automation.
Repetitive, high-volume workflows that follow a golden pattern of this sort in one or more places are
game-changing opportunities to transform the process end-to-end.
But time and again we see instances where softer success factors—the target operating model and its
organizational structures, the approach to AI talent and skills management, and the change
management that must accompany any transformation—are underrepresented and underfunded
within bank’s AI strategies and prove to be the most critical success factors.
To adjust to this change, FIs must be bold in rethinking people-driven processes and reimagining whole
functions. This effort will require the creation of more interdisciplinary teams with embedded data,
business analysis, and legal capabilities; the implementation of a flatter and more agile structure for
Finally, a platform operating model is critical to supporting successful AI adoption. An elevated market
orientation with greater ability to rapidly deploy people, processes, and data will support faster and
more assertive business model innovation and disruption. Cross-functional teams with end-to-end
ownership of products, journeys, and services will support reimagining whole processes, and the
platform operating model’s ability to drive scalability with standardization and without compromising
on customization will be a key enabler.
• Roles that build AI such as technology specialists who create and monitor AI models and
support tech platforms, leveraging deep technical capabilities
• Roles that shape AI such as functional experts who direct AI operations to deliver business
outcomes and integrate models into business processes
• Roles that use AI such as practitioners who work with outputs from AI models, interpreting
resulting content and data to deliver value to customers and employees
• Roles that govern AI such as specialists who monitor AI output to ensure that the software
drives returns and to verify that the system uses tech safely and ethically
GenAI will have a high degree of impact on certain functions, including marketing, customer service,
legal, and software development. These functions are likely to see extensive automation, resulting in
significant opportunities for cost reduction, demand generation via higher-quality service, and the
ability to focus resources on higher-value tasks.
Financial institutions must be pragmatic about implementing changes. This entails identifying which
roles have the highest value to their particular GenAI strategy and then developing an appropriate
value-added talent plan. (See Exhibit 7.) To manage the transition to GenAI well across all functions,
executives must integrate GenAI directly into their workforce planning process, defining skills required
in the future state, assessing current workforce potential, devising strategies for filling supply-demand
gaps, and supporting comprehensive culture and change management to inform the organization’s
“build, buy, or borrow” talent strategies.
The first and second regimes are the upcoming ASEAN Guide in AI Governance and Ethics (a guiding
framework) and, much more importantly, the EU’s AI Act (a risk-based consumer protection law that is
the first horizontal law on AI in the world). The EU AI Act classifies predictive AI and GenAI
applications into four risk categories. Applications that fall into the “unacceptable risk” category will be
banned from the European market, while applications that fall into the “high-risk” category will be
subject to pre- and post-deployment barriers and obligations. Common predictive AI creditworthiness
assessments will likely be high-risk applications, as will GenAI-powered customer support chatbots. Still
in its final negotiation stages, the EU AI Act is supposed to reach final form by the end of 2023 or early
2024 and, after a grace period, will apply to all products in the European market. Failure to conform to
its requirements may result in fines of up to 7% of global annual turnover.
The third regime is the US regulators’ approach, which currently aims to adapt existing regulations
rather than to create new laws, and which takes a more national-security-driven perspective on GenAI
With appropriate guardrails in place to guide AI developers and users, companies should be able to
deploy and quickly scale even rapidly changing technologies, with clear controls on the risks and with
high regulatory compliance. These guardrails should center on a framework that ensures alignment of
AI development and operation with the bank’s purpose and values while still delivering transformative
business impact. We call this approach responsible AI. (See Exhibit 9.)
A holistic and agile responsible AI framework must include five key components:
• Strategy—a comprehensive AI strategy linked to the firm's values as well as to its risk strategy
and ethical principles
• Processes—rigorous processes put in place to monitor and review products to ensure that they
meet responsible AI criteria
• Culture—strong understanding among all staff, including AI developers and users, of their roles
and duties in upholding responsible AI, and strict adherence to them
A recent BCG study in collaboration with MIT Sloan Management Review found that organizations
that successfully integrate responsible AI practices into the full AI product life cycle realize more
meaningful benefits. In fact, the likelihood of making full use of the benefits of predictive AI nearly
triples, jumping from 14% to 41%, when companies become leaders in responsible AI.
The rise of AI in the workplace will undoubtedly surface complex and pressing questions related to
human-AI collaboration and will probably elicit strong positions from workers’ unions on process
changes and technology implementation. Questions will arise that the new AI regulations do not
answer. But executives who prepare for this eventuality now by developing a holistic RAI framework
will have a critical advantage and will set up their AI transformations for success.
The temptation to wait and see may be strong, but too much is at stake to play the short game.
Executives must make investigating and adopting AI, including GenAI, a transformational priority for
their organizations, taking a medium- to long-term perspective in their AI strategies, their HR planning,
and their approach to building a robust governance framework around the technology. Players that
actively plan today for the impending AI revolution in their ways of working will be at a decisive
advantage going forward.
Michael Strauß
MANAGING DIRECTOR & SENIOR PARTNER
Cologne
Ella Rabener
MANAGING DIRECTOR & PARTNER, BCG X
Berlin
Pim Hilbers
MANAGING DIRECTOR & PARTNER
Amsterdam
Nipun Kalra
MANAGING DIRECTOR & PARTNER
Mumbai - Nariman Point
Aparna Kapoor
PARTNER
Singapore
Julian King
MANAGING DIRECTOR & PARTNER, BCG GAMMA
Sydney
Neil Pardasani
MANAGING DIRECTOR & SENIOR PARTNER
Los Angeles
Marc Pauly
PARTNER & DIRECTOR
Frankfurt
Kirsten Rulf
PARTNER & ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR
Berlin
Michael Widowitz
MANAGING DIRECTOR & PARTNER
Vienna
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