Catch Me If You Can
Catch me if you can: A new world of ever accelerating transactions
July/August edition, 2007: One word explains why accelerating remittance processing and payments is appealing for any business: cash. The faster the process, the more cash a company can call in on outstanding invoices. Apply that to a corporation with annual revenues of a few billion dollars, as some of Westpac’s Global Transactional banking clients generate, and it can boost a company’s working capital by literally billions. And what engine could power this? Not just technology and not just a bank, but a potent mix of the two, trained on achieving Straight Through Processing. Liam Tung takes a peek into a new benchmark for accelerated transactional banking.
Since 2003 Westpac’s Global Transactional Banking (GTB) division has been championing the concept of Straight Through Processing (STP). During this time it has proven to customers its method of wringing out efficiencies in the accounts receivable process can and does make a significant impact on financial performance. To achieve this, it has secured partnerships with best-of-breed technology providers, QM Technologies, and has utilized its own technology subsidiary, QValent. It has also taken a customer-approach that has caught the attention of competitors and major corporations alike.
The service being offered to Westpac’s transactional banking customers is both old and new. Large and small imaging bureaus have long offered outsourced mail-capture, workflow and document management technologies to streamline the accounts receivable process. The difference with Westpac’s “Locked Box and EFT Solution” is that it dovetails with the transactional banking services it already delivers. In conjunction with QValent’s Present and Pay solution and QM Technologies’ mail capture technologies, the service wraps itself around the entire accounts receivable process. The goal from a processing perspective is to achieve maximum automation; the fewer hands that touch physical documents, the better. From a financial perspective, Westpac’s Head of Global Transactional Banking Scott Southall says the prime goal is to accelerate the accounts receivable process to boost a customer’s working capital.
To its advantage, Westpac’s GTB client list is perhaps one of the most qualified in the country. It only services organisations generating over $400 million in annual revenue and the sheer scale of its customers’ lend themselves to sizeable efficiency gains where there is opportunity to tighten processes. For organizations looking to streamline the back office, the appeal of Westpac’s pre-fabricated infrastructure is high. And while the transition to such a model can be a huge and complex task, as was the case with Orica, the potential gains are too enticing to ignore.
Southall says, “For many businesses there are 60 days between sending out the invoice and receiving that remittance. What we do is help our customers receive it faster, which in turn impacts their working capital. For our customers that can be as much as a billion dollars in unprocessed remittances; reducing that by 30 days equates to a lot of money.”
The service aims to reduce a company’s DSO or “Days Sales Outstanding”, an accounting metric used to illustrate the impact outstanding invoices has on business performance. A low DSO means a company takes fewer days to collect its accounts receivable while a high DSO means a company is slow in collecting payments. The high DSO means the business is selling on credit, which for Westpac’s customers can mean a huge opportunity cost if that cash could be used to greater effect elsewhere in the business.
Taking content technology to new places
“Our goal is to take what’s been content technology and apply it to business problems to achieve results for our clients,” says Southall. “We change their cost structure by changing their capital structure.”
It’s interesting to listen to the New Yorker speak, not only for his accent, but because he is one of a few that are equally proficient at talking tech as he is finance. He makes a perfect ambassador for enterprise content management (ECM) technologies, particularly at a time when ECM vendors are seeking ways to express how content and technology should be deployed. That is, where it has the greatest impact on revenue. The 38 year old only recently moved to Australia from New York where spent the previous eight years as the managing director of BearingPoint, USA. With this experience and in his current role, few are so well positioned to talk first hand about the relationship between content, technology and revenue.
On the other hand, championing ECM technologies is not his job. Southall’s task is to assure his customers that the processes Westpac have engineered are, as he calls them, “bullet proof”. He openly admits a major challenge is that clients need to become comfortable with the notion of entrusting an external party to deliver its own revenue. Fortunately, these customers have often been Westpac’s customers for a number of years. The entrepreneurial approach taken by Westpac and its willingness to invest in creating the infrastructure to deliver such a service has won it new customers and industry accolades. At least this was the case with Orica when it recently put out a tender for a transactional banking partner.
Southall says, “In any outsourcing situation, there is always a concern and the closer that is to the revenue the greater the concern; that’s why testing is so crucial. We take the key issue, solve it, prove it and then the client understands the true implications. There’s always a sense of disbelief until they see it working.”
Besides making a difference to its customers, the service has become a major differentiator for the bank. It has become a benchmark case-study and industry accolades include Westpac’s three year reign in the Peter Lee Associates awards for “overall relationship strength” and “value added services”. While the awards are for the unique service, Southall believes the underlying factor is actually Westpac’s ‘different way of thinking’. Already further down this path in delivering such a service than its competitors, Southall has the luxury of challenging Westpac’s competitors to step up the plate. But can they catch up and if so will they be able to do it as well?
He believes that different way of thinking is actually the manifestation of Westpac’s customer-approach, work culture and knowledge of common challenges its customers face in various industries.
“In corporate institutional banking, customers are not looking to be told what to do,” says Southall. “We want to understand our customers’ business and build sustainable partnerships to make our customers’ business practices better.” Within Westpac itself, Southall says he has been impressed by the collaborative culture, which stood in stark contrast his experiences in the US. He says, “You know, coming from New York in financial services, it was a very mercenary place. I was surprised to find it very different at Westpac.”
Then there is the knowledge his division has acquired over the years of doing business with large corporations. Southall says, “We have the advantage of seeing across a wide variety of industries and bringing that knowledge to spaces such as Australia’s state governments. We’ve applied these concepts to five state government clients, including infringement bureaus. Now the system is automated, they’re achieving much higher collection rates.”