By Anton Wilsens
It is no great secret that many financial service providers have relied heavily on outsourcing to meet their IT needs. This approach has enabled banks to modernize their offerings without the burden of managing IT services in-house.
However, while banks have always maintained ultimate accountability for their operational risk, including their IT, European banking regulators are now adopting a tougher stance on IT governance to ensure the accountability is backed by the right controls.
By early 2025, through regulations like the European Digital Operational Resilience Act (DORA), financial service providers and third-party IT vendors in the EU must adhere to rigorous new standards for managing their IT infrastructure.
Regulations like DORA signal positive change. They encourage banks to strengthen their IT controls and by extension, boost their cyber resilience in an environment of more frequent and sophisticated cyberattacks. According to a recent Kyndryl report, over 70% of organizations have experienced a cybersecurity-related event in the previous two years alone.
Still, the prospect of developing an operating model that ensures total governance over a sprawling IT environment can be overwhelming.
Belfius, one of Belgium's leading banks, already has made significant strides towards strengthening their IT controls and regulatory readiness.
Their progress has been driven by four practical steps that IT leaders in the EU may also want to consider when preparing for the 2025 DORA deadline.