FCA’s Consumer Duty is bringing a range of updated standards for financial firms to comply with. Its goal is to improve the consumer experience in light of the increasing complexity of purchasing decisions for products and services.
In order to meet the Duty’s upcoming standards, financial firms need to create a comprehensive plan that meets the specific milestones and deadlines set by the FCA. Being aware of these deadlines and understanding how to create a plan is paramount to compliance, which can be enhanced and improved by using adaptive customer-centric technology.
Consumer Duty requires firms to provide their consumers with benefit-focused outcomes. These outcomes can be separated into four key areas:
Gap analysis is a common process for businesses and firms to compare their current performance against their desired end goals to identify the gaps between the two. In the case of Consumer Duty, firms should analyse their current processes, policies and procedures in relation to the four desired outcomes it requires.
After the results of gap analysis have been achieved, firms need to then develop a plan that addresses these gaps to meet the Duty’s requirements. This includes setting specific objectives, timelines and work streams that take all factors into account to allow the widespread adjustment to Consumer Duty across a firm’s structure. This plan should be overseen by key individuals that can scrutinise decisions, processes and hold the firm accountable according to the FCA’s guidelines.
One of the most significant aspects of Consumer Duty is the self-compliance and monitoring required of financial firms. They need to prove to the FCA that they are providing consumers with benefit-focused outcomes to be compliant with the Duty’s standards. To achieve this, firms need to implement processes and procedures that monitor customer data across their organisational structure. This includes the use of technology such as optimised consumer onboarding, real-time monitoring and system integration to streamline the compliance process.
Financial firms will need to perform the appropriate analysis and create a comprehensive plan to meet the key deadlines of Consumer Duty. As a result, these firms will need to implement new ways of working to ensure compliance and benefit-focused outcomes for consumers. Customer verification is a prerequisite to every user journey and establishing this compliance, which is where Bonafidee comes in.
Bonafidee’s rigorous approach elevates us apart from others as the consumer engagement platform of choice. We allow organisations to configure user journeys that are accessible to everyone whilst automating tasks that help eliminate customer abandonment. Moreover, we provide a range of ID verification options that enhance due diligence and optimise costs by removing the need for repeated checks that often arise as a result of fragmented workflows.
Organisations can no longer rely on standalone identity checks that are unrelated to subsequent demands put on the consumer in unrelated workflows.
Bonafidee enables organisations to complete consent, customer verification, data capture, document presentation and e-signature all in one evidencable process.