Doug Brown Discusses Digital Banking with Business Insider Intelligence

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Doug Brown Discusses Digital Banking with Business Insider Intelligence

Business Insider Intelligence Q&A:

NCR's SVP of digital banking on what its pivot to software and services means for customers as the pandemic accelerates cross-channel integration

Tyler Brown | October 02, 2020

NCR is pivoting its business model as the pandemic accelerates cross-channel integration. NCR (called National Cash Register from the late 1800s until 1974) is well known for its point-of-sale systems and ATMs, and its business model relies heavily on hardware products and the software and services that support them. In the last several years, however, NCR has shifted focus to its more profitable software, maintenance, and professional services businesses—and reduced its exposure to revenue volatility related to hardware sales. With this strategic turn, NCR implies that ATM manufacturers and network operators are now less relevant competitors than technology vendors FIS, Fiserv, and Temenos—a change from the years prior to 2018.

The company's goal with digital transformation in retail banking has been to become what Doug Brown, senior vice president and general manager of digital banking at NCR, calls the "operating system of the bank." The company's presence within the physical footprint of FIs across the country positions it well to bridge physical and digital banking, and it has made acquisitions to further its goal: Notably, it bought D3 Technology, a digital banking software provider, last summer. Yet it has to patch together its new model from both emerging digital capabilities and legacy, lower-margin lines of business.

Insider Intelligence spoke with Brown about cross-channel digital transformation and NCR's plans to shape itself into a software and services company.

The following has been edited for brevity and clarity.

Insider Intelligence (II): Can you talk about NCR's plans for cross-channel platform integration and how you envision the customer experience?

Doug Brown (DB): It's led with our delivery of capabilities around digital and self-service, allowing customers, businesses, and consumers to interact both digitally with their banks and credit unions, and via self-service in the physical channels, like with ATMs and interactive tellers. That model extends to software, where we're the operating system of the bank. "Digital-first" means helping customers when they want to interact with the institution across any and all channels.

II: NCR is recasting itself as a software and services company, but close to a third of its revenues come from hardware sales, and much of the rest comes from software and services for that hardware. How is NCR making that transition?

DB: It's our intent to migrate the focus of the company to "NCR as a Service." Eighty percent of the business over the next five years is targeted to come from software and services specifically. And then we're linking it to the recurring software model, more subscription-based. [Editor's note: In Q2 2020, NCR reported a revenue mix that included 55% recurring and 72% software and services.] We are doing things like offering the hardware as a service, for example, ATM as a Service. We are no longer selling you just the unit: You're buying a servicing package, and you don't really take full ownership of the ATM. The business model is to drive our product development and our innovation into software and services. But that's coupled with how hardware—still an important part of the mix—is bundled into a solution. We want to leverage the strengths we've got, but we are looking forward.

II: What kind of pandemic-related trends are you seeing in the market that may be affecting what NCR is planning on doing in the near future?

DB: The pandemic has been an accelerant for the things we have underway and that our customers had underway around digital transformation. It probably brought forward what was on the two- to three-year horizon. There was an intense need for increased use of digital paired with guidance and advice. That's where our digital-first capabilities and strategies seem to be resonating.

II: It's been a little more than a year since NCR acquired D3. What bearing has that had on NCR's product and strategy?

DB: That's been an amazing success for us in servicing larger institutions. We've been able to help a number of larger clients succeed in significant digital enablement and transformation projects. Some of these banks are in the process of strategically scaling up through mergers and acquisitions. TCF in Minneapolis, for example, is doing a sizable merger of equals. We've helped them through the digital transformation of the customer base into a combined entity. We've also helped some larger clients migrate strategic infrastructure to cloud. And now, that digital transformation is part of our go-to-market model. We've got a technology capability that allows for better synthesis and integration at a technology level. That's a full microservices platform capability that allows us to blend the digital servicing for online and mobile banking, combined with branches and contact centers, because we've got a consistent technology and platform architecture.

II: What else can you say about demand for on-premises and cloud-based software solutions?

DB: Client appetite for cloud has accelerated faster than we anticipated. The D3 business, as a cloud-native architecture solution, has helped in the acceleration of that journey and enabled us to react to customer demand. I think we assumed it would be a 50-50 split a year ago about client adoption and take rate for on-premises or cloud, but now almost every new client and every new direction is evolving around leverage of cloud.

II: How is NCR looking at startups that are attempting to get into the customer experience as potential partners or as competitors in this space?

DB: There's a high trust equity factor that banks and credit unions, we think, continue to enjoy and will continue to enjoy over some of the startups and the neobank models. But we have an open model on our platform that allows for integration of fintech capabilities into our managed and hosted instances for clients. That allows banks to configure things that they think are important to a market segment. Examples of that might be where we allow money movement through Zelle. We also allow budgeting and advice through these capabilities—something like MX.

About NCR Corporation

NCR Corporation (NYSE: NCR) is a leader in transforming, connecting, and running technology platforms for self-directed banking, stores, and restaurants. NCR is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, with 35,000 employees globally. NCR is a trademark of NCR Corporation in the United States and other countries.

About NCR VOYIX, LLC

NCR VOYIX Corporation (NYSE: VYX) is a leading global provider of digital commerce solutions for the retail, restaurant and digital banking industries. NCR VOYIX transforms retail stores, restaurant systems and digital banking experiences with comprehensive, platform-led SaaS and services capabilities. NCR VOYIX is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, with approximately 16,000 employees in 35 countries across the globe.

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