Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation Part 2—Challenges of Digital Iterations

While advice and directions concentrate on the “next normal” inflicted by Covid-19, the underlying challenges facing financial services and banking organizations have been building long before its arrival. If banking and mortgage leadership are to adjust to an altered consumer and investment future, they must quickly determine how to build core competencies with digital leveraging—or risk becoming a statistic.

Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation Part 2—Challenges of Digital Iterations

While advice and directions concentrate on the “next normal” inflicted by Covid-19, the underlying challenges facing financial services and banking organizations have been building long before its arrival. If banking and mortgage leadership are to adjust to an altered consumer and investment future, they must quickly determine how to build core competencies with digital leveraging—or risk becoming a statistic.

Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation Part 2—Challenges of Digital Iterations

While advice and directions concentrate on the “next normal” inflicted by Covid-19, the underlying challenges facing financial services and banking organizations have been building long before its arrival. If banking and mortgage leadership are to adjust to an altered consumer and investment future, they must quickly determine how to build core competencies with digital leveraging—or risk becoming a statistic.

Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation Part 2—Challenges of Digital Iterations

While advice and directions concentrate on the “next normal” inflicted by Covid-19, the underlying challenges facing financial services and banking organizations have been building long before its arrival. If banking and mortgage leadership are to adjust to an altered consumer and investment future, they must quickly determine how to build core competencies with digital leveraging—or risk becoming a statistic.

Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation—A Tale of What is Coming

The leverage of all things digital is here. However, digitalization is NOT digital transformation, let alone digital leverage. As finance firms and their target markets reach their cycle peaks, the leverage of digital is a requirement most banking leaders have not incorporated into their forthcoming budgets and operations.

Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation—A Tale of What is Coming

The leverage of all things digital is here. However, digitalization is NOT digital transformation, let alone digital leverage. As finance firms and their target markets reach their cycle peaks, the leverage of digital is a requirement most banking leaders have not incorporated into their forthcoming budgets and operations.

Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation—A Tale of What is Coming

The leverage of all things digital is here. However, digitalization is NOT digital transformation, let alone digital leverage. As finance firms and their target markets reach their cycle peaks, the leverage of digital is a requirement most banking leaders have not incorporated into their forthcoming budgets and operations.

Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation—A Tale of What is Coming

The leverage of all things digital is here. However, digitalization is NOT digital transformation, let alone digital leverage. As finance firms and their target markets reach their cycle peaks, the leverage of digital is a requirement most banking leaders have not incorporated into their forthcoming budgets and operations.

Mark Dangelo: Beyond Digital Transformation—A Tale of What is Coming

The leverage of all things digital is here. However, digitalization is NOT digital transformation, let alone digital leverage. As finance firms and their target markets reach their cycle peaks, the leverage of digital is a requirement most banking leaders have not incorporated into their forthcoming budgets and operations.

Mark P. Dangelo: The Demise of the Contact Banker

Banking was a “contact” industry—prior to the Great Recession. With the loss of 12,000 branches in the past decade and consumers now doing over 90% of their transactions digitally, public health implications and social unrest, if sustained, may be the catalysts for closing many more branches by 2022.