Many financial institutions suffer from the same dependency:
“If it’s not in the back-office system, it can’t be managed.”
Or worse:
“If the vendor doesn’t provide it, we wait.”
The result is predictable: management is done with blind spots, or through manual extractions and spreadsheets.
The goal is not to replace the ERP
The objective is not to replace the core banking or ERP system.
The real objective is to regain control over the management and decision layer.
This means being able to:
- consolidate multiple data sources (ERP, CRM, Risk, Compliance),
- stabilize and standardize KPIs,
- deliver Executive Committee views that are explained and defensible,
- without waiting for a ticket, a vendor roadmap, or the next release.
Performance management should not be constrained by system limitations.
From system dependency to decision autonomy
When the management layer depends entirely on one system, the organization loses agility.
Decisions are delayed, reporting becomes fragmented, and teams compensate with workarounds.
What is needed is an independent, governed layer that sits above the systems, not against them.
The role of an integration engine
This is precisely the role of an integration engine such as Integraal Banking Engine:
- build a shared and governed data foundation,
- connect heterogeneous sources without disruption,
- make data usable, consistent, and decision-oriented.
The focus is not technical elegance. It is operational clarity.
What changes for a CEO
For executive leadership, the impact is immediate:
- a consolidated view that does not depend on a single system,
- real business agility: you decide, you don’t wait,
- a more aligned organization: Finance, Operations, and Front Office speak the same language.
When the management layer is independent, governed, and business-driven, systems stop dictating decisions. Leadership regains control.