Separating the signal from the noise in mortgage technology
As someone who started his career by designing and developing expert systems (fraud early warning, behavioral scoring etc.,), I've always been keenly interested in the science of decision making. Daniel Kahneman of course is the Nobel laureate in this field! I've been enjoying reading his latest book where he makes a compelling case for cutting out the "Noise" in human judgment and decision making process. A review of his book is here and I highly recommend it to anyone who is interested in this topic!
As I was reflecting on the theme of the book- the bias vs noise phenomenon and the techniques to make better judgments in everything from business to criminal justice reform (he makes excellent points about this), I started wondering about how this applies to our own world of mortgages (and technology in specific).
With the flood of technology solutions out in the market, there is too much noise! Lenders are constantly bombarded with solutions containing sound-bytes like AI, Intelligent Automation, Blockchain etc., It is important for lenders to separate the signal from noise. These buzzwords are great for valuation and to get the creative juices of marketers flowing, but lenders should deconstruct the mystery behind these phrases and find out what it REALLY means for their businesses.
Imagine a perfectly digital world where all 3300 counties in the US have digitized their title records, secured provenance with a blockchain enabled database, all verifications are secured by blockchain, the LOS information is secure with blockchain, pricing is locked with a blockchain and the mortgage is registered and transferred using blockchain.
THAT, is the end state where an ecosystem of connected platforms hum together in a blockchain seamlessly. Technology platforms need to evolve to support that ecosystem because that day is not too far (hopefully!), but in the current day, lenders have to take that with a grain of salt!
Much of the security that current LOS and mortgage technology demands can be met with existing data security frameworks. So lenders have to question if having a blockchain component in any of their systems causes any unintended consequences (performance delays?). While this technology is still maturing and use cases are still being figured out for the mortgage industry to be applied in a large scale, much due diligence needs to be done with the premium that is expected to be paid simply because of the presence of a blockchain component!
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There is often a very creative spin slapped on Robotic Process Automation (RPA) as Intelligent Automation. The fact is, there is nothing "Intelligent" in Robotic Process Automation. RPA emulates repeatable, rules-based human interactions on a computer and mimics those for execution by software programs. This space has matured greatly and smart lenders are seeing through the marketing spin that there is nothing intelligent in RPA.
RPA has a place where native LOS, servicing or systems of record do not have the capability to drive straight-through automation. We at Indecomm have our own set of pre-programmed, out-of-the-box bots for the mortgage industry called BotGenius(R) where we have automated hundreds of thousands of minutes worth of transactions previously executed by humans. One of the most common tasks that come up for automation is flood review. It's not a surprise that many lenders do not even receive XML payloads or API from their flood provider to determine digitally if a property is in a flood zone or not. Someone needs to visually look at FEMA's Standard Flood Hazard Determination Form and see if Box B.4 has a flood zone indicator in it for EVERY SINGLE LOAN!
How hard is it to deliver this data digitally and for LOS systems to natively automate this? But since both the flood provider and LOS platforms don't have this native capability, humans are doing this very basic task when they could be using their judgment to underwrite loans or clear conditions! We have automated tons of such tasks using RPA. So RPA has a place to automate such routine and rules-based tasks that unfortunately cannot be automated otherwise under the current technology solutions. But it is not intelligent by any means!
There is a place for decision management systems (making underwriting recommendations) and there is a place for RPA. One is not going to eliminate the other and any message you hear to the contrary is simply not true.
In summary, as with everything else, lenders are urged to apply context to any marketing material or spin they hear and make an informed decision about the relevance of those marketing buzzwords to the solution, pricing and ultimately their experience!
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/how-to-turn-down-the-noise-that-mars-our-decision-making/2021/05/19/758be210-b370-11eb-9059-d8176b9e3798_story.html
Image attribution: Hand-drawn charts by?Mike Wolfe ?on?NoLongerSet
Very nicely articulated Narayan
Serial Entrepreneur, Advisor , Mentor , Independent Director with a passion to help startups
3 年Well said, Narayan I am advising a company Https://rap.ventures They are into process automation and slowly picking up traction. In the mortgage space and also in Healthcare
True lot of noise. More marketing than actual substance
VP Mortgage Sales and Business Development. Digital Operations and Platforms BFS | Mortgage | Originations| Fulfillment | Servicing | Reverse Mortgage | Mortgage License | BPO | Mortgage Transformation |
3 年Good one Sir, except one leetle part :-)