Conference Notes
BEFORE YOU START: EXISTENTIAL QUESTIONS
- What *is* automation?
- What problem are you trying to solve? Is automation necessarily the best answer? Are you really just after better ORGANISATION?
- Cost
- Speed
- Scale
- Business Process
- Consistency
- Quality
- Reporting
- What other enterprise technologies do you use: whether you’re ready for automation will depend on what you already have:
- Information retrieval/Search
- Collaboration/social
- Process Management/Audit/Controls
HOW YOU MAKE THE DECISION TO AUTOMATE
- What should you automate? Suitability Criteria to consider
- Expected Volume
- Time taken to prepare manually
- Degree of Standardisation
- Susceptibility to change
- Degree of Negotiation
- Substantive complexity
- Formal Complexity
- Length
- Optimisation: How much influence do you have over Suitability Criteria? Can you optimise the success of automating? Where you can, you should.
PREPARATION
- Institutional Attitude: How much autonomy does your institution let users have? Answer: likely, not very much
- Information Security (confidentiality): how comfortable are you with “the cloud” and the “crowd”? (likely answer: not very)
- Information Technology: (system robustness): how much tolerance for “breakdown”?
- Governance: what restrictions in terms of architectural integrity, procurement, consistency, quality:
- Politics:
- Systems: simply put, IT departments want to maintain control of gizmos.
- Content:
- Optimisation (as per above): are your documents ready for it?
- Content Policy
- These are the underlying rules your automation will need to cleave to.
- If not agreed, very hard to successfully automate.
- Negotiation Procedure
- Who will use the automation system? How much will it be used?
- Integration:
RESOURCING It isn’t just about buying software.
- Tools
- Which application? Will depend on your needs and your organisation
- Inside/outside the firewall
- User interface
- Degree of integration with existing firm systems
- A brief interlude: The End-to-End Principle insofar as it relates to your organisation
- Which application? Will depend on your needs and your organisation
- Personnel
- Status: Employees versus contractors
- Fancy telling permanent staff you hired as derivatives experts that the next six months will be spent programming a machine?
- Attributes: Lawyers versus IT analysts versus Management Consultants: you need to bring to bear a good understanding of:
- Content: the market and the content of the documents: what they mean and how the document works
- Data Structure: optimising the text and data model for maximum simplicity and flexibility. This is HARD.
- IT structure: it helps to have some idea or interest in how data is actually processed by machines (xml, html, etc)
- Status: Employees versus contractors
IMPLEMENTATION Degree of automation: Depends on the type of document.
- The more negotiated a document is, the less value there is in automating a final complete agreement
- For an ISDA that will be negotiated, an 80% complete document which captures the non-controversial text will be almost as valuable that a fully complete document.
- For a high-volume structured note, more important to have the whole thing automated.