Will the database move into the cloud?

In 1999 when senior vice president Marc Benioff left Oracle to create Salesforce.com, many thought he was headed for a cliff at full steam but 10 years down the line, software as a service (SaaS) is a matured business model. Online productivity applications have joined the fray and are maturing at a brisk pace (Say Google Docs, Zoho).

In our modern enterprise, the database is a corner of most of the software architecture and I ask myself, will the database move into the cloud too? Will I be able to implement applications and point it to a database somewhere unknown?

The benefits are obvious – zero hardware configurations, zero backups (hey, I could spend a million dollars for that!), titanium grade security protection, etc. But should things fail, I have loss of data staring me in the face. With that I could get a jail time or be bankrupt depending on what data is missing.

These are interesting times.

What makes a smart organization

Of recent, I have been thinking deeply about what makes an organization to be smart. Or deeper still, what defines a smart organization. I am thinking about real life attributes not some fancy buzz words from smart pants consultants.

If someone should ask me, I would say a smart organization is one that reacts quickly to market changes, whose components (resources, employees) are used in the most cost effective manner delivering above average return on investment. So a lot must be expected from each organizational unit. Assets must be deployed in the most cost effective manner and results must be squeezed out. These are just rambling thoughts but one day, I will come around to codify it.

Why should we have smart organizations? My own answer is so simply stupid: It makes employees happy! From my little life experiences, the workers are the first to get stressed up when things don’t go smoothly. Like some people I know will say, they willl “Fi eje se!” (use blood to run it!). If things can run faster, better, more efficiently with less input and more time to either party away (Friday night is sacrosanct) and do better things, I should be less stressed up.

December 31 FYE: Implications for the Nigerian banks

 With the drive of the current administration of the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, to take the Nigerian financial sector to be at par with international standards, the recent pronouncement for all banks to have the same financial-year-end comes as no surprise. In more sophisticated economies, the financial institutions usually close their books at the end of the fiscal year. With this, regulators, analysts, investors and other gamut of interested parties in between have a clear cut idea of what their economy is doing.

The last 3 years since the CBN handed down the shore-up-your capital declaration, the financial sector, especially the banking industry, has witness a rapid growth. But that hasnt come without its own baggage of issues. With banks closing their FYE at different times, each was clamming one flag-post position or the other while the average Joe sits there bewildered; not knowing who is where.

The new FYE directive will solve that problem once and for all. 

For one, competition would be keen and cut-throat. Now that the end has come for year-end-deposits balances would be adjusted by markets which would now force bankers to look for deposits more aggressively. Competition is not really a bad thing as customers could now call the shots. Since deposits would be in short supply, any bank that wants to close the year on a positive note must find a way to delight its customers. 2009 would probably be a good year to be a banks customer. This could induce an increase in deposit rates; forces of demand and supply, with demand outweighing supply.

Also, this would definitely sieve the big players from the fringe players. The top ten positions would be keenly contested and there would probably be severe punishments for any bank caught in the bottom 5.

Since every bank would be closing its book by December 31st, industry pundits, and the rest of us mere mortals, can at last know the real size of the Nigerian economy. Massive account to account from one bank to another for year end is about to come to an end, the winner truly takes it all. Since the CBN depends on the figures provided by banks for year end to determine the size of banked funds in the economy, this would give us an accurate snap shot of where we truly are.

Another winner here is the NDIC. The NDIC takes an insurance premium from every bank based on the size of their deposits by December 31st. Legends have it that December 31st usually has banks recording the lowest deposit in the year which miraculously increases few months after. This is the time for NDIC to take its own pound of flesh.

The biggest question of all is how will the few heavy weight auditing firms be able to handle the 23 banks within 2  3 months when their books are due to be submitted to CBN for vetting? How will the CBN audit all these banks at once? Does that mean that there would be a scramble to employ more auditors?

This is really an interesting time.

The Start of a New Era

Today is my last day at First City Monument Bank Plc. That marks the end of an exciting 2 years of challenging and rewarding work at one of Nigeria’s finest banks.

The guys here are simply wonderful to work with. People are nice and they actually greet you and my colleagues are my friends.I was also lucky to handle some very interesting projects which have enlarged my understanding of so many things. But I have to go.

I am going to start my own business doing technology consulting, sales and writing enterprise applications for financial organizations. It is called TechnologyMBP which stands for Technology Makes Business Perfect. Now that am my own boss, I guess I am free to give myself pay rise every 2 months… (that would be fun!).