When it comes to customer-facing corporate banking applications, the world's leading financial institutions choose Bottomline's WebSeries® Global Cash Management Platform. As banks continue to consolidate and offer more products to their corporate customers, banks need a way to differentiate themselves in the market. WebSeries provides financial institutions with a flexible, Web-based platform that can work within an existing environment or replace current systems to drive revenue and ensure customer loyalty through new or improved banking services.
Applications that work within the WebSeries Global Cash Management Platform include ACH, Wires, International Payments, Check Management, Information Reporting, and Client Access Gateway. These modules provide your bank with the opportunity to offer additional services to existing corporate clients as well as attract new customers. Because each bank-branded module integrates seamlessly within WebSeries, they are faster to deploy and less expensive to maintain.
Unlike other solutions, WebSeries empowers client end-users to perform their own administration, making initial and ongoing setup and maintenance more cost-effective and less labor-intensive processes. The degree of self-administration is controlled by the hosting bank, which can add or withhold administrative privileges from clients, or perform all initial client user and entitlement setup and then hand off administration to the customer.
WebSeries offers banks a lower total cost of ownership over proprietary solutions:
- Web interface means no software to load and support
- Intuitive menu of standard and customizable interfaces, screens and reports
- Common business-termed transaction types
- Self-service administration
- Modular application setup
- Established upgrade path
With the WebSeries Global Cash Management Platform, financial institutions can increase their portfolio of corporate applications. And, because of its low total cost of ownership, banks can continue to service large customers while attracting smaller ones without increasing costs.