Tuesday, June 9, 2026
HomeBig DataThe Missing Piece of Every Core System Transformation

The Missing Piece of Every Core System Transformation


Banks and insurers are spending millions, sometimes hundreds of millions, to modernize their core systems. New platforms, cloud-native architecture, faster processing and real-time data. It’s the right move, and most organizations know it.

But here’s the part most transformation roadmaps leave out: the moment you go live on a new core system with the same customer communications you’ve had for the past decade, you’ve already undermined your investment.

The customer never sees your architecture. They see their statement, their policy renewal notice, and the message they get after they submit a claim or open a new account. And if that message is stiff, inconsistent, or disconnected from who they actually are as a customer, it doesn’t matter how elegantly modern your backend is.

The Communications Gap Is Real, and It’s Costing You

One in five consumers switched providers in the past twelve months because of poor communications quality. Among consumers between the ages of 18 and 43, that number rises to one in four. And when those consumers were asked why they left, five of the top six reasons came back to communications content: incorrect information, inconsistencies, irrelevance, a tone that missed the moment. The data comes from independent research Precisely conducted with Aspire CCS, and it points to something the industry keeps underestimating.

This isn’t a technology problem in isolation. It’s a coherence problem, and core system transformations have a way of making it visible. When you upgrade your infrastructure but leave your communications templates untouched, you don’t maintain the status quo. You make the gap more glaring. The new system can surface richer customer data, enable faster processing, and support omnichannel delivery, but none of that potential reaches the customer if the communications layer wasn’t part of the transformation plan.

Most organizations think about CCM modernization as a cost. The more accurate way to look at it is as a retention play. Losing a banking or insurance customer costs significantly more to replace than it does to keep, and when one in five are walking out the door specifically because of how you’re communicating with them, the question isn’t whether you can afford to modernize. It’s whether you can afford not to.

Three Things AI Needs to Actually Work

Artificial intelligence is the other half of this conversation. According to the same Precisely-Aspire research, three quarters of businesses believe AI will fundamentally transform customer communications, and six in ten have already implemented AI into their communications at some level.

But confidence in AI’s potential and readiness to deploy it effectively are different things. For AI to deliver real value in customer communications, three prerequisites have to be in place:

Clean, high-quality data. AI is only as relevant as the data feeding it. Fragmented customer records, duplicate entries, and siloed systems produce communications that are generic at best and inaccurate at worst. Data integrity isn’t a prerequisite you work toward eventually. It’s the foundation AI sits on from day one.

Modern, API-based architecture. Batch-processing systems built around document production cycles can’t support the real-time, channel-agnostic engagement customers now expect. Componentized, cloud-native architecture is what allows AI to orchestrate personalized interactions across the full customer lifecycle, not just generate a slightly better template.

A unified view of the customer. Siloed teams produce siloed communications. When marketing, operations, compliance, and customer service each manage their own content independently, customers receive fragmented, sometimes contradictory messages. AI amplifies whatever organizational structure it’s deployed into. Connected organizations get better results; siloed ones just automate the problem.

Core system modernizations, when done well, address the first two. But the third, breaking down the silos between teams so each has a comprehensive, unified view of the customer, requires deliberate focus that most transformation programs forget to prioritize until they’re past go-live.

REPORTBuilding Dialogue – Driven Engagement

As customers demand personalized, omnichannel, two-way engagement, legacy, document-centric CCM systems can no longer keep up—especially in regulated industries. New analyst research by Aspire CCS shows that AI and automation are rapidly redefining how organizations communicate, compete, and stay compliant.

Learn more

The Shift From Documents to Dialogue

Customer Communications Management (CCM) was built for a world of print. The underlying logic was document-first: produce a statement, generate a notice, mail a letter. As digital channels arrived, many organizations simply moved that logic online, trading paper for pixels while keeping the same one-way, transactional mindset.

Customers no longer accept that. Particularly younger, more digitally native customers expect communications that are relevant to their situation, responsive to their behavior, and consistent regardless of which channel they’re on or which team generated the message. That’s not a document. That’s a dialogue.

Precisely’s EngageOneThe Missing Piece of Every Core System Transformation RapidCX platform is built for this shift. By combining CCM, personalized video, and AI-powered in a unified SaaS solution, it moves customer engagement from reactive document production to proactive, bi-directional conversation. AI agents embedded in daily content workflows, for sentiment analysis, readability, contextual rewriting, and intelligent recommendations for next best action, help communications teams work faster without sacrificing compliance or brand consistency. Critically, every AI capability is auditable and governed by design, operating on an opt-in basis so organizations can activate only what aligns with their specific compliance and operational requirements. In addition, no agent publishes or enforces a change without human approval, giving regulated industries the confidence to modernize at their own pace, on their own terms.

The Moment Is Now

Core system investments create a window. When organizations are already focused on transformation, the conversation about modernizing customer communications is a natural extension, not an add-on. The question to ask is straightforward: if your new core system surfaces better data, faster, across more channels, what kind of communications are you going to send with it?

Old templates that weren’t built for real-time data won’t suddenly become relevant. Legacy content that hasn’t been reviewed for tone or compliance won’t become trustworthy. Communications that treat every customer identically won’t feel personalized just because they arrive faster.

The organizations that capture the full value of their core system investment will be the ones that modernize communications alongside infrastructure, treating the customer conversation as part of the transformation, not an afterthought.

Precisely is built for exactly this. As a global leader in data integrity and customer engagement, serving more than 12,000 organizations in over 100 countries, including 95 of the Fortune 100, Precisely brings a unique capability: owning the complete journey from trusted data to personalized customer experience. That’s not a feature. That’s the foundation that makes everything else work.

Ready to close the communications gap? Explore EngageOneThe Missing Piece of Every Core System Transformation RapidCX or download the full Aspire research report to learn how trusted data drives dialogue-driven engagement.

The post The Missing Piece of Every Core System Transformation appeared first on Precisely.

RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Recent Comments