Financial Services

Taking control of IT in a complex financial landscape

Financial institutions operate in an environment where regulatory requirements and digital expectations continue to increase, while legacy systems and fragmented data create an IT landscape that lacks agility and scalability. This heightens risk and slows down innovation. There is therefore a need for a modern, vendor-agnostic IT foundation that reduces complexity, structurally ensures compliance, and safeguards business continuity.

Why IT control has become a board-level priority

New regulations, such as DORA, NIS2, PSD3, and CSRD, make executives explicitly accountable for the control of IT. Delaying action increases the risk of disruptions, sanctions, and ultimately a loss of trust. Making clear, well-informed decisions about the IT landscape is no longer optional.

What effective IT control delivers in practice

  • Predictable costs through a manageable architecture and standardized approaches
  • Reduced operational and compliance risks through explicit control mechanisms
  • Demonstrable auditability for regulators and supervisory authorities
  • Scalable delivery without the accumulation of legacy systems

Successful partnerships

Controlled modernization of the existing IT landscape

The IT landscape must be renewed while operations continue uninterrupted. This requires deliberate, controlled choices in architecture, data, and cloud, without impacting continuity or service delivery.

  • Legacy: phased modernization through controlled migrations, avoiding big-bang approaches and maintaining full risk control
  • Data: a single, reliable data foundation for AI, decision-making, and compliance
  • Cloud: designed for scalability, sustainability, and cost efficiency, with demonstrable control over security, compliance, and the prevention of vendor lock-in

How Info Support supports you

Info Support designs and delivers integrations within complex, existing IT landscapes. We modernize without disrupting operations and ensure that architecture, costs, and risks remain under control.

  • Back-office systems and portals: robust solutions that seamlessly integrate with existing core systems
  • Data platforms: a single, integrated foundation for AI, decision-making, and compliance
  • Integrations: a robust, domain-driven approach that reliably connects legacy systems, cloud applications, and ecosystem partners in complex environments
  • FinOps: structural cost control across cloud, on-premises, and hybrid environments
  • Managed Security Services: demonstrably aligned with DORA and NIS2 frameworks
  • Generative and agentic AI: AI solutions built on secure and scalable architectures to improve efficiency and effectiveness of processes
  • Managed Services: fully managed operations and maintenance, without vendor lock-in

Mission-critical and controllable. Without vendor lock-in. While retaining full autonomy over your IT architecture.

After the Wtp: the next phase of the pension sector

The introduction of the Future of Pensions Act (Wtp) is widely regarded as the largest and most far-reaching reform in the history of the Dutch pension system.

Now that the Wtp has become an operational reality, the central question shifts from implementation to design: how do you ensure control and agility in a landscape that is becoming structurally more complex?

The following choices are unavoidable:

  • Data quality as an architectural principle
    Without structural data quality, reliable steering and compliance are not possible
  • AI as an integral part of operations
    AI is moving from experimentation to a production-level capability within core processes
  • Cloud as a controlled foundation
    Cloud is no longer merely an accelerator, but the foundation for scalability and control

How can I help you?

Do you have an IT issue you would like to spar about? Contact us without obligation.

Wilco de Vries

Business Development Manager