Click to return to BOL home page
Banker Store eCard Exchange Vendor Connect Career Connect Learning Connect Bankers Information Network
 

Support for BOL is provided by:

MAIN CONTENT 
Compliance

    Agency Road Maps

    Alphabet Soup

    Compliance Tools

    FACTA/FCRA

    OFAC

Lending

    FACTA/FCRA

    Lending Tools

    SCRA

Marketing

Operations

    Check 21

    Operations Tools

    SAR Resrch Guide

Security

    AML/BSA

    Bank Robbery

    Counterfeits

    ID Fraud/Phishing

    Security Tools

Technology/eBanking

    Info Security


SPECIAL AREAS 
BOL Archives

BOL Blogs

Briefing Archive

Calendar

Court Watch
Em@il Education

Examiner's Corner

Executive Briefing

Infovault

Launch Pad

Site Map

Site Orientation

Top Stories


~ ~ ~
SERVICES 
CrimeDex

Em@il Education

ID Verification

Record Retention


~ ~ ~
SHOP 

Banker Store

Bankers Info Ntwk
Vendor Connect

CONNECT 

Career Connect

Learning Connect

Vendor Connect

Guru Central

INTERACT 

Ask a Guru
Bankers Threads

Contact Us

Give Us Feedback


TOOLS 

60 Second Solutions

Alphabet Soup

Banker Tools

BOL Forms

FUN 

BOL Recipes

eCard Exchange

LEARN MORE 

About Advertising
About Our Sponsors
About Us


Print Friendly! Email This Article! Discuss NOW!




Referral Volumes as a Significant Operations Concern


Question: Why are referral volumes (the potential that the account origination or maintenance process will get bogged down due to a significant number of red flags detected) such a significant operations concern?

Answer: These concerns are not without merit. Because of the new Red Flags Rule, many covered institutions are likely to implement more identity theft prevention measures than previously employed. With this increased scrutiny will follow a greater volume of accounts and associated transactions segmented for further review.

Organizations may be able to control referral volumes through the use of automated tools that evaluate the level of identity theft risk in a given transaction. For example, customers with a low-risk authentication score can be moved quickly through an account origination process absent any additional relevant Red Flags detected in the ordinary course of the application or transaction. In fact, using such tools may allow organizations to expedite the origination process, benefiting both legitimate customers and operational processes. At the same time, the finite pool of operational and financial resources then can be used on those applications and transactions that pose the greatest potential risk for identity theft.

A risk-based approach to Red Flags compliance allows an institution the ability to reconcile the majority of detected Red Flag conditions accurately, efficiently, consistently and with minimal consumer impact. Conversely, a simple rules-based approach, incorporating more binary decisions relying solely on the presence or absence of a Red Flag condition, leads to substantial and often unmanageable false positives and referral volumes.

Identification and detection of Red Flag conditions are only half the battle. Responding to those conditions is both a requirement of the guidelines and a substantial problem to solve for most institutions. A response policy that incorporates scoring, alternate and comprehensive data sources, and flexible decisioning can reduce the majority of referrals to real-time approvals without staff intervention or customer inconvenience.

For more information on how your institution should respond to the Red Flags Rule requirements, visit click here.

Experian Boilerplate Experian’s Decision Analytics business combines data intelligence, analytics, software and consulting to help clients optimize profitability and improve performance. Its enterprise-wide decisioning capabilities enable clients to manage and mitigate credit risk; prevent, detect and reduce fraud; meet regulatory obligations; and gain operational efficiencies. 1 888 414 1120 or fraud.solutions@experian.com.



First published on BankersOnline.com 10/27/08










Privacy Policy    Disclaimer   Recommend This Site !   Contact Us


BankersOnline is a free service made possible by the generous support of our advertisers and sponsors. Advertisers and sponsors are not responsible for site content. Please help us keep BankersOnline FREE to all banking professionals. Support our advertisers and sponsors by clicking through to learn more about their products and services.