01. Governance and Strategic Abstraction
We show how an internal layer of governance and decisioning enables the bank to precisely control every critical alert: what is communicated, when it is triggered, and under which business logic.
This guide analyzes how integrating an internal governance layer enables financial institutions to maximize the value of their channel providers, transforming message delivery into a strategic capability. Through Latinia’s architecture, the bank achieves true independence, ensuring that business intelligence and operational resilience remain under its direct control, while delegating last-mile execution to specialized partners.
At Latinia, we promote a model in which the relationship with channel providers is not one of substitution, but of technical complementarity. By abstracting delivery complexity, the bank can diversify providers, mitigate service outage risks, and ensure that every critical notification has auditable evidence, complying with the most demanding international standards such as DORA.
We show how an internal layer of governance and decisioning enables the bank to precisely control every critical alert: what is communicated, when it is triggered, and under which business logic.
We help explain how Latinia does not replace the channel provider, but strengthens it. It acts as an internal control layer and supervisory shield, ensuring continuity, traceability, and resilience.
Discover how an end-to-end vision makes it possible to move beyond channel logic and protect every stage of the process: from the initial event to the final evidence.
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