RSS FeedIT Business

Yorkshire Building Society and Chelsea merge -  IT integration challenge looms

Yorkshire Building Society and Chelsea merge - IT integration challenge looms

Will Yorkshire rip and replace Chelsea’s main systems?

An IT integration challenge is looming at Yorkshire Building Society, following its takeover of rival Chelsea Building Society.

Yorkshire, which uses SAP BusinessObjects business intelligence software and an Oracle data warehouse, is the larger party in the merger. Its headquarters in Bradford will become the new group’s main office for 135 branches.


Related Articles

 

Virtualisation, Big Data and BYOD

Check out our Business IT Hub for opinions and briefings. Read more


Chelsea, which has 35 branches but a comparatively large mortgage book for its scale, instead uses the Unisys Business Information Server for business intelligence. At its headquarters in Cheltenham, it uses the Unisys Enterprise Database Server and Unisys e-commerce software, Microsoft SQL Server and Microsoft Access databases, and runs Microsoft Windows Server 2003 on Dell PowerEdge servers.

Neither party was able to give details on IT plans. The merger of the two societies is aimed at creating a large rival to the UK’s biggest society, the Nationwide, and will create a society with 2.7 million members, some 178 branches and a mortgage book of £25 billion.

More detail is expected in April when the merger is planned tocomplete. But a spokesperson at Chelsea Building Society said that when the merger is finalised the group “will look at overlapping functions, because we wouldn’t want two IT systems doing the same thing, for example”.

Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:


PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.

Does your company use managed print services?

Question of the day!

Does your company use managed print services?


% of Computerworld UK readers agree with you


Yes
TBC
No
TBC

What benefits do you believe managed print services offer?


123 characters remaining

Follow the conversation at @Think_Print


ComputerWorldUK Resources

ComputerworldUK
Share
x
Open
* *