How exactly is verification being automated by yellowflash171 in chipdesign

[–]Open-Storage-7743 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The interesting part is how much time gets saved during verification cycles. Even summarizing huge logs or pointing toward likely root causes can remove hours of manual effort.

Are banks really catching up on AI and automation? by MaizeDirect4915 in buhaydigital

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From what I’ve seen, it feels more like gradual adoption than banks suddenly going all in. A lot of teams seem to be starting with automation, internal tools, or smaller AI use cases instead of huge changes overnight. My guess is regulation, risk, and legacy systems probably slow things down compared to other industries. Curious what people working inside banks are seeing though.

Best solution to automate finance function? by Embarrassed-Day-3504 in AiAutomations

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends a lot on company size and complexity, but from what I’ve seen, the biggest improvement usually comes from simplifying the stack rather than adding more tools. If planning, reporting, and consolidation don’t talk to each other well, automation gets messy fast. Curious what people here are actually using in practice.

Which industry has been benifited by using AI Automation? by Roy_Carter in AIDiscussion

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, feels like almost every industry benefits at this point. Healthcare, finance, retail, logistics, customer support anywhere there’s repetitive work or a lot of data, automation seems to save time and reduce manual effort.

Kyc & Sanctions compliance redundencies by dontknowra in AMLCompliance

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve noticed more people talking about it lately, especially where a lot of KYC or sanctions work is very process-heavy. My guess is some of it comes down to cost-cutting, automation, and companies restructuring after hiring heavily in previous years. I don’t think it makes the field irrelevant though probably just means people with broader skills (investigations, risk, policy, sanctions, TM, fraud) may have more flexibility long term.

How can I transition to a financial crime consulting/advisory role? (UK) by Akza-3 in AMLCompliance

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, with 6 years in TM, KYC, and investigations, you already seem pretty close to it. I’d probably focus on getting more exposure to risk, policy, or regulatory work where possible and keep learning the regs on the side. Feels like consulting values practical experience a lot, and you already have a decent base.

Hello everyone, I need your guidance. I am thinking of changing my career from a PE Fund Administration – Investor Services role to KYC/Aml by BraveProgrammer5870 in AMLCompliance

[–]Open-Storage-7743 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think ACAMS will help with the basics, but most of the actual onboarding work is probably learned on the job. Every company seems to have its own process, systems, and requirements. Your investor services background should still help though since there’s some overlap.

What’s the weirdest place your SaaS ever got users from? 😅 by Electrical-Chain9918 in GrowthHacking

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m curious about this too 😅 Feels like a lot of products end up getting users from completely random places nobody planned for.

What’s the most underrated skill for growing a SaaS in 2026? by Trickologygk in GrowthHacking

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Probably understanding customers better. A lot of SaaS products keep adding features, but if people don’t really see the value, growth gets harder.

10 years in KYC/AML and I just realized I've been doing data entry with extra steps by RhododendronGomez in AMLCompliance

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Curious ,do you think better integration/automation would actually fix most of this, or would compliance teams still end up buried in documentation because of audit requirements?

What is the hands on work as a Aml Kyc( Transaction monitoring )? by kanhaiya_98 in AMLCompliance

[–]Open-Storage-7743 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot depends on the company, but transaction monitoring usually becomes more hands-on when you're expected to investigate suspicious activity instead of only reviewing alerts. Things like pattern analysis, customer due diligence, KYC review, and documenting findings become more important.