America’s big banks are staffing up—for blockchain

IBM this week announced a massive internal re-organization to cater to blockchain.

It is one of many recent signs that the peer-to-peer ledger technology, which first came along with the digital currency bitcoin, has serious future applications in big business. Or it is at least a sign that big companies are convinced they ought to examine it further. (What exactly is blockchain? Watch this primer video.)

The computing giant will create a new unit called Watson Financial Services to encompass Watson, cloud, and all blockchain-related offerings and strategy. Bridget van Kralingen, IBM’s senior VP of global banking services, will take on the role of building the unit, and take a new title, VP of industry platforms. To replace van Kralingen in global banking services, IBM has hired Mark Foster, a former Accenture executive.

IBM says that it has created new roles specifically devoted to blockchain, and will create more, but it declines to share how many.

Search for “blockchain jobs” on job sites like Monster.com and Indeed and you’ll find more than 100 at some, posted by companies like IBM, Fidelity, BNY Mellon, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Capital One, American Express, Citigroup, Cognizant and Infosys.

Blockchain job openings on Monster.com
Blockchain job openings on Monster.com

There are, of course, many jobs listed at companies like Circle, a payments app that uses the bitcoin blockchain, and at Chain, which creates custom blockchains for clients like Visa, Citi and Nasdaq (see below video from May), but those are the companies you would expect. They are companies that exist squarely in the digital currency or blockchain space.

To see blockchain job openings at big banks, payment processors, or financial firms is the surprise. It suggests that blockchain tech is creating new jobs—hundreds of them, for now, not thousands.

As Computer World UK wrote in May, “Demand for distributed ledger expertise is on the rise.” (While many jobs require coding and technical proficiency, some of them are closer to traditional management positions.) And J. Christopher Giancarlo, commissioner of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), wrote an op-ed in May encouraging companies to “Do no harm to the blockchain” because “American jobs depends on it.”

Getting rid of friction—and maybe humans—in banking

To be sure, blockchain will likely eliminate jobs in the long run, too, if it fulfills its promise as an efficiency-improver for big financial giants. Giancarlo had to acknowledge such in his own op-ed about the job benefits of blockchain: “Still, the blockchain revolution will not come without adverse consequences, including a likely drop in the human capital that supports the recordkeeping and transaction processing of today’s financial markets.” A report from Citi this year predicted that blockchain and other automation in retail banking could eventually eliminate 30% of jobs at banks in the US and Europe.