Conversations at this year’s Building societies Association (BSA) conference, held in Edinburgh, reinforced a clear shift happening across the building society sector.

Organisations are still investing in transformation, but priorities are changing. The appetite for innovation remains strong, yet there is growing caution around large-scale programmes that require significant internal resource, lengthy implementation timelines or high operational risk.

Instead, many building societies are focusing on practical, lower-burden change that can deliver measurable value quickly, without creating unnecessary complexity.

Across conversations with executives, operational teams and technology leaders, several themes emerged consistently.

Operational efficiency is driving digital priorities

One of the most common discussion points throughout the conference was operational cost reduction.

While digital transformation is often framed around customer experience and innovation, many building societies are currently focused on solving more immediate operational challenges. Print, paper and postage costs continue to place pressure on organisations already balancing increasing regulatory demands and limited internal resource.

As a result, there is growing demand for solutions that can:

  • reduce manual administration
  • lower communication costs
  • streamline operational processes
  • improve visibility across member communications
  • deliver measurable ROI

The conversation is becoming less about transformation for transformation’s sake and more about practical operational improvement.

For many organisations, the priority is not implementing the most ambitious technology strategy. It is implementing solutions that solve real operational problems quickly and sustainably.

Resource constraints are reshaping transformation priorities

A recurring theme across conversations at the conference was internal capacity.

Many attendees spoke about the challenge of delivering change programmes while balancing day-to-day operational demands. Limited internal resource, competing priorities and governance requirements are making organisations increasingly selective about the projects they pursue.

This is changing what building societies expect from technology providers.

Messaging around:

  • low deployment burden
  • SaaS delivery
  • out-of-the-box functionality
  • minimal internal resource requirements
  • fast implementation timelines

consistently resonated throughout conversations at the event.

Building societies are looking for partners that can reduce operational pressure, not add to it. Solutions that require significant ongoing involvement from already stretched teams are becoming harder to justify, regardless of long-term potential.

Transformation priorities are changing

The conversations at BSA Conference suggested that building societies are prioritising achievable operational improvement over ambitious transformation roadmaps.

There is increasing caution around programmes that require extensive implementation projects before value can be realised. For many organisations, the concern is no longer just about technology capability. It is about delivery risk, operational disruption and internal resource commitment.

As a result, there is growing interest in technology that can be introduced incrementally and scaled over time.

This is where modular approaches are becoming increasingly attractive. Rather than committing to large replacement programmes upfront, organisations are looking for flexibility. They want the ability to solve immediate operational challenges first, while maintaining the option to expand capability as priorities evolve.

The strongest message from this year’s conference was clear. Building Societies are still investing in transformation, but they are increasingly prioritising solutions that are practical, achievable and capable of delivering value without creating additional strain on internal teams.

Supporting Building Societies Through Sustainable Change

At Legado, these conversations reinforced why practical, lower-burden transformation matters.

Building societies are under pressure to modernise member communications and improve operational efficiency, while still balancing limited internal resource, operational pressure and rising communication costs.

That is why the focus should not just be on introducing new technology, but on making change achievable.

By delivering modular solutions that can be implemented incrementally, with minimal disruption and clear operational value, building societies can make meaningful progress without committing to large-scale transformation programmes from day one.

Whether the priority is reducing paper-based processes, improving communication workflows or creating a more scalable digital engagement model, the focus should be on sustainable improvement that supports teams rather than overwhelming them.

The future of transformation in the sector is unlikely to be defined by large-scale disruption alone. It will be shaped by practical change that delivers measurable value and reduces operational burden over time.