Domain separation and Financial Services Payment Operations

  • Release version: Yokohama
  • Updated January 30, 2025
  • 3 minutes to read
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    Summary of Domain separation and Financial Services Payment Operations

    Domain separation in Financial Services Payment Operations allows ServiceNow customers to logically separate data, processes, and administrative tasks into distinct domains. This separation controls user access and visibility, ensuring data integrity and privacy across multiple tenants or service providers. The application supports domain separation at runtime, including UI, cache keys, reporting, rollups, and aggregations. Proper setup by the instance owner is required to enable multi-tenant functionality.

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    Key Features

    • Domain Separation Support: Financial Services Payment Operations fully supports domain separation with a basic support level, enabling data isolation for service provider use cases.
    • Integration with Customer Service Management (CSM): Built on CSM, the application domain-separates key customer reference tables such as Consumer, Account, and Contact.
    • Domain-Separated Tables: All new Payment Operations tables (e.g., payment inquiries, claims, checking and savings accounts) are domain-separated to maintain data segregation.
    • Use Case Support: The application manages inquiries and claims related to payment issues such as Beneficiary Claim Non-Receipt (BCNR) and Payment in Error (PiE), supporting both internal and external bank customers and routing accordingly.
    • Claims and Refund Process: Agents can create claims on behalf of customers, determine refund sources (internal or external), and manage Debit Approvals for internal refunds requiring customer approval or dispute handling.

    Practical Implications for ServiceNow Customers

    • Enabling domain separation ensures secure management of multiple tenants' data within a single instance, critical for service providers handling diverse customer bases.
    • Customers can utilize the payment inquiry and claim processes to resolve payment issues efficiently while maintaining strict data boundaries.
    • Service providers can configure domain-specific settings to control user access and visibility, ensuring compliance and operational clarity.
    • The integration with CSM tables facilitates seamless customer data management within a domain-separated environment.
    • Understanding the routing of internal versus external inquiries and claims helps in designing workflows that comply with banking and regulatory requirements.

    Additional Notes

    Some ServiceNow platform features or applications may support service provider use cases without full domain framework implementation, potentially achieving varying domain support levels from Basic to Enhanced through configuration.

    Domain separation is supported for Financial Services Payment Operations. Domain separation enables you to separate data, processes, and administrative tasks into logical groupings called domains. You can control several aspects of this separation, including which users can see and access data.

    Support level: Basic

    • Business logic: Ensure that data goes into the proper domain for the application’s service provider use cases.
    • The application supports domain separation at run time. The domain separation includes separation from the user interface, cache keys, reporting, rollups, and aggregations.
    • The owner of the instance must set up the application to function across multiple tenants.

    Sample use case: When a service provider (SP) uses chat to respond to a tenant-customer’s message, the customer must be able to see the SP's response.

    For more information on support levels, see Application support for domain separation.

    How domain separation works in Financial Services Payment Operations

    All Financial Services Operations (FSO) applications are built on top of Customer Service Management (CSM) and use many CSM tables. The key reference tables are the customer tables such as Consumer, Account, and Contact, and these tables are domain-separated.

    Tables

    All new tables added in Payment Operations are domain-separated:
    • sn_bom_payment_inquiry
    • sn_bom_payment_inquiry_task
    • sn_bom_payment_service
    • sn_bom_payment_claim
    • sn_bom_payment_claim_task
    • sn_bom_checking_account
    • sn_bom_saving_account

    Use cases

    Payment Inquiry
    Customers have the ability create a payment inquiry via the portal for the following use cases:
    • Beneficiary Claim Non-Receipt (BCNR): The customer has sent a payment, but the intended recipient claims to have never received the money.
    • Payment in Error (PiE) – The customer makes a mistake when sending a payment and is trying to retrieve the money.
    Branch workers and call center agents can create these inquiries on behalf of the customer. Payment Operations staff receive inquiries from their customers as well as from external banks.
    • Internal inquiries come from the bank’s own customers. The recipient customer could be internal or external to the bank. The distinction between internal or external recipients is important because it determines which route Payment Operations takes to resolve the inquiry.
    • External inquiries come from third-party banks, which means that the payment recipient is always internal.
      Note:
      There can never be a case where the inquiry is external and the recipient is external.
    • Some inquiries may result in the creation of a claim.
    Payment Claim
    Inquiry agents can create a claim on behalf of a customer when the bank determines that the claim is valid and the customer is entitled to a refund.
    Payment Operations staff receive the claims either internally from an inquiry or from an external bank. When they receive the claim, they start determining where to get the refund.
    • Internal claims come from customers of the bank either from an inquiry or directly from bank staff (Branch or Call Center). Agents can resolve the claim if they know where to get the refund. The refund could be either external (payment to a third-party bank customer) or internal (payment to the bank's customer). If the refund is internal, a Debit Approval must be created (see Debit Approval below).
    • External claims come from third-party banks. The refund is always internal for external claims. Agents may need to create a Debit Approval for internal refunds (see Debit Approval below).
    Debit Approval
    Claim agents create Debit Approvals for customers to approve a refund from a claim. The customer can either accept the debit or dispute or reject it.
    Note:
    Sometimes a ServiceNow® platform feature or application may be able to effectively support service provider use cases even though the domain framework is not being used. In this case, the application may be assigned Basic*, Standard*, or Enhanced* for its domain support level, and include detailed use cases. For example: Before the New York release, Service Catalog had no domain support. But the instance owner was able to configure separate catalogs and items for each customer in a domain-separated instance. This allowed Service Catalog to be used at a Standard support level. To learn more, see domain separation Application levels of support.