Tel Aviv, 70100,
Israel
Bank of Jerusalem Technographics
Bank of Jerusalem Technographics, Software Purchases, AI and Digital Transformation Initiatives
Discover the latest software purchases and digital transformation initiatives being undertaken by Bank of Jerusalem and its business and technology executives. Each quarter our research team identifies on-prem and cloud applications that are being used by the 7 Bank of Jerusalem employees from the public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources.
During our research, we have identified that Bank of Jerusalem has purchased the following applications: Kryon RPA for Robotic Process Automation in 2020, Amazon EC2 for Application Hosting and Computing Services in 2020, Cisco Secure Email (formerly Email Security Appliance) for Secure Email Gateways (SEGs) in 2020 and the related IT decision-makers and key stakeholders.
Our database provides customer insight and contextual information on which enterprise applications and software systems Bank of Jerusalem is running and its propensity to invest more and deepen its relationship with Kryon Systems , Amazon Web Services (AWS) , Cisco Systems or identify new suppliers as part of their overall Digital and IT transformation projects to stay competitive, fend off threats from disruptive forces, or comply with internal mandates to improve overall enterprise efficiency.
We have been analyzing Bank of Jerusalem revenues, which have grown to $218.0 million in 2024, plus its IT budget and roadmap, cloud software purchases, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions for Bank of Jerusalem intention to invest in emerging technologies such as AI, Machine Learning, IoT, Blockchain, Autonomous Database or in cloud-based ERP, HCM, CRM, EPM, Procurement or Treasury applications.
Bank of Jerusalem Tech Stack and Enterprise Applications
PaaS
Vendor |
Previous System |
Application |
Category |
Market |
VAR/SI |
When |
Live |
Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kryon Systems | Legacy | Kryon RPA | Robotic Process Automation | PaaS | n/a | 2020 | 2020 |
In 2020, Bank of Jerusalem deployed Kryon RPA, a Robotic Process Automation application, to automate processing of mortgage and consumer loan deferral requests submitted via multiple channels during the COVID 19 pandemic. The deployment used Kryons unattended RPA capability to ingest, queue and execute high volume deferral workflows across the banks existing systems.
Implementations focused on unattended bot orchestration for rule based document and form processing, automated data entry and status updates, and queue management to handle surge volumes. Kryon RPA was configured to centralize deferral eligibility checks and to trigger standard processing steps without human intervention, aligning with operational controls typical of Robotic Process Automation deployments. The configuration emphasized throughput and repeatable processing rather than changes to customer facing channels.
The automation targeted mortgage and consumer loan operations and ran under regulator driven timetable pressures, enabling the bank to process tens of thousands of deferral requests rapidly. Bank of Jerusalem reported that Kryon RPA helped the institution meet regulator driven timelines and substantially reduce manual workload. Governance centered on automated workflow orchestration, queue oversight and operational controls to maintain compliance during the surge.
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Transactional Email | PaaS |
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2019 | 2019 |
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IaaS
Vendor |
Previous System |
Application |
Category |
Market |
VAR/SI |
When |
Live |
Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon Web Services (AWS) | Legacy | Amazon EC2 | Application Hosting and Computing Services | IaaS | n/a | 2020 | 2020 |
In 2020, Bank of Jerusalem implemented Amazon EC2 to host its public website, deploying Amazon EC2 within the Application Hosting and Computing Services category. The implementation provisions virtual compute instances to run the web tier and associated runtime processes, leveraging AWS constructs such as instance sizing, virtual private cloud networking, security groups and instance configuration for application hosting. Amazon EC2 is the primary compute layer referenced for the bank's web presence.
Operational responsibility is concentrated in a small IT footprint, with instance lifecycle management, access control through AWS Identity and Access Management and basic patching and monitoring workflows observable in the implementation. Governance is expressed through account level controls and security group based network segmentation, enabling programmatic provisioning and standard compute orchestration via the AWS console or API. The overall configuration aligns with Application Hosting and Computing Services use cases for web serving and hosted application processes.
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CyberSecurity
Vendor |
Previous System |
Application |
Category |
Market |
VAR/SI |
When |
Live |
Insight |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cisco Systems | Legacy | Cisco Secure Email (formerly Email Security Appliance) | Secure Email Gateways (SEGs) | CyberSecurity | n/a | 2020 | 2020 |
In 2020 Bank of Jerusalem deployed Cisco Secure Email (formerly Email Security Appliance) as its Secure Email Gateways (SEGs) control visible on the corporate website. The implementation signal on the bank web presence indicates Cisco Secure Email is in use to mediate email flows for the organization’s published domains, establishing an SEG layer for inbound and outbound mail traffic.
Cisco Secure Email implements core Secure Email Gateways (SEGs) capabilities including inbound and outbound SMTP filtering, anti spam and anti malware inspection, TLS transport encryption, quarantine management and administrative policy controls, aligning with standard SEG functional terminology. For a small banking organization with seven employees the deployment implies a compact operational footprint with centralized administration and policy enforcement, and the Cisco Secure Email application provides console based monitoring and quarantine workflows to support email security governance and day to day message handling.
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Security Orchestration, Automation, and Response (SOAR) | CyberSecurity |
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2018 | 2018 |
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IT Decision Makers and Key Stakeholders at Bank of Jerusalem
| First Name | Last Name | Title | Function | Department | Phone | |
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Apps Being Evaluated by Bank of Jerusalem Executives
| Date | Company | Status | Vendor | Product | Category | Market |
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