N 40.7128 W 74.0060 / SAP RISE Negotiation / IDX 2026.05New York . London . Stockholm
Independent RISE Advisory
SAP RISE Negotiations
VER. 2026.05
DOC.ID / CASE.002
STATUS / LIVE
Case 02 / Financial Services

European bank rewrites nine RISE clauses before signing under DORA scope.

A top tier European bank with operations across twelve countries received a $34M RISE with SAP proposal carrying five year term commitments. The proposal landed two months after DORA enforcement began. The bank operational risk team flagged nine clauses that conflicted with the bank exit plan testing requirements. The engagement closed with the nine clauses rewritten, a 64 percent reduction in committed contract value, and DORA aligned exit protections built into the agreement.

Engagement Profile
SectorFinancial Services
GeographyEU, 12 countries
Revenue$28B
Initial Claim$34M
Final TCV$12.2M
Reduction64%
Duration18 weeks
Reduction
64%
Against initial RISE proposal value
Clauses Rewritten
9
Before signature, DORA aligned
Exit Credits
$3.6M
Recoverable under regulatory exit
Term
5 yr
With exit plan test rights

A regulatory reset of the RISE conversation.

The bank operated a mature SAP estate across retail banking, commercial banking, treasury, and a separately regulated asset management subsidiary. The on premise ECC environment was approaching the SAP mainstream maintenance horizon, and the SAP account team had been pushing a RISE with SAP Cloud Private Edition migration for eighteen months. The bank board had asked for a final commercial proposal in advance of the annual technology planning cycle.

The proposal arrived in March 2026, two months after DORA enforcement began for in scope European financial entities. The bank operational risk team reviewed the proposal against the DORA exit plan testing requirements, the substitutability analysis expectations, and the third party concentration risk framework that the bank ICT supervisor had communicated in the prior six months. Nine clauses inside the SAP proposal conflicted directly with what the bank had committed to its supervisor.

The engagement was scoped at eighteen weeks. The work split into four streams running in parallel. Commercial modelling and benchmarking. Contract review against DORA scope. Operational continuity and exit plan testing design. Hyperscaler selection against the bank existing infrastructure relationships.

Four phase negotiation sequence.

01
Intercept
Account team engagement reset around DORA scope. Timeline extended to allow contract redline and supervisor consultation.
02
Measure
TCO model built across five and seven year scenarios. Concentration risk analysis against existing hyperscaler relationships. Exit cost modelled.
03
Negotiate
Nine clause redline submitted with DORA citations. Executive escalation in week ten when SAP legal pushed back on exit plan testing rights.
04
Convert
Final contract signed with rewritten exit, audit, subcontractor disclosure, and incident reporting clauses. Supervisor briefed before signature.

What the contract review surfaced.

Nine clauses inside the SAP proposal failed the DORA alignment review. The exit plan testing clause limited the bank to one annual test of two business days, conducted under SAP supervision, with output limited to a written report. The bank exit plan committed to quarterly tests, including data extraction validation, integration cutover rehearsal, and parallel operating capacity demonstration. The proposal language could not support the commitment.

The subcontractor disclosure clause limited SAP obligations to disclosure of named subcontractors at the time of contract signature, with no ongoing obligation to disclose changes. DORA expects continuous awareness of the subcontractor chain for material ICT services, with prior notice of material changes. The proposal language did not meet that standard.

The incident reporting clause aligned SAP reporting timelines to internal SAP processes rather than the DORA major incident classification framework. The bank supervisor had communicated specific expectations on incident classification, escalation timing, and the contractual underpinnings that should support those expectations. The proposal language was silent on those expectations.

The audit rights clause limited the bank to one annual audit conducted under SAP supervision, with audit scope limited to controls already certified under SAP standard frameworks. DORA contemplates expanded audit rights for material ICT service providers, including the right to conduct unannounced audits in defined circumstances. The proposal language did not include the expanded rights.

The nine clauses were not theoretical risk points. They were direct conflicts between the SAP proposal language and commitments the bank had already made to its ICT supervisor. The negotiation was not about commercial terms. It was about regulatory alignment.

What changed at signature.

All nine clauses were rewritten. The exit plan testing clause now supports quarterly tests with defined cooperation obligations, data extraction validation, and parallel access during the test window. The subcontractor disclosure clause includes ongoing disclosure obligations and prior notice of material changes. The incident reporting clause aligns to the DORA major incident classification framework with defined escalation timing. The audit rights clause includes expanded audit rights aligned to supervisor expectations.

The commercial reduction came from three sources. The first was the standard discount stack rebuild, with software subscription, infrastructure subscription, BTP credits, and Digital Access components negotiated separately. The second was the rescoping of the deal around the actually deployed bank user population rather than the original SAP proposed FUE count. The third was the unbundling of services that the bank could source from its existing systems integrator at lower rates than SAP standard professional services rates.

The exit credits worth $3.6M were tied to a defined regulatory exit trigger. If the bank ICT supervisor required exit from the RISE environment, the credit would be paid in cash on a defined schedule rather than applied against future SAP commitments. The trigger was narrow enough that SAP could accept it without rewriting standard contract templates. It was broad enough to give the bank meaningful recovery if regulatory direction changed.

ClauseInitial languageFinal languageDriver
Total contract value$34.0M$12.2MCommercial reset, scope rebase
Exit plan testing1 annual, SAP supervisedQuarterly with cooperation obligationsDORA exit plan alignment
Subcontractor disclosureStatic at signatureOngoing with prior noticeDORA concentration risk
Incident reportingSAP internal timingDORA major incident timingSupervisor expectation
Audit rightsAnnual, supervised, scopedExpanded with unannounced rightsDORA supervisor expectation
Regulatory exit creditNone$3.6M cash recoverableRegulatory exit trigger
Data extractionProprietary formatOpen format with parallel accessOperational continuity
Change in controlSAP consent broadCarve outs for intra groupBank restructuring optionality
Service level remediesCredits onlyCredits plus termination rightDORA service performance scope

Negotiating a RISE deal under regulatory scope.

Financial services buyers under DORA, banking supervisors, or other regulated frameworks face a different RISE negotiation than unregulated buyers. Our team has handled engagements across European banks, insurers, and asset managers. Request a confidential briefing to model your proposal against active engagement benchmarks.

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