Tuesday, June 25, 2013
All Bank Customer Experience Initiatives Are Not Created Equal
Despite an increased focus on customer experience initiatives by banks of all sizes, new research has found that not all of these efforts may be resulting in revenue growth.
In fact, while some banks and credit unions are significantly outperforming peers, others aren't focusing on efforts that customers care about most.
In a just released study from PeopleMetrics entitled, "A Shifting Landscape: Customer Experience Trends and Practices in Retail Banking", it was found that banks are engaged in a surprisingly large number of customer experience initiatives. In fact, it was found that 7 out of 10 executives were working on customer-centric practices.
While a good start, the research found that most banks have shied away from activities that require investment of human or financial resources. Part of the problem is a lack of association by banks between customer experience initiatives and a tangible ROI.
The important question is which activities lead to revenue growth. By evaluating activities being implemented at growth and non-growth banks, the research found that there were four fundamental customer experience practices that could be directly tied to revenue growth at financial institutions. These insights were drawn from a more encompassing PeopleMetrics study 2013 Most Engaging Customer Experiences (MECx) completed earlier this year.
Labels:
customer experience,
engagement,
loyalty,
satisfaction
Monday, June 24, 2013
Digital Shopping Has Transformed The Bank Purchase Funnel
Historically, customers came into a branch to research financial products prior to purchase. Today, the majority of customers have done significant online research before entering the lobby, transforming the bank and credit union purchase funnel.
Unfortunately, these digital shoppers get confused as they try to navigate tedious web pages or become unimpressed when they encounter unprepared branch personnel, requiring financial institutions to develop an improved multichannel sales strategy.
When respondents to the Novantas 2012 Multi-Channel Sales Survey were asked to identify their preferred channels for product research, online was cited as the top avenue by 63 percent of respondents with only 13 percent of the respondents stating that the branch was their primary research source. A majority of these same respondents, however, preferred to open an account at a branch, with only 36 percent preferring to open an account online.
The Novantas research found that preferences differed based on the account the customer was researching, with customer using the online channel more when shopping for a new checking account (69%) than for a mortgage (57%) or investment product (55%). Again, the branch channel was not the first choice for initial research.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Banks Accelerate Mobile Banking Innovation
The acceptance of mobile banking has grown more quickly than most financial institution futurists could have imagined. The impact of channel migration is changing the foundation of banking as we know it, with banks now being carried in customer's pockets and handbags wherever they go.
This seismic shift in consumer behavior is prompting banks around the world to innovate their mobile offerings at breakneck speed. The question is . . . what will the next generation of mobile banking look like? And how should banks respond?
In the new insight report entitled, "Mobile Banking 2013 - Are You Following or Leading?", Mapa Research provides an in-depth quantitative and qualitative review of the mobile banking offerings of 67 banks in 14 countries to find the best of recent innovations in the industry. Using a panel of live bank accounts from around the world, the report has close to 100 visual examples of mobile innovations including reviews of 15 additional offerings that put the best and most recent mobile banking developments under the microscope.
The report debunks a number of myths that seem to be prevalent both inside and outside of the financial services industry:
The report debunks a number of myths that seem to be prevalent both inside and outside of the financial services industry:
- The largest banks have been hampered by legal constraints and legacy systems meaning ‘risky’ or innovative ideas have been shelved. Innovations are coming from large traditional banks as well as nimble mobile centric disruptors
- Few banks let customers make payments to new payees in mobile banking. In fact more do than don’t
- Payments to mobile/email services have been pioneered only by the most innovative banks. Again, the banks who don’t provide this functionality are now in the minority
- Meaningful customer support and advanced functionality such as PFM and share trading are hard to deliver on mobile. In fact more and more banks are proving that these features can be deployed successfully
Preview of Mapa Research report available for free download here.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
9 Steps to Improving Bank Cross-Sell Performance
With an increasing need for banks to increase revenues and decrease costs, optimizing every marketing contact has never been more important. In addition to leveraging multiple channels to generate a steady stream of new customers, one of the easiest and most steady sources of new businesses and related revenue is to reach out to current customers for additional business.
With the cost of acquiring new retail, small business or commercial
customers being five to ten times the cost of retaining an existing
one, and with the average spend of a repeat customer being 50-100% more
than a new one, bank marketers need to remember that the most efficient
investment of marketing funds is to market to customers that already bank
with you.
Here are 9 time-tested, common sense techniques that many bank marketers sometimes forget:
Here are 9 time-tested, common sense techniques that many bank marketers sometimes forget:
- Ask questions: Consultative selling has been discussed the focus of the
banking industry for decades. In a nutshell, the process begins by clearly
analyzing a customer’s situation before presenting services or
products. From the outset, a failure to cross-sell a brand new customer is
a failure to develop a consultative relationship and a failure to ask the
right questions.
Without these questions (which are close to impossible to ask later), the opportunity to open the right services initially or later in the relationship is made more difficult. In addition, as opposed to going through a long set of questions that make the banker (and customer) feel uncomfortable, the dialogue should be free flowing and natural. Another option is to engage the customer with tools that can be used to complete the profile easily such as a tablet device.
Monday, June 17, 2013
Using Big Data To Predict Online & Mobile Banking Needs
Investing in online and mobile channels was not intended to simply provide additional channels for customers to access their accounts. The promise of reduced costs, increased cross-sales and enhanced service was the objective for most banks.
The good news is that online and mobile channel adoption is very high, meaning that customers are downloading mobile banking apps to their phones and creating online access points at a high rate. Unfortunately, that’s where the momentum has stopped.
Third in a Series on Big Data in Banking
Instead of migrating more expensive interactions to less costly channels, consumers have actually increased their total interactions. “In talking to all types of banks across the globe, we’re hearing a similar story – customers are signing-up for online and mobile banking, but calls into the call centers are not decreasing at any noticeable rate,” says Ido Ophir, head of products at Personetics. “People are still calling with transaction-related questions and even account-level questions.”
A recent industry report revealed that more than 30 percent of customer service calls were preceded by an online visit. That’s a large percentage, especially when the vast majority of these questions can easily be answered in the digital self-services channels.
Based on the numbers being
reported by large banks, while they have several million signed up for digital banking services, less than
10% are using mobile banking in any real capacity each month. So, while banks have done a great job of signing
up consumers for online and mobile banking, customers are not fully leveraging
what these self-service channels have to offer. The utilization problem actually goes even further - most customers log
in to check balances or look at individual transaction details, but only a very
small percent use in-depth or multiple features like funds transfers and check
image deposits on a regular basis.
Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System - Consumers and Mobile Financial
Services (March 2013)
The question is, what’s stopping them?
Is it that:
- They don’t want anything else? . . . Show me the balance and I’m done.
- They can’t find what they’re looking for? . . . They get frustrated and leave.
- The service they want isn’t offered? . . . Only high-level transaction inquiry; no detailed information.
- They aren’t sure what they’re looking for? . . . Expecting better personal guidance.
- They don’t know what to do or where to go? . . . Poor user interface.
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