Could Apple be your next bank?
A few weeks ago, I was enjoying a lazy Saturday morning in London loitering on social media, when I got an unexpected message from Apple Pay. It was a payment confirmation to Uber. I checked the App to find 5 transactions on Uber between 1:00 and 5:00 am, when I was fast asleep. I logged-in to the Uber app to find 5 long distance trips in the Philadelphia area – I had been hacked.
I immediately checked my Amex app – the payment card on the Uber account – to block payment. There was no trace of the fraudulent transactions. I called Amex customer service and they (somewhat unapologetically) explained that transactions in their App can take up to 24 hours to appear “That’s just how the app operates”. What struck me about this was not that Amex could not provide data to me in real time – they clearly could if Apple could – It’s that they felt it was not necessary.
Those who use it know, that Apple Pay is a better card payments interface than those most card companies currently offer – and they have done this using the card companies’ own infrastructure. Apple understands the value of a good user experience that truly addresses the needs of a card customer, much better than the card companies themselves seem to do.
In the last few years, we all know how Apple disrupted the media distribution, mobile phones and photography industries. They did this, not because they were attracted to the economics of these industries, but because they wanted people to buy more iPhones, iPads and iPods. So a question many should ask is: what if If Apple decides that banking is the next service they need to provide to sell more boxes?
What would Apple Banking look like? I would suggest that they would build their proposition on top of three key things they are very good at: user experience, authentication and data analytics.
This platform would engage with a number of third parties that would provide a banking service superior to anything in the market. Considering Apple’s customer base, skills and financial strength – Apple Banking could easily become the world’s most formidable challenger bank.
The Apple Banking platform would offer three main services that would enable customer to do the following:
- Manage: Brilliant user experience to understand and supervise how customers manage their money enabling users to control their money
- Optimise: Provide customer the knowledge and the ability to be always getting the best provider for their financial needs
- Reward: Use their understanding of the customer to provide them relevant and valuable rewards
Manage
First and foremost Apple Banking will be a mobile application integrated with Apple Pay. Apple is very good at making complex processes appearsimple to the end-user. The Apple Pay proposition, even in its current incarnation, is a distinct improvement on many other mobile payment propositions in the market. Apple Banking would do the same.
Customers would be able to engage with their banking platform in a simple and clean interface that provides them with a snapshot of their financial situation. Powerful PFM (good examples of Personal Financial Management businesses are Quicken and Geezeo) would provide customers with clear insight and possible actions that they could take to get the most from banking provision. Apple would get customers’ permission to access their bank accounts and populate the Apple Banking application with real-time customer transactional information. This would then be re-presented to customers in a way that is straightforward to understand and easy interact with. This interface would enable customers to interact with their bank through the Apple Banking interface, making it possible for the customer to do anything they can do on their Bank’s web and mobile offerings through their App. A brilliant example of good banking services UX is provided by the Finnish non-bank wallet Holvi (recently acquired by BBVA).
To get access to live customer data, Apple could use the (few for now) existing banking APIs or resort to a screen-scraping solution. Yodlee andeWise are good examples of businesses that already offer this service. In Europe with the advent of PSD2 (European Payments Services Directive) EU banks will be mandated to let their customers enable “Trusted Third Parties” to access their personal bank accounts through APIs. Apple will then be able to reinvent the digital banking UX available to most bank customers.
Within this new UX, Apple could provide insight on the quality, pricing and features of the services customers are receiving from their bank. This would be equivalent of a whole-of-market impartial shopping comparison, using real customer data that requires almost no effort for customers to set up. Customers would quickly see if they are getting value for money or if they would be better off with another provider. A good example of this approach is provided by Ontrees in the UK.
All of this would reduce the need for customers log in to their bank to bank. Customers would begin prefer to use Apple Banking to other interfaces available to them gradually becoming dis-intermediated from their bank, eventually resulting in the customer loyalty to shift from the Banks to Apple. This would lead customers to see banking as a commodity with Apple Banking as their trusted advisor protecting them from being taken advantage from the unscrupulous banks. All of which neatly leads to the next feature of Apple Banking.
Optimise
Once Apple Banking becomes the primary way customers engage with their bank, providing them with insight on the quality of the banking services they are receiving, the next logical step is to enable customers to optimise their banking provision. Apple Banking could not only show customers which provider would offer them the best service and value for money – they could also make it extremely easy for customer to move their custom to the best provider.
Apple Pay’s core proposition is to identify and authenticate the customer at the point of sale. Apple owns most of the data a bank needs to open a new customer account. Apple captures demographic data, details on ownership of other financial products and even biometric information that could be relatively easily bundled into an authentication / account opening service for banks. Apple Banking could allow customers to authenticate and open a new account with a new provider with a few taps. Making the commoditisation of the bank complete. The challenger bank Mondo is aiming for such an approach.
Reward
Once Apple Banking is able to provide all of the above the services to their customers, the next step is provide rewards. Apple Banking could leverage Apple’s relationship with the retailers and manufacturers to provide cash-backs and incentives to their customers. This would be a supercharged version of the. big-data cash-back propositions provided by businesses likeCardlytics and Meniga.
Apple has gone out of their way to announce that they would not use customer data for marketing purposes without their consent. But if customers consent, the richness of the data that Apple has access to would enable the rewards that it could provide be more substantial and better targeted that any other provider today.
If Apple decides to launch Apple Banking it would give banks a real run for their money. Apple has a better grasp on user experience and customer engagement than most businesses – not just banks. They have close to a billion iPhones in customers’ hands, a good few hundred millions with Touch-id authentication built-in, it has a trusted brand, very deep pockets and the skills to completely revolutionise the retail banking industry.
The attractiveness of the banking sector for Apple is not in its financial return. Banking is a relatively low margin, highly regulated and difficult business – so it’s unlikely that Apple will want to become a bank. Apple’s interest is in becoming an even more integral part of its customers’ life, creating an even higher barrier for them to switch hardware provider.
In a few years we could see that, not only does the world’s biggest taxi service not own any cars and the world’s largest hotel chain not own any property also the world’s greatest bank doesn’t have a banking license.
Senior Director - Structured Lending Origination - Healthcare | empowering UK Healthcare SMEs growth ambitions through flexible funding solutions.
7 年Apple, Google etc... any of these names have the wallet size to launch into consumer banking and obliterate the existing retail banks globally. Most people already carry a mobile platform that other banks operate on. It's only a matter of time before we move across from our banks to our phone companies banking if they do choose to go down that route. There will be others who know far more about this topic and how far those global brands are down the track in development.
I’m the guy who left the Glastonbury Festival with zero job prospects and somehow ended up with a 20-year career in talent acquisition and recruitment. I also talk and host stuff.
8 年Really great post Alessandro Hatami - very informed. This really builds on my long-held (*and less detailed) belief that Apple has the potential to provide a full banking experience that is far superior to that of the traditional banking providers in the UK. I agree with Gary Watts that propositions from Mondo Bank, Atom and N26 all have the potential to improve on the promise that was pinned to the 'challenger banks', however, Apple's dominance in customer experience and overall customer engagement would provide them a distinct advantage. Additionally, as a brand, Apple is trusted by the consumer - a key element to any banking proposition.
Payments | Innovation | Platforms | Ecosystems | Fintech | Financial Services | Open Banking | Cards | New Propositions | APIs | AI
8 年Great article Alessandro I think you could probably swap out the Apple brand for a number of other of the big digital players that will also look to play in this space. Also as Brendan Jones mentioned, they wont have to hold the credit risk but provide an amazing customer experience and give the customer value.
Alessandro a great article and you express a view that I have held for some time, albeit not directly relating to Apple. I believe that there are a number of consumer facing organisations that can deliver upon this vision, whether it be Apple, Google, social networks, computing companies etc. There are many consumer facing companies that have developed a deep and rich interface with their customers, that to elevate their services to provide financial services is not a big step. This especially in light of PSD2 within Europe as you mention. This will give these organisations the opportunity to access customer data, with explicit consent, directly from their banks, allowing them to develop a richer understanding of their customers and their purchasing behavior. I personally believe to use the term “bank” can be somewhat misleading in this context. Bank by definition means that the organisation is regulated as a Credit Institution etc. and to achieve this status means a lot of time, money and investment in technology, not forgetting the burdensome regulatory oversight. Once you receive your banking license you can then commence business in markets that are typically saturated with incumbent players, who most the time do not deliver what the consumer wants, however tend to retain their client base due to customer apathy and little perceived value in moving to another provider. In the UK the Current Account Switching Service (CASS) has been an abject failure due to this, and this is a major obstacle for the new Challenger Banks launching across Europe. How long before they can attract a sufficient volume customers to move the business in to the “black”? Another issued which should not be overlooked is “trust”. Even though we have gone through a recent banking crisis where to be called a banker was like being infected with some unmentionable disease, banks still today are viewed as trustworthy when it comes to holding consumer funds. However, for the tech savy, consumer facing organisations that have already developed a deep and rich interface with their customers, I believe the future looks bright. They have an opportunity, at least within EU due to PSD2, to position themselves in between the customer and the bank, to deliver value bearing consumer finance propositions that their customers will find engaging. Services that they offer directly (i.e. account aggregation) and will no doubt also obtain from specialist organisations (i.e. loans, mortagages, savings accounts, insurance … the list is endless). In this scenario they will not be a bank, and will not have to take on all the regulatory burden and oversight associated with this. They will have to get regulated status under PSD2, however, this will be less burdensome as they will not be holding client funds directly. So Apple et al, sit between the consumer and the bank. They offer value bearing consumer finance propositions, they enhance the already deep and rich interface they have with their customers. They add value to customers and become the “go to place” for financial products and services. The consumer wins!! The downside for banks in this scenario they could become merely account service providers, analogous to mobile network operators (MNOs), providing the pipework and plumbing only.