The Rise of the Digital-Only Banking Customer

The Rise of the Digital-Only Banking Customer

Are banks and credit unions keeping up with consumer demands when it comes to digital banking offerings? With 46% of consumers using only digital channels for their banking, expectations are outpacing experiences at most organizations.

By Jim Marous, Co-Publisher of The Financial Brand and Owner/Publisher of the Digital Banking Report

The financial services industry has been working hard to deliver a better experience on digital channels. Building on an early foundation that focused more on cost savings than customer experiences, most banking institutions now realize they must improve delivery of financial services on digital channels to keep pace with tech organizations like Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple (GAFA).

PwC’s 2017 Digital Banking Consumer Survey provides insights into the rapidly changing behavior of the digital banking customer. The most significant finding was the rise of a very specific group that PwC referred to as “omni-digital.” This segment uses only digital channels such as mobile phones, PCs and tablets to conduct their banking, avoiding traditional physical channels and call centers altogether.

The research found that 46% of consumers use only digital channels today. This is an amazing increase from the 27% share that was seen only four years ago. Other highlights from the research include:

  • Millennials bank by phone, period – 82% of 18 to 24-year-old smartphone owners say they use mobile banking. This should be a wake-up call to organizations who are building branches ‘to reach Millennials”.
  • Smartphone banking has gone mainstream – 60% of smartphone users report using mobile banking in some way, up from 36% four years ago.
  • The branch is not dead – 62% of survey respondents felt it was important for their bank to have local branches. In the future, however, “branches” could refer to sophisticated ATMs or a small office providing virtual capabilities since the frequency of visits have dropped from “a few times a month” to “a few times a year.”

The Rise of the ‘Omni-Digital’ Segment

For the past several years, the financial services industry has talked a great deal about the “omni-channel” segment. These customers use a variety of channels (both digital and physical), with the goal of most financial organizations being to provide similar experiences across channels, and to allow for travel between channels to be seamless.

PwC found that this segment of omni-channel customers has been significantly shrinking over the past four years, being replaced by the “omni-digital” customer who only uses digital channels. The size of this segment is massive (46%), with implications for branching strategies, investment prioritization, staffing models, etc.

If the access to banking will be through phones, computers and tablets for the majority of customers, how does this shift impact product development, product sales, customer service, design of mobile banking applications, etc. Should branches be closed, moved or resized? If an organization has differentiated itself on personal customer service, how does this translate to a digital platform?

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Thomas Mercer

Director of Application Development & CRM at University of Washington - Michael G. Foster School of Business

7 年

The most important issues are how we can securely move money in real time. The new Zelle product (https://www.zellepay.com/ - I have no affiliation) will move in the right direction, but the biggest benefit to society will be achieved when banks and credit unions enable secure, real-time, validated transfers of real USD currency between consumers, between consumers and business/government/organizations, and between business/government/organizations and each other. The reality is that these transactions have extremely low costs - they are merely the updating of database entries coupled with some security operations and logging/reporting. But our legacy of third party, for-profit payment processors and networks currently leech billions from our economy. Imagine what we can do when moving money is easy, secure, and instant. Micropayments open up options for ad-free content. Costs come down for retailers. Digital is the future. Let's make it happen. Death to paper checks!

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Zayed Khan

Strategic Alliances & Partner Development | AWS GCP Alliance | Circle of Excellence Winner | Cloud Payments Processing with Visa, MasterCard, American Express | Consultative | Driving Digital Experiences

7 年

The article could be titled "The rise of convenience in Banking"

Satiendar Guleria

MBA (MDI-Gurgaon) SCM; Rutgers Univ-US, ISO 31000-2018 & ISO/IEC 27001:2013; TUV-SUD, Negotiation-Univ of Michigan

7 年

Dear Jim, Rightly brought out Millennials are the game changer. And the country like India where they dominate the population demography this is the next big thing.

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Joseph Wong

TEFL-TESOL certified Leadership, Communications & Phonetics Coach who helps everyone become better leaders.

7 年

46% of consumers using only digital channels for banking is a very high number. May I know what demographics this number is representative of?

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