Convergence, Communication,
Connectivity –
they have changed it all! We are at the advent of a new era in the making. What
we have dreamt about is to become real; infact is becoming real. Thanks to advanced
telecom, mobile and the internet technologies. They all came to existence with
a specific purpose and never has mankind thought it would serve the purpose
what we wish to accomplish today. Every walk of life, every industry is seeing
change; we are at the crossroads of a mobile age!
Mobility isn’t a new
phenomenon. The retail banks had been using it for quite a few years now like
alerting the customer on an ATM withdrawal or a POS payment or for
communicating banks offers. Ever since and with the proliferation of
smartphones, Mobility is having a steep adoption trajectory in banks.
Innovation is still on the way. Each one is learning from the other what
innovativeness could they offer to their customers. Mobility in banking shouldn't be a delivery channel alone for branch
based banking but a contextual experience, with a clean design, simple
interface and an engaging platform to manage money. Today, unfortunately
many mobile banking sites just happen to be miniaturized replica of their
online banking websites. Little innovation is to be seen. Banks shouldn't be
reactive to changing customer behaviors but be innovative in growing the mobility platform for both customers and employees. Mobile should be looked
into as the creation of a new delivery platform for banks where user experience
is the key plus the security and fraud constraints should be addressed.
Questions that one should ask oneself as a
business leader or technology change leader could be-
Why do
users choose to go mobile?
What do
users do on their mobile devices?
What do
I expect from an application as a mobile user?
It will be a wise move to give some thought
on the above questions to arrive at answers from which you select the best few
to plan strategically for your mobile banking initiatives. Banks can also think
of creating an ‘Ideabank’ on channels such as their websites and social media
interfaces where customers can post their ideas, problems, challenges that
could be added to an attractive rewards scheme to encourage participation.
Bartering to cashless banking: Delving into the history
of money
Fig 1.1 Evolution of Money
Where could mobile banking create an impact?
Mobile applications that were created to meet
a certain functionality is getting more complex as additional features get
added up with innovation sprung out of increased customer expectations and
along with it greater is the security vulnerabilities. Amongst the highly
sought after financial function is the world of payments that has grown really
complex over the years with financial institutions, retailers, wireless, device
manufacturers all sneaking themselves in. An added dimension to this
competition is the tug of war between smart start-ups and established players.
With
external customers
– customers are the life-blood for any business and so is it for banks. Banks
today are equipping and moving towards to be along their customers to create an
impact and add value to each of their customer’s life decisions. The growth of
bank like institutions sprung from the initiatives of a few retailers, telcos
and technology firms have forced banks to rethink and adopt a strategy that’s
customer centric. Some of the mobile applications that banks could think of to
be part of their mobile strategy could be:
§ Account Opening
/ Account Management
-
Almost all banks
possess this mobile application, differentiation is the key. Say for instance,
a good user experience; ease in use could help customers use it again and
again.
§ Mobile
Deposits
-
Check deposits
-
Deposit guidelines
§ Cards Processing
/ Management
-
New Credit Card
Application / Processing
-
Spent Analytics
(Daily/ Monthly)
- User could set a
monthly spent limit from the available limit to check overspending (incorporate
alerts)
-
Receipts/ Statement
Generation
-
Lock/ Disable your
card ( say upon theft)
§ Loans
Management
-
New loan Eligibility
( based on loan type & borrowing power)
-
New loan application
( auto form filling and documents uploading)
-
Loan approvals
- Supports to help find
approximate prices for home (at a particular suburb), education (particular
region / university), and car (based on automobile type) loans based on loan
type and borrowing power.
-
Payday loans
disbursal ( against your employment, fixed deposits, credit cards)
- Payment Tracking and
history ( archived and retrieved through email when necessary using secure
password)
§ Investment
Portfolio Management
- Mobile app to manage
a portfolio of shares, insurance, mutual funds and other investment instruments (individual / firm)
-
Investment Analytics
-
Investments Tracking
§ Mobile Payments
- loans,
insurance premiums, mutual funds, utility bills etc.
-
Transfer funds
-
Mobile Contactless
-
Cardless Cash
withdrawals
-
Money remittances
-
Mobile Wallet
§ Customer
loyalty/ Rewards Management
-
Innovative loyalty
programs could be weaved into existing customer outreach efforts.
§ Mobile
Security Management
-
Anti-virus, app
security, data security, anti-theft, Remote data wipe
§ Mobile
Document Management
-
Digital Lockbox for
secure and easy storage of statements and payment acknowledgements.
§ Mobile
Analytics
-
Smart analytics for
customer risk profiling, investments, and product comparisons.
§ Mobile Video
Banking
- Video communication
channel that helps connecting mobile and desktop based customers to a bank’s
staff (Relationship Manager / Branch Manager) for face to face interactions. Here the customer is able
to interact in real time, virtually through their smartphones to the banks’ customer advisers for any
support. Let me cite the example of an Indian bank that took this innovation path, IndusInd Bank.
§ Mobile
Marketing / Cross-Sell
§ Digital
Marketing
§ Mobile Text
Banking
§ Cross
Industry Convergence
- Integrating both
banking and property market for offering support to new/ existing customers who
are
on the lookout for owning a home on loan.
The differentiation lies in how each bank
would position their application to draw their customer’s attention.
Within
the Enterprise
– Much has been done towards mobile enablement from a customer perspective, but
still many banks lag behind in mobile adoption within their enterprise for
faster decision making.
§ Mobile
Analytics
– helps marketing, cross-selling, fraud
and risk (ex, transaction monitoring and anomaly detection using behavioral
analytics), customer spent, customer experience, segment based analytics and
profitability.
§ Mobile CRM
– achieve
internal employee, inter-departmental coordination and collaboration.
§ Sales
Automation
- Email marketing, Lead
nurturing, Lead Scoring, CRM integration, Sales Alerts, Set meetings, reporting
§ Mobile Treasury
Management
- Managing liquidity and streamlining working capital cycles
- Approval of financial
transactions directly e.g. foreign exchange trading or wires that may require
multiple signatories.
- Controlled
Disbursement Reporting
- External
market monitoring such as currency fluctuations, credit ratings etc…
§ Mobile
Branch banking
- Cost effective. Convenient. Enables the bank staff to interact with their clients over mobile / handheld devices while on the go.
§ Workforce Management
The increased usage of
mobile devices have led a few financial services providers or new aspirants to
think of a mobile only banking platform, an extension and consolidation to the
myriad of mobile apps available for carrying various banking functions; a
mobile only bank that would offer services similar to a traditional brick and
mortar or online banking channel. The big question is - Would you trust your
money to a mobile only banking service? Financial Analysts worldwide believe
that more and more people will move money using their smartphones in the future
and the idea towards a mobile only bank is worth investing.
Some of the early innovators
in this field are MovenBank, Simple, GoBank, FidorBank and Jibun Bank. Jibun
Bank founded by Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi in 2008, already has 1.5 million
customers. Its mobile only banking app is designed specifically for the small
screens of mobile phones. MovenBank, mobile only banking platform founded by
Brett King, noted banking technology enthusiast and author; Simple and GoBank
differentiates itself from traditional banks in offering low fee banking and
sophisticated money management. Waves of innovation have been felt from across
the globe in the mobile only banking concept. For instance, UK based start-up Osper
(https://osper.com/ ) is
a mobile only branchless banking service that’s creating a banking service to
be used by children.
Tackling
User Adoption and Loyalty in Mobility Apps
The idea of going mobile is basically for
faster, easy access to information while on the go and in fulfilling the goal
of attaining high mobile user adoption and engagement is still really a
challenge. Mobile apps today sprout like weeds and many don’t survive after the
first use. According to SAP, 78 percent of the mobile apps are abandoned after
first use. Three things in apps would define mobile user adoption at a faster
pace – being simple, highly responsive and secure.
The mobile app that was
meant to carry out simple basic banking functions is witnessing complexity and
security threats are looming around with added features and functionalities. Though
users look for advanced functionalities yet they want their mobile apps to be
simple and easy to use in a secured environment. Security is really a concern
for mobile banking and financial services users especially when it comes to
payments while having to disclose their credentials for the transaction. Privacy
is another issue mobile user’s fear because many apps don’t disclose to their
users what information they collect or monitor. Addressing these challenges
would require a close coordination between the business and technology to
create apps that are simple, secure, highly responsive, available and respect
user privacy. The designers of apps should give users a highly personalized
painless experience.
Crucial factors that would
shape up increased adoption of mobile apps in banking can be summarized as
below:
Fig 1.2 User Expectations from Mobile Applications
Creating a wining mobile
strategy: Charting your approach
Banks and Credit Unions are faced with margin
compression, high operating costs, regulations, new competitors and channel
disruptions that threaten to put them out of business even for the most
efficiently run organizations. Banks should look towards Omni channel banking
that would maximize cross channel consistency and help in seamless user
experience where and when customers desire. Mobile happens to be one such
channel in the Omni channel banking strategy and it’s a highly disruptive
channel considering the present user acceptance and adoption rate.
Banks should look at from four different
perspectives – Company, Customer, Competitor and Channel while planning to
embark on a mobility initiative. Failure to take a disciplined approach will
divert attention from the pressing need to break through the conventional walls
of banking. What has set the banks behind the new entrants in financial
services? Lacking a clear strategic rationale, banks digital initiatives ended
up producing marginal enhancements that further drive up IT spending than
lending a competitive advantage for banks. Banks were slow in weaving new
customer facing technologies into the core of their operations and failed to
harness the full potential of the technologies around.
Company
|
§
Mobility adoption level
§
Transformation feasibility and scalability on existing
frameworks
§
Integration channels and complexity
§
Risks Assessment and management. Includes
Financial,
Regulatory, Operational and Technology
risks.
§
Mapping priorities
§
Results. How do we measure our progress?
|
Customer
|
§ Understanding
customer expectations
§ Understanding the
User Experience customers seek
§ The Security
apparatus customer expect
§ Advanced
functionalities – Customers expect mobile
apps that help them with managing
their financials, check
deposits, safe keeping of documents, real time
analytics
etc.
|
Competitor
|
§
Competitor types (Banks, Telcos, Technology firms and
start-ups)
§
Available Apps and the business purpose they serve
§
User experience they provide
§
Apps adoption level
|
Channel
|
§
Channel Adoption Statistics
§
Channel Assessment. Is mobility the right channel for
this service / product delivery in this geography?
§
Assessing customer’s channel convenience
|
Beyond
mobile banking
Though mobile enablement and
enhancements will continue to be a priority for banks, yet banks will try
venture into newer horizons such as wearables, artificial intelligence, data
analytics and non-core banking apps largely based on an Omni-channel engagement
approach. Many banks and financial services providers have already started
developing and deploying these applications.
Fig 1:3 Features
expected of from a future mobile app
Financial Services firms like
Caixa Bank (Spain), Barclays (UK), Nationwide (UK), Banco Sabadell (Spain) and
Westpac (Australia) have already developed and deployed wearable friendly
products. Qualcomm is said to be experimenting on giving life to smartphones through
artificial intelligence. Through their neuro inspired chips that mimic the
neural structures and processing methods found in the brain, smartphones of the
future should be able to recognize patterns of sounds, images and other data
helping in assisting users.
In a nutshell, banks should
do an initial assessment in having a clear blueprint for their mobile strategy.
It’s important for banks to analyze consumer adoption behavior and barriers,
study the competition and shortcomings and embark on a journey to build apps
that are scalable, user friendly, highly responsive and secure that incorporate
cutting edge features based on consumer’s real needs to survive in a growing
world of mobile apps. This journey will see no end but a silent metamorphosis in the adoption of newer technologies said to bring improvements in people's lives and mobile as a platform for change will hold relevance!
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