Showing posts with label internet banking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label internet banking. Show all posts

The Impact of Digital Transformation and Mobile Apps on Banking

The banks of today will not be the banks of tomorrow unless you're caught in the script of Ground Hog's Day ~ Kevin Benedict

Mobile apps are rapidly replacing branches as the customer preferred point of interaction with banks. Today, customers are choosing their banks based upon the quality of their mobile apps and the services that are enabled.   In recent customer satisfaction surveys, mobile apps were shown to play a significant role in keeping customers satisfied.

In addition, users today are seeking ways to consolidate their personal financial management tools and banking tools all in one application.  They would like a complete view of their personal finances.  The challenge today is these services are often providing by different providers with different apps.

In the following news excerpts from 2014, we can clearly see the impact mobile and online banking is having on banks.

RBS recently announced there has been a 30% fall in the number of transactions carried out at its branches since 2010.  As a result, they are shutting 44 branches across the UK. The number of online and mobile transactions has now surpassed those taking place in branches and ATMs.

Citibank Korea Inc., the South Korean unit of Citigroup Inc. announced it will close nearly a third of its branches, reflecting falling profits in the country and a shift to online banking.  The bank said it would cut the number of its branches to 134 from 190 over the next several months and enhance online services for mobile and tablet platforms.  Source: April 8, 2014 edition of the WSJ
Challenges - Digital Transformation and Banking

Senior bank executives view technology as the biggest cause of transformation to the industry (Source PwC, Retail Banking 2020: Evolution or Revolution). The problem is that executives are not confident about their preparedness for a technology-driven transformation.  Only 20% believe their organizations are prepared for this transformation.

The accelerating demands for mobile apps from business units and customers are triggering a tidal wave of disruption.  This disruption is a huge challenge for CIOs who must transition their banks’ strategies to align with the technology adoption rate of their customers.   

  • 50 percent of respondents say their company does not have a mobile strategy. 
  • Of those companies with a mobile strategy, 45 percent say it is not aligned with IT objectives
  • 36 percent say it is not aligned with business objectives. 
  • Tactics are overshadowing the development of long-term strategy.

Source: Ponemon Institute report titled The Changing Mobile Landscape in Financial Services

In addition to the technology related transformations, non-banks are entering into services once
reserved for banks.  For example, Wal-Mart has launched a service called Walmart-2-Walmart that allows customers to send money to other customers using the store’s network of more than 4,000 retail locations.  Source: http://www.bankinnovation.net/2014/04/walmart-enters-p2p-space/

Did you know that most traditional banks draw the majority of their income from loans?  Wal-Mart-housed banks, however, tend to draw more income from fees. Among the 6,766 banks the Journal looked into, just 15 had fee income higher than loan income.  Among those 15 were the top 5 banks operating through Walmart.  Yikes!  Those with low-incomes never get a break!

The world of banking is changing.  Today traditional banks must be innovating at the same rate as their customers are adopting technologies and changing their shopping and buying behaviors.  That is a huge task for those sitting on top of 40 year old mainframe systems not designed for a day of real-time and mobile interactions.


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Kevin Benedict
Writer, Speaker, Editor
Senior Analyst, Digital Transformation, EBA, Center for the Future of Work Cognizant
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***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I am a mobility and digital transformation analyst, consultant and writer. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Banks, Mobile Technologies and SMAC, Part 1

The mega-trends of SMAC (social, mobile, analytics and cloud) plus IoT (Internet of Things/Connected devices/M2M) are changing entire industries.  I am being asked frequently now to meet with IT and business teams to review how SMAC and related trends are impacting various industries so companies can better plan to meet these transformations.

My colleague at Cognizant, Peter Abatan, is both a banking expert and a mobile technologies expert.  Recently Peter has been sharing his thoughts with me on the topic of how SMAC (social, mobile analytics and cloud) trends are impacting the banking industry.  Here are some excerpts from our exchanges:

  • Bank branches are predicted to see diminishing foot traffic (visits per branch) at a rate of 8-10% each year for the next 8 years.  People are using mobile apps in increasing numbers rather than visiting branches for routine banking tasks.
  • Given the popularity of mobile banking apps, the banks with the smartest and most responsive mobile banking infrastructure will have a competitive advantage.
  • If banks do not quickly evolve and educate their customer base on the advantages of mobile banking and digital transformation, other competing banks will, and they will use it to their advantage.
  • Traditional banks are feeling an increasing pressure to transform because their current size, structure and legacy IT environments prevent them from adapting rapidly enough to meet new challenges and to address the changing behaviors in the marketplace.  Many banks will become smaller and more nimble as a result of these pressures.
  • Social media impacts the way banks sell and market their products.  People talk about their banks, the service levels they receive and the price of service fees. If a bank tries to sell a customer the wrong product, provide poor service or charge a higher than appropriate service fee, then the customer’s network of contacts will learn about it quickly.
  • Crowd-funding platforms like Crowdcube and KickStarter are offering higher returns on investments than traditional banks.  This is an emerging threat to traditional banks.  These crowd-funding platforms have far lower cost structures to maintain than a traditional bank with branches and labor intensive sales and marketing channels.
Read Part 2 of this article series here.



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Kevin Benedict, Head Analyst for Social, Mobile, Analytics and Cloud (SMAC) Cognizant
View Linkedin Profile
Learn about mobile strategies at MobileEnterpriseStrategies.com
Follow me on Twitter @krbenedict
Join the Linkedin Group Strategic Enterprise Mobility
***Full Disclosure: These are my personal opinions. No company is silly enough to claim them. I am a mobility and SMAC analyst, consultant and writer. I work with and have worked with many of the companies mentioned in my articles.

Interviews with Kevin Benedict