Banks seem very ambivalent about how they feel about their local customer..
Alas, I am no expert at all on banking and I found myself getting more and more puzzled the more I looked at the topic on the internet.
This one article from a banking site gives some clues, though
How Community Banks Can Compete in Mobile
Banks continue to face a difficult operating
environment, amid a sluggish economic recovery, compressed margins,
onerous regulatory requirements, and looming disruptions from
nontraditional market entrants. Most banks have taken steps to address
near-term financial pressures, such as pricing adjustments or operating
cost reductions (including branch closures). Additionally, over the past
few years, those banks with the resources have also invested in a broad
range of digital (online and mobile) services. These services have
helped to further reduce operating costs by migrating transactions to
lower-cost channels while also enhancing the customer experience.
Customers, in return, have rewarded these digitally-enabled banks with
increased market share.
First, regional and community banks know their customers better than anyone else.
While larger banks offer mobile services that are largely transactional in nature (mobile account balances, transaction alerts, remote deposit capture, etc.), regional and community banks have the opportunity to differentiate by offering truly differentiated services. Rather than simply providing mobile account statements and transaction histories, these banks should consider offering services linked to a broader, longer-term customer value proposition, such as personal financial management, expense planning, and savings incentives.
Using their own rich trove of customer data and their uniquely strong relationships in the local and regional merchant and civic communities, regional and community banks can deliver personalized shopping offers directly to customers’ mobile devices. Many other companies outside of financial services have successfully deployed mobile platforms; banks can follow these examples of using effective mobile app design and user interface elements, such as rich media, entertainment or gaming, to offer customers compelling and personalized experiences.
Second, a best-in-class approach can enable banks to create truly differentiated user experiences.
Banks are no longer forced to default to adding a mobile extension to their existing core banking platform. Although conventional wisdom says that integrating technology components from different sources typically increases complexity and time to market, integration partners and mobile development companies with specific competencies in mobile app development, mobile web design, service creation, and system integration are now able to minimize these risks.
Working with partners, banks can now strike the right balance between unique, differentiated services and the cost and complexity of development and deployment.
Third, the investment required to create and deliver mobile capabilities has shrunk considerably.
Institutions that led the creation of mobile services a few years ago had to invest heavily in developing applications from the ground up. Today, platform components as well as development and integration services are widely available at much lower cost. Cloud-based or hosted (mobile as a service) models have reduced the cost of delivery, leading to low capital investment and variable operating cost models. In short, current generation entrants can now leapfrog earlier, deeper-pocketed players on budgets that are affordable to small and mid-sized banks.
Small and mid-sized banks have a unique opportunity to benefit from the change in how customers interact with their banks by leveraging their unique relationships with their customers and their communities. Mobile technology gives these banks the ability to reconnect in more meaningful ways with their customers, build longer-term relationships and customer loyalty, and regain lost market share.
Seth Rosensweig is a managing director and Ari Roy is a director at AlixPartners
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