Marketing concepts for banking in the new millennium.
Bexley, James B. ; James, Joe ; Maniam, Balasundram 等
INTRODUCTION
With the beginning of the new millennium, there is a need to focus
on the fact that banking has changed and is changing at a very rapid
pace. In fact, the industry has undergone more changes in the previous
five years than all of the prior 50 years combined. It is also important
to realize that this rapid change is not just limited to the banking
industry--it touches every phase of American life as the computer,
competition, and the Internet change the way products and services are
delivered. How can banks position themselves to be competitive?
Some key questions that need to be asked about marketing bank
products in the new millennium are:
What will banking look like in the future?
Will bank asset size determine success or failure?
What will banks have to do to insure success?
How will the "new competition" impact the individual bank?
Can all of the banks make the "cut"? If so,
Will banks have a rising investment value?
Will the banks be relevant to their customer/prospect
base?
What has changed in banking since 1980? Interstate banking has
become a reality. The firewalls between commercial banking and
investment banking have been eliminated by the repeal of the
Glass-Steagall Act, Bank consolidation has been extensive, with big
banks replaced by giant banks. Nonbanks and secondary markets have taken
a major role in retail lending. Most loan funding has become almost
totally interest rate sensitive. Thrifts have lost any status that they
previously held and historic reason for being. The desire to reduce
costs has resulted in automation has transformed backroom and delivery
systems, and technology has changed in geometric proportions.
What has not changed since 1980? Banks and thrifts are highly
profitable and growing. Branches are still the primary focus of banking.
Customers prefer small institutions to large ones. Deposit insurance
continues to have a major impact on customer money placement. Small
business lending remains highly specialized. Quality service continues
to be critical to bank customers.
FACTORS IMPACTING FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Looking at the net impact on banking since the 1980s, large banks
are in a race for size and national marketshare. Mid-sized banks and
stock thrifts are doing well but face the greatest likelihood of having
their markets erode and their organizations being acquired. Small banks
and thrifts are doing very well, but the future contains a large number
of unknowns.
As banking enter the 21st century, they must consider several
pertinent factors. Some 43 million households own personal computers.
Conservative estimates predict that 60% of the households in our country
will be online by the end of the year 2000. Computers are providing more
processing power for less money. For example, in the early 1970s, Bank
of the Southwest in Houston purchased the first third generation
computer mainframe used to process a bank. They paid $1.3 million for
that computer. Today, most laptop computers costing some two or three
thousand dollars are more powerful than that 70s state-of-the-art
computer!
This is the information age. The improvements in connectivity
through fiber optic cable had over 10 million households with DSL (digital) technology in 1998. The Internet with its worldwide web has
changed and is changing the way Americans conduct their business. With
these changes there has been a cultural shift in American living and in
the assumptions financial institutions make. The customer expects to get
things done instantly, efficiently, and without human mediation.
Perception of reality in terms of distance, hours, etc. no longer
exists.
When it comes to technology and banking, the market paradigm has
been transformed. Today, banks have computer banking, unattended
telephone balance response, and automatic bill payment. Banking is
evolving with its existing customer bases looking at new and larger
arrays of products and financial competitors that they must compete
with. Bank consolidation has become a reality with an industry high of
14,500 banks declining below the 9,500 level this past year (FDIC). If
banks are going to succeed, they must get over the denial, self-pity,
and anger about change, and set a course that will allow competing
effectively in the entire financial arena.
FUTURE MARKETING ISSUES
Jeanne Althouse, Director, Future of Money Program for The
Institute for the Future located in Menlo Park, California presented a
program to the recent Independent Bankers Convention in San Francisco.
She said the 21st Century Customer will be:
1 College educated majority, which will increase to 70%.
2 Currently averaging $40,000 family income per year, which should
increase to $50,000 annually by 2005.
3 On-line computer user, with 46% owning PCs.
4 Seeking control, better information, interaction, and convenience
as opposed to the traditional customer who is seeking price,
accessibility, convenience, and quality.
5 Educated customers have more financial accounts. 20% of new
consumers and 42% of college graduates have 4 or more financial
accounts.
6 Like electronic payments (with 18% using them).
7 High information comparison seekers with over 40% using 3 or more
sources.
While it is frightening to see how rapidly customers demands are
changing, one thing that has not changed is the need to give the
customer the services they want and deliver them in such a way that it
will be difficult for the competition to take the customer away from the
bank. Community banks have a distinct advantage over the large regional
or multi-national banks in that they generally know their customers by
name and give them personalized service. That is what sets the community
bank apart from the competition and insures their place in the market.
ADDRESSING MARKET ISSUES
Turning to some specifics concerning what banks are facing in the
new millennium, it is not all gloom and doom, but it is sobering and
demands the undivided attention of those banks wishing to be
competitive. Banking as it exists now will have to move to the concept
of the financial services firm. A financial services firm is a business
that supplies financial products and services. The general categories of
these products and services include transaction accounts (checking),
portfolio accounts (loans and time-related deposits), insurance,
investment banking (securities underwriting and broker/dealer
transactions), fiduciary services (trust and estate management),
financial planning, and data management/processing.
Just months ago, Congress eliminated the Glass-Steagall Act, which
since 1933 had provided the "firewalls" that separated
investment banking from commercial banking. Congress felt that there
would be a rush by aggressive banks to offer the investment banking
services, insurance services, and other services that were not allowed
under present laws. However, their expectations have been slow to
develop as banks cautiously take a conservative wait-and-see attitude.
Eventually, it is inevitable that investment banking and commercial
banking will be locked in competition for the "total
customer".
Another issue that must be addressed by the Congress is who may own
a bank, which will have a major impact on marketing and product
delivery. Currently, the Federal Reserve has a long list of permissible
activities for bank holding companies. Should a non-bank entity such as
J. C. Penney desire to own a bank (as defined by law as an organization
that both accepts deposits and makes loans) it would have to divest
itself of all activities not permitted by the Fed. Likewise, under
current law, if a bank holding company wanted to conduct an activity
such as manufacture telephones it would have to dispose of its bank.
Assuming that Congress "modernizes" its laws relating to banking, the financial services industry will be made up of all firms
that provide financial services and products. As such it will be an
amalgamation of traditional firms such as banks, thrifts, securities,
insurance, real estate, credit union, and finance companies.
Additionally, it will include those firms not traditionally known
primarily for the delivery of financial services such as General
Electric, Ford, General Motors, Sears, Daimler-Chrysler, J. C. Penney,
AT&T, and others.
Consolidation within banking and the financial services industry is
on-going at a rapid pace and will continue to be a factor well into the
21st century. All one has to do is look at Citicorp and Travelers, who
were so anxious to consolidate and get an advantage over the competition
that they consolidated or merged without formal regulatory approval. In
fact, if the Glass-Steagall Act had not been repealed and specific
legislation had not been passed, they would have had to reverse the
consolidation or merger within three years! Additionally, the largest
banking organization was created by the merger of Nations Bank and
BankAmerica. Another blockbuster merger was BankOne and First Chicago.
Lost in the merger of these giants were thousands of mergers and
consolidations of smaller banking organizations across the entire
nation. All of the above will have a substantial impact on how banks
market and deliver services.
As pointed out earlier, there will continue to be mergers and
acquisitions both on the national scene and local scene, but with all of
the merger activity, the big national and regional banks will not
eliminate the community banks, if they do what they do best. What most
bankers don't realize is that the large banks are probably more
concerned with takeover (and justifiably so) than the community bank.
Many of the larger banks have designed elaborate anti-takeover plans to
keep some of their peers and other financial industry giants from
merging with or acquiring them. Being consumed with take-over, could
cause some major banks to fail to come to speed with their marketing
effort.
Another major issue facing a changing banking industry is the
concern that product expansion will create more risk, which might
jeopardize bank safety. The public is not ready to give up its Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation insurance. Congress has already shown that
it is unwilling to extend the insurance safety net to cover
non-traditional banking products. This could create a major dilemma.
Often, management in banks and other organizations are fearful of
introducing new products. As banks move toward a highly competitive
financial services industry approach, they must step up and deliver
products that will meet the public's needs and make banks more
competitive. With the changing technology in banking, there has never
been a time like the present when the public was demanding so many new
services and products. At the same time, competition should cause the
bank's management to look for new products and services to retain
existing customers and attract new bank customers. The status quo approach will not allow banks to be competitive in today's
environment.
SERVICE QUALITY AS A MARKETING DRIVER
It is becoming more obvious that the delivery of quality service is
the single most important element for banks to be successful.
Unfortunately, quality is much like the weather, everyone talks about it
but very few people do anything about it. Recall, if you will, shortly
after World War II the radios and other products coming out of Japan.
They were cheap, unreliable and not competitive in the American
marketplace. To compete, the Japanese dedicated themselves to a quality
discipline that now has them at the forefront of quality. If banks are
going to be equal to the challenge, they can accept nothing less than
100% accuracy. Why? Because most banks and companies are willing to
accept errors and mistakes in the range of from 1 to 5 percent! Some
banks and businesses regard a nominal error rate as routine.
Here is why even 99.9 percent isn't good enough. Jeff Dewar, a
researcher for Q.C.I. International, a quality improvement training
firm, clearly proves why 99.9 percent isn't good enough. Dewar
stated in USA Today , "As we face the future, 100 percent
performance will become the predominant philosophy." To prove his
philosophy, here is what Dewar says would be the result if things were
done right "ONLY" 99.9 percent of the time:
A Two unsafe landings at Chicago O'Haire Airport every day!
B 16,000 lost pieces of mail per hour!
C 20,000 incorrectly filled drug prescriptions per year!
D 500 incorrect surgical procedures performed each week!
E 22,000 checks debited from wrong accounts per hour!
Should you be one of the lucky 99.9% this would be fine, but should
you be among the "unlucky one-tenth of one percent" in the
above examples, the error affects you 100 percent. It is rather obvious
why banks cannot accept "nominal errors".
SUMMARY
To be competitive in the 21st century, banks must create a climate
for success. This climate consists of obtaining, training, and keeping
good people. People are banks' most important asset. To involve
their people, banks need to build group effectiveness, which cannot be
ordered or "willed". Instead, it is a climate that exists in
which the employees feel that their ideas are valued, and that they are
a part of the group--not outsiders. Further, they need to feel that they
have management's support to try new things without fear that they
will be second-guessed. They need encouragement to keep going against
the challenges that face them. Successful employees need to be rewarded
for their successes, and at the same time, those that weren't quite
so successful need to be encouraged to try again.
In conclusion, there are many challenges to banking in the future,
but there are also many opportunities for those financial organizations
flexible enough to adapt their marketing approaches to meet the demands
brought about the changing banking scene.
REFERENCES
Althouse, Jeanne, (1999). Director, Future of Money Program for The
Institute for the Future, Menlo Park, CA, Presentation to the
Independent Community Bankers Annual Convention, San Francisco, March.
Bexley, James B. (1998). Directors' Duties &
Responsibilities in Financial Institutions, Huntsville, TX: Sam Houston
Press, Huntsville.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, (1998) Annual Statistical
Data.
Hempel, George H. & D. Simonson. (1999). Bank Management-Text
and Cases, 5th Ed., New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Koch, Timothy W. (1999). Bank Management, 4th Ed., Fort Worth: The
Dryden Press.
Rose, Peter S. (1999). Commercial Bank Management, 4th Ed., Boston:
Irwin/McGraw-Hill.
Sinkey, Jr., Joseph F. (1998), Commercial Bank Financial
Management, 5th Ed., Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.
James B. Bexley, Sam Houston State University
Joe James, Sam Houston State University
Balasundram Maniam, Sam Houston State University