| The
Devil in the Details
By Kenneth Cline
Wells Fargo won a well-deserved
reputation as a retail banking innovator. But CEO Paul
Hazen discovered that poor execution of an acquisition
can trip up the best-laid strategies.
Sometimes innovation is just
not enough.
Wells
Fargo & Co. has been heralded as the pioneer retail
institution among large U.S. banks -- and for good reason.
The San Francisco-based company has gone further than
most in replacing traditional branches with supermarket
outlets. It was among the first to offer Internet banking.
Wells is aggressively backing "smart card" technology
by serving as the West Coast pilot for Mondex.
The bank's revolutionary program of making small business
loans through credit scoring and direct mail is so successful
that it is being copied nationally.
Such originality
notwithstanding, Wells today is regarded as more of a
cautionary light for the industry than a beacon. A $13
billion, or 15.5%, deposit reduction -- some planned,
some not -- occurred in the wake of its tempestuous acquisition
of First Interstate Bancorp. It will take a long time
for Wells to overcome negative publicity generated by
severe service problems plaguing the hurried merger integration.
Strategically, chairman and chief executive Paul Hazen
is fighting to regain lost ground as opposed to moving
his company forward.
To be sure, great
potential still lies with the bank's alternative delivery
strategy of encouraging customers to use supermarket outlets,
automated teller machines, telephone call centers and
PC online banking. The campaign promises to help cut Wells'
delivery expenses and win convenience-hungry customers.
But merger integration problems have, fairly or unfairly,
cast a pall over this ambitious experiment in retail banking.
The situation underscores
how even the most carefully designed strategy can founder
on the shoals of uneven performance. As Hazen himself
says, "The business philosophies we employed are
correct, but our merger execution was poor."
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Essentially Wells
tried to do too much. Not yet finished with its own branch
reconfiguration project, the company endeavored to assimilate
First Interstate on a rushed schedule while striving to
deliver $800 million of expense cuts promised to Wall
Street. Migrating customers from traditional branches
to grocery store outlets was at the heart of Hazen's plans
to realize required savings in the $13 billion deal. The
company found itself juggling two major strategic initiatives,
even though it temporarily suspended the branch reconfiguration
program to complete system conversions. Meanwhile, defections
thinned the ranks of managers and customer service representatives,
leaving the company unable to respond adequately when
integration problems cropped up.
"Things were
clearly more complicated from the standpoint of being
in the middle of transitioning the distribution network
and then taking on the merger," says Joseph P. Stiglich,
vice chairman in charge of Wells' physical distribution
group.
The deeper strategic
question is whether Hazen should have completed Wells'
own branch reconfiguration program in California before
proceeding with his bid for First Interstate. Originally,
Wells did not anticipate being ready to handle a major
acquisition until the end of 1996. But the company wound
up violating its own timetable by roughly 14 months, launching
its First Interstate takeover campaign in October 1995.
A source close
to the company says Wells executives thought it would
actually be less disruptive to include the First Interstate
branches in the reconfiguration project already underway.
The desire to preempt other bidders may have also been
a factor. "First Interstate had all the tell-tale
marks of a takeover candidate," says analyst Thomas
F. Theurkauf of Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc.
The timing and
rationale of the bid can be debated at length. But the
lesson for other banks is clear: implement strategy at
a realistic pace. While it's important to heed the discipline
of the market, setting up high expectations on Wall Street
can be risky. "Wells' officers had to promise deep
and expedient expense cuts," says Theurkauf. "They
didn't have the luxury of time. It added up to tremendous
execution risk."
The task before
the 56 year-old Hazen is to staunch the hemorrhage of
former First Interstate customers and shore up Wells'
battered franchise and image, particularly outside of
California. During the first nine months of 1997, Wells'
loan-to-deposit ratio soared from 82.4% to 91.8% as total
deposits fell by $11 billion. A sizable portion of the
erosion came as Wells sold branches to allay anti-trust
concerns -- but another big chunk represented customers
leaving the bank.
Hazen is responding
with a program that pays $5 to any customer who has to
wait more than five minutes in a teller line. The policy
is in force in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico,
Oregon, Texas, Utah and Washington. Wells is also working
on new advertising campaigns. And Hazen himself has been
touring the Wells branch system to rally the troops. His
message: the problems are behind us, now let's get on
with the job of winning back business. "The challenge,"
Hazen says, "is very simple. We need to be in a position
where we're taking market share from others."
Though visibly
chastened by the First Interstate experience, Hazen remains
adamant in his pursuit of what is arguably the most aggressive
retail strategy in the nation. He wants 55% of Wells'
branch network to operate through supermarket outlets
by next year, up from an already-high 45%. Wells executives
take encouragement from pilot projects in Sacramento and
San Diego, where the alternative delivery strategy has
been fully implemented.
But there is a
subtle change in approach. Banished from the lexicon are
such slogans as "High tech, low touch," and
"Do it, fix it, learn," phrases that Wells executives
once used freely to express confidence in technological
solutions. Hazen now says these slogans received exaggerated
press coverage and did not reflect the company's emphasis
on customer service. More importantly, the transition
to supermarket branches will be slowed in states such
as Arizona, Nevada and Oregon, where Wells experienced
the brunt of merger-related service problems. The final
mix of traditional and supermarket branches in those states
will also be skewed a bit more to the traditional side
than is the case in California.
Wells based its
retail strategy on a belief that today's customers uniformly
desire speed, convenience and choice in terms of their
routine banking transactions. A necessary corollary to
that view is that customers uniformly place less value
on face-to-face contact in traditional branch offices.
In the wake of First Interstate, Wells concedes that customer
preferences may vary somewhat by region. "We don't
believe customers have different desires in one market
versus another. But the transition pace may be different
outside of California," Stiglich says.
Could this shift
in nuance herald a major change in Wells' strategy down
the road? Many Wells critics say the bank risks getting
ahead of its customer base. But Hazen refuses to retreat.
"I don't call that a change in basic philosophy,"
he says. "It's an adaptation to market conditions."
Alternative
Delivery
Wells has long
been known for its penny-pinching style. Former CEO Carl
E. Reichardt was fond of such maxims as "Kill for
a basis point" and, "Run it like you own it."
The quest for cost savings became even more intense in
the early '90s when the company found itself carrying
a heavy burden from nonperforming commercial realty loans.
The physical distribution group, in charge of the branch
network, began studying how the bank could improve retail
profitability by cutting expenses. By 1994, Reichardt
had signed off on a plan to increase the availability
of alternative delivery channels -- supermarket outlets,
multi-purpose ATMs, 24-hour telephone banking and PC online
banking -- while reducing the number of traditional branches.
"We had to
come to grips with the contradictory issues in running
a large, branch-based network," Stiglich says. "It
is questionable whether traditional branch economics are
sustainable over the long term. Equally important to running
a retail bank, customers are demanding easy access. We
were looking for a solution that brought expenses in line
and addressed the convenience issue for customers."
Electronic alternatives
support Wells' strategy by helping it capture customers
willing to conduct their banking business from remote
locations. But the majority of customers still want the
option of face-to-face contact, which is why supermarket
outlets constitute the heart of the plan to lower expenses
while offering more convenient access. Assuming parity
in functionality and staff quality, such outlets enable
banks to offer branch-comparable service in a much more
efficient setting. Having already experimented with grocery
store branches in major California markets, Wells was
comfortable with that business and believed customers
would respond well to an accelerated rollout, which began
in 1995.
While many other
banks around the country are implementing similar programs,
few have been willing to go as far as Wells in abandoning
the safety of the traditional branch. The Wells transition
has been slowed in some areas by problems related to the
First Interstate acquisition. But test results in Sacramento
and San Diego, where supermarket networks are now fully
deployed, provide grounds for optimism. Expenses in those
markets fell by roughly 20%, while sales gains ranged
from 15% to 20%. Results from Los Angeles and San Francisco,
the next two "beta sites," should prove more
conclusive, since those markets are much larger and more
demographically diverse.
Of course, strategy
isn't implemented in a competitive vacuum. Rivals pounced
on the alternative delivery campaign as evidence that
Wells doesn't care about customers. California thrifts
have been particularly aggressive in using negative advertising
to lure away Wells' customers. Attacks took on a renewed
sting in the wake of horrendous service problems attending
the First Interstate conversion.
Wells, obviously,
considers the criticism unfair. The bank doesn't force
customers to use supermarkets or ATMs -- although reducing
the number of branches could have that effect. The strategy,
rather, is to use price incentives to encourage customers
to use alternative delivery. Wells bundles some of its
account packages in such a way that customers get price
breaks when they transact routine business via ATM, PC
or telephone. Supermarket outlets inject more convenience
into the total "value proposition" because retail
customers get more physical access options. The reconfigured
Wells network also includes a prototype investment center
for mutual funds and securities sales, and business banking
centers for small business customers requiring face-to-face
handling.
"There's a
tendency for competitors to hang us with the label of
being just a transaction bank," Stiglich says. "That's
not the case. We are different, however, in that we think
routine and relationship banking are two different things
and ought to be treated that way. We think we can address
the relationship piece by solving the transactional piece
in a way that's both cost-efficient for us and faster,
more convenient for our customers."
Even as direct
competitors criticize the Wells approach, banking peers
and analysts salute the innovative strategy. A 1995 Bank
Administration Institute/First Manhattan Consulting Group
survey of senior executives at 38 major banks ranked Wells
the "most progressive" retail distribution bank.
"This whole delivery system change is the most important
thing going on in banking," says analyst Thomas K.
Brown of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette.
Indeed, even as
the new retail strategy gained momentum, the combination
of commercial real estate recoveries and strict cost control
transformed Wells into the most profitable large bank
in the country by 1995. The banking company delivered
a 2.03% return on assets and a 29.7% return on equity.
The stock, having attracted high-profile investors such
as Warren Buffet, climbed to $216 a share at year-end,
up 274% from $58 at year-end 1990. Wells could do no wrong.
Then came First
Interstate.
Hazen
Takes Over
When Hazen replaced
Reichardt as chairman and CEO on Jan. 1, 1995, he had
already spent 11 years as Wells' number two executive.
While he often seemed overshadowed by Reichardt's more
gregarious personality, Hazen's contributions to the company
were well recognized. He was credited, for example, with
Wells' 1986 acquisition of Crocker National Corp., commonly
regarded as the most successful merger integration of
that era.
Observers wondered,
however, when Hazen would put his own mark on Wells. Did
he intend to launch the company in any new directions?
The answer was
not slow in coming. On Oct. 16, just 10 months into his
tenure as CEO, Hazen launched a full-scale hostile bid
for First Interstate, a risky and rarely attempted maneuver
in banking. Reichardt had already conducted inconclusive
merger negotiations with First Interstate, in early 1994.
But it was Hazen who took the bull by the horns and drove
the deal to a successful conclusion, despite having to
fend off a competing bid by First Bank System Inc., Minneapolis.
First Interstate, in one
fell swoop, gave Wells 6 million new retail accounts and
a presence in nine additional states. Paying for the $13
billion acquisition, however, required Wells to cut expenses
dramatically. The bank's strategists saw an opportunity
to achieve some $800 million in savings by dovetailing
the First Interstate conversion with Wells' ongoing branch
reconfiguration project. Plans called for shrinking the
combined base of 900 First Interstate and Wells branches
to 400 by the end of this year, while deploying nearly
800 supermarket outlets at the same time. Analyst Brown
believes the branch reconfiguration numbers tipped the
First Interstate bidding war in Wells' favor. "They
could reduce the cost basis at First Interstate even more
because of what they had just decided to do with their
own delivery system," Brown says.
But a decision
to rush the conversion schedule left little room for error.
And three-fourths of First Interstate's top 500 officers
took advantage of generous severance contracts to bail
out at this critical time. In the process of switching
First Interstate accounts over to Wells, deposits were
not recorded, checks got bounced, and angry customers
besieged customer service representatives, who proved
too few to handle the complaints. Wells ended up reporting
$180 million of operating losses in the second quarter
of this year as it reimbursed First Interstate customers
for lost monies and booked additional merger integration
charges.
Wells' problems
may have been exacerbated by the nature of First Interstate's
customer base. At the time of the merger, the Los Angeles-based
bank had been experiencing net account attrition, which
is common for large banks. But First Interstate also enjoyed
some of the cheapest funding in the industry, owing to
a high proportion of demand deposits. First Interstate
stressed personal service in its marketing campaigns,
and it appears the bank attracted many customers placing
greater importance on responsiveness than deposit yields.
Were they alienated by Wells' "high tech, low touch"
approach?
The evidence is
ambiguous. Wells' alternative delivery strategy certainly
received extensive press coverage following the merger.
And Wells has been building a lot of supermarket branches
throughout the former First Interstate franchise. But
actual branch closings didn't begin until the second quarter
of this year -- after system conversions were completed.
Also, the majority of deposits lost by Wells fell in the
large corporate and small business categories rather than
retail, and much of the erosion can be traced to regulator-prescribed
branch divestitures.
Wells executives
like to point to California, where the branch overlap
was greatest and First Interstate customers experienced
the most merger-related change. California is also where
Wells has been most aggressive in replacing traditional
branches with supermarket outlets, particularly in Sacramento
and San Diego. Yet, Wells has gained deposits in the Golden
State, even though First Interstate customers experienced
the same service problems there as in other states.
The problem outside
of California may not be too much alternative delivery
but rather too little. "In California," Stiglich
says, "we had rolled out an extensive network of
supermarket outlets and ATMs. Even when the branch system
broke, we had other positives for customers. In other
markets, the core system broke and customers had nowhere
to turn. To the extent that it's harder there, it's not
because customers are resistant to what we're building
-- it's because we can't deliver it fast enough."
Retail
Conundrum
Debate still roils
the industry, however, about whether supermarket outlets
and other alternatives can truly replace the traditional
branch. The question reflects a basic conundrum of retail
banking. On the one hand, research clearly shows that
banks lose money on at least half of the households they
serve. Since raising fees is dangerous, for competitive
and political reasons, the only alternative is to try
to get unprofitable customers to transact more of their
business via cheaper delivery channels. On the other hand,
research also suggests that the most profitable customers
tend to favor face-to-face interaction at local branches
and may resent having to enter a supermarket to conduct
their banking business. Banks won't make headway with
efficiency if they are forced to maintain both traditional
and new channels at full strength.
"So far, many
early adopters using food store, telephone and PC channels
are unprofitable due to their low balances and higher
transaction volumes," says James M. McCormick, president
of First Manhattan Consulting Group. "Studies of
grocery store locations show an over-concentration of
low revenue households. This raises marketing issues.
How critical is the traditional branch to the value proposition
perceived by profitable households?"
Wells itself won't be able
to answer that question conclusively until next year,
when the California branch reconfiguration is completed.
In the wake of the First Interstate problems, meanwhile,
it remains difficult to distinguish flaws in execution
from flaws in strategy. Hazen himself admits Wells probably
didn't have enough well-trained employees available to
handle customer complaints since the bank's staffing models
had been oriented to a lean-and-mean style of operation.
"It is probably
true that our staffing models may not have included sufficient
training, particularly with former First Interstate employees
who had to adapt to the Wells system. So in that sense,
we were under-staffed," Hazen says. "But there
was not an intentional business strategy or philosophy
to under-staff."
In any case, the
problems at First Interstate should not obscure Wells'
achievements in alternative delivery. The supermarket
branching experiments, combined with progress in PC online
banking and direct mail small business solicitations,
suggest Wells may yet be able to show the industry how
retail bankers can provide convenient access and good
service to customers while reducing the cost of delivering
that service.
Despite the chastening experience of
the First Interstate merger, Wells still remains committed
to a full-speed-ahead style. Bumps along the way are simply
accepted as part of the cost of doing business in banking's
brave new world. Says Hazen, "If you're going to
be aggressive and innovative, not all of your results
will fit within a narrow spectrum of expectations."
Mr.
Cline is senior editor of Banking
Strategies.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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