| Revitalizing
the Branch
By Kenneth Cline
Spurred by new customer information
technology, bankers are placing renewed emphasis on the
revenue-generating potential of their branch networks.
The traditional branch often is
portrayed as a throwback customer service mechanism meriting
no more managerial attention than what is warranted to
cut costs. But instead of documenting a descent towards
extinction, regulatory statistics show a resurgence of
these physical banking sites. Between 1984 and early 1998,
banks and thrifts together boosted their branch outlets
by 16.3%, or 10,162, to a record total of 72,340 sites,
according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
The explanation for the comeback lies
in the branch's enduring value as a sales platform. Electronics
and alternative delivery systems have so far failed to
provide an effective substitute for distributing financial
products and services to the consumer mass market, and
branches have resumed their central role in retail banking
strategy. Only now, the focus is less on reducing expenses
and more on improving revenues through sales.
These conclusions emerged from a roundtable
discussion convened by Banking Strategies during
the Bank Administration Institute's recent branch banking
conference in Nashville. Delving into the future of branches
in retail banking, we began with an assumption that any
discussion would gravitate to issues of cost control and
downsizing. Instead, the talk immediately veered to how
institutions are using customer information technology
to revitalize their traditional brick-and-mortar offices.
The new technology helps branch employees
better attune sales pitches to specific customer needs.
It also helps banks in configuring the right mix of traditional
and self-service delivery systems in particular markets.
Said David L. Pope, senior vice president at Wachovia
Corp., "We're creating, in fact, a portfolio of physical
points of presence. And managing that portfolio is becoming
our biggest retail challenge."
Joining Pope were three other prominent
retail bankers: Alexander (Sandy) Berry 3d, executive
vice president, Crestar Corp.; Thomas K. Fisher, senior
vice president, Comerica Inc.; and David Mooney, a senior
vice president at Chase Manhattan Corp. The group also
included an expert on branch design, Robert Steele, vice
chairman of John Ryan Co.
Banking Strategies:
Are branches past their prime?
Mooney:
At Chase, we don't believe the branch is obsolete. Part
of the reason is that consumers are not monolithic in
their channel preferences. Different customers prefer
different ways of accessing the bank. In our market, branch
availability and location still influence customer decisions
about which bank to do business with. Branches are also
extremely important to many of our small business customers,
who to a large extent still value and need physical access.
Pope:
Wachovia operates in some rural markets, so the branch
is vital. Customers expect it to be there. And for some
especially valuable customer segments, such as business
banking and upscale households, the quality of branch
service is still a major determinant of success or failure.
We are seeing, however, more and more
of a trend toward different types of branches -- some
designed for fast service, some for cross-selling or
relationship expansion, and some for convenience. We're
creating, in fact, a portfolio of physical points of
presence. And managing that portfolio is becoming our
biggest retail challenge -- making sure you have the
right presence at the right time in the right place.
Berry:
A couple of years ago, I heard a speaker use the term
"prestalgia," which he defined as "the
longing for things that have not yet occurred." We
bankers have displayed that sentiment about delivery networks.
We look at the huge costs associated with branches and
say, "Gee, if we get rid of that overhead, then we
can have better earnings." Instead, we should be
thinking about enlarging the already-tremendous value
derived through the branch.
Branches are like hundreds of billboards
that advertise the bank every day. They're places where
our customers can come and do the many things that still
can't be accomplished electronically. They bring us together
with customers face-to-face.
But it's a mistake to think of branches
in terms of one-size-fits-all. Instead, we need to configure
different types of delivery for particular markets. Small
business banking, my area of responsibility, contributes
a great deal to the overall value of the branch system.
When delivery decisions are made, however, our customer
segment oftentimes seems to be thrown in as an afterthought.
At Crestar, we are experimenting with business-only branches
to serve highly concentrated areas of small business and
middle market companies, for whom the branch is still
extremely important.
Banking Strategies:
Are any of you planning major reductions in your branch
networks?
Mooney:
By most measures, we already have downsized fairly radically
at Chase. But that was largely a function of merging the
predecessor Chase with Chemical Banking Corp. We had numerous
overlapping facilities serving pretty much the same trade
area.
Fisher:
Our branch count at Comerica will probably go down
somewhat. The mix will also change considerably. Of the
branches that remain, fewer will be full service in the
old sense.
Pope:
Until recently, we just didn't have the information we
needed at Wachovia to make smart decisions about configuring
the branch network. As we got that information, we made
some fairly sizable reductions in branch numbers to reach
a "right-sized" state. As we move forward, we'll
continue to aggressively manage that investment. We think
of it as "continuous network management," not
just something you do every once in a while.
Banking Strategies:
What kind of information helps in configuring branch networks?
Fisher:
We've done a lot of customer research at Comerica to determine
which branch permutations work best in which markets.
We're experimenting with a lot of different models. Some
sites will lean to commercial uses, and some to self-service,
depending on the market. From an industry perspective,
I think we'll see a lot of industry experimentation with
smaller offices that don't include all the components
of a full service branch.
Berry:
In the old days, we'd go out and say, "This is
a really attractive corner, let's put a branch here."
Now we use our improved information to find a certain
group of customers we know will be valuable to us and
then determine what delivery mechanism they want. It could
be a traditional branch or more self-service electronics.
Steele:
That's the key: the mix is changing. And the new kinds
of facilities being created blend different kinds of
activities. You might combine, for example, a printing
shop, a coffeehouse, and a bank. We're seeing enormous
interest in these ideas as people begin to think more
expansively.
Another observation: no matter how ambitious
a bank may be about downsizing its branch network, we
repeatedly see those plans get moderated when managers
come face to face with the issue of losing customers.
The latest research is really quite
favorable toward the branch, in that the majority of the
most profitable customers use branches extensively. People
stand back and say, "Now wait a minute. I didn't
realize that."
Banking Strategies:
But isn't expense control still an issue?
Mooney:
The issue isn't so much expense per se. The issue is productivity
and how much revenue you can generate in support of any
given level of expense. A lot of it gets down to how you
use all your resources -- the employees, the physical
space and your customer base. Some of our studies show
that branch personnel spend more than half their time
on activities that aren't directly related to revenue
generation and maintenance.
We also have more than 600 discrete
policies and procedures governing the operation of a branch.
It's inconceivable to me that any business can function
efficiently with that kind of operating complexity. So
the operating environment is a problem. It not only needs
to be simplified but also truly re-engineered, with obstructing
processes either eliminated or automated.
Pope:
The physical branch itself doesn't do anything. The value
really flows from human interaction. We're talking about
the staff members who work in that market and create value
through face-to-face interaction with customers. The reconfiguration
that we all talk about goes back to this human factor.
Banks are reallocating their human resources to focus
on targeted groups of customers.
Banking
Strategies: So the debate has shifted
from lowering physical distribution costs to improving
productivity?
Steele:
We've certainly seen a shift in the last couple of years
in terms of a focus on revenue instead of cost. That doesn't
mean that efficiency no longer is a priority. But there
is certainly far more appreciation of the leverage available
on the revenue side.
Fisher:
It depends on the part of the branch you're talking about.
In the teller area, lowering the cost of cash handling
is still a major concern. You'll continue to see cost
control in that area as new technology replaces physical
labor. On the platform side, I would agree that the revenue-generating
capacity of the branch has been underestimated and underutilized
in the past. There's a lot of room for improvement there.
Pope:
One of the important issues in branch operations is: what
happens during the quiet part of the day, when nobody's
coming in? As an industry, what processes and tools are
we adopting that allow branch employees to productively
fill the times when customer traffic is low?
Berry:
At Crestar, we're finding that one way to fill up this
excess time is through telephone service. And by God,
it works. Not only is it working in terms of product sales,
but also in terms of retention -- letting your best customers
know you really care about them.
When customers change banks in the small
business market, they frequently do so because they didn't
think their bank offered a particular product when, in
fact, it did. No one ever told them. We need to be in
communication with those customers and let them know that
we do have those products.
Mooney:
We preach a philosophy that says there's no spontaneous
success in selling. In other words, you have to be in
contact with the customer for a sale to take place.
Fisher:
We recently did some training on outbound telephone calls
by branch employees. About 70% of the customers that we
reached around dinner time were willing to divulge their
financial needs over the telephone because they could
identify the caller as someone in the building where they
had opened their account and with whom they felt a relationship.
No other outbound sales force could do that. There is
an inherent advantage in being a branch banker that we've
only begun to exploit.
Mooney:
We sometimes underestimate the value of personal familiarity.
We know that emotional responses largely govern customer
satisfaction and loyalty -- not rational evaluations.
After 10 years in retail banking, I have yet to hear a
customer compliment our products, pricing, systems, or
our great policies and procedures. The feedback always
revolves around the quality of service delivered by an
individual.
Fisher:
A significant change is occurring in terms of the
way branch bankers sell at the front line. Past sales
campaigns were based on trying to find the ideal customer
for a given product. Reversing that, trying to seek
out the best products and services for an individual
customer, represents a real cultural shift. It's much
more profound than people realize until they try it.
Banking Strategies:
Tailoring products to customers requires detailed
customer information. Do data warehousing and database
marketing capabilities provide the keys to revitalizing
the traditional branch?
Pope:
For Wachovia, yes. Take the issue of keeping branch employees
busy during slow times. Those employees can now hit a
button on their personal computer and receive from our
data warehouse a prioritized customer communication list.
The list includes suggestions on reasons to call the customers.
In turn, as our bankers or salespeople talk with clients,
all the new information they learn is fed back into this
customer management database. So I think data warehousing
is a huge part of how you leverage your investment in
different types of branches in different places.
Mooney:
Where that information technology can really assist
is in directing those sales activities to customers
with the highest propensity and ability to buy, which
then improves the yield on your selling activity. Effective
sales representatives, of course, are a crucial factor.
Fisher:
Those people who deal eyeball-to-eyeball with customers,
or those who are placing outbound phone calls to customers,
constantly glean fresh information not reflected in the
database. You have to implement processes that will funnel
to the database that information which can only be acquired
through dialogue with the customer. As you enrich the
database, it will become even more helpful to the front
line people.
Berry:
Tom's statement is particularly apropos to the small
business market, which is data-poor. We don't have huge
amounts of information on small business clients like
we do on retail customers. So the knowledge that you get
from face-to-face contact is crucial in building a database
that allows you to make good decisions.
Steele:
Banks have spent a huge amount of money on building their
databases. But the key really is teaching employees what
kind of information to extract from those databases and
then how to use that information to increase sales.
Banking Strategies:
Do you see the branch changing much in the next five years?
Fisher:
We bankers have probably been guilty of overstating the
pace of change. I don't see things being radically different
in five years. But you will see more use of alternative
channels. The amount of technology used inside a branch
will increase, as will the use of customer knowledge databases.
The effectiveness of our selling processes will also improve.
Pope:
I don't think there will be dramatic change. We're
still talking about consumers, and in general, their behavior
changes quite slowly. They'll add things to their repertoire,
but they also like to hold on to the old things. It's
better to be a step behind their willingness to change
than a step in front.
Fisher:
At the end of the day, it's the consumers who determine
the pace of change. And they will do what they want, not
what we want.
Mr. Cline
is senior editor of Banking Strategies.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
back
to top |