| Mixed
Signals
By Bill Stoneman
Customer profitability analysis
sparked a revolution in bank marketing. Was it properly
understood and utilized?
In a hopeful quest for growth, banks
all over America spent a good part of the '90s slicing
and dicing their customer bases to identify which retail
relationships were profitable and which were not. Pursued
under the banner of customer segmentation strategy, the
profitability-based analytical framework and its associated
responses seemed to address some of banking's deep-rooted
problems.
Pamper profitable clients and move the
rest to low-cost electronic channels, experts said, and
banks could rejuvenate themselves.More than five years
into the experiment, however, it appears the optimism
was premature if not misplaced.
Many institutions have attempted retail
strategies based on profitability segmentation, and although
anecdotal success stories abound, it's difficult to see
bottom line improvement either for individual institutions
or for the industry at large. Executives increasingly
are realizing that profitability analysis, by itself,
will not get the job done. "Many organizations thought
they found the Holy Grail when they discovered relationship
profitability," says consultant Robert Hall, chief executive
of ActionSystems Inc., Dallas. "It is an important
tool, but not the complete answer."
This is not to suggest that profitability-based
segmentation is without merit. On the contrary, the insight
that a handful of clients contributes more than 100% of
retail earnings at a typical financial institution is
profound, since it means that most client relationships
are unprofitable. This revelation has sparked deep soul-searching
among bank marketing strategists. Confronted by the now-famous
"profitability skew," they realized that the "one-size-fits-all"
approach to serving customers was no longer valid. The
industry got serious about upgrading information management
capabilities and began targeting specific groups of customers
for marketing and retention efforts.
At least a few major players apparently
have taken meaningful advantage of profitability segmentation.
First Manhattan Consulting Group president James McCormick,
who did more than anyone to develop and popularize the
concept, insists some large institutions are generating
3% annual growth in deposits on the strength of marketing
strategies guided by profitability segmentation. Memphis-based
First Tennessee National Corp. cites a 97% annual retention
rate for its best clients.
Still, scattered successes are something
different from an industry breakthrough. Instead of fueling
an overall expansion, profitability segmentation became
a guerrilla weapon that institutions used in an ongoing
fight among themselves over the most lucrative banking
customers. Cumulatively, after adjusting for acquisitions,
the nation's largest banks reported zero growth in checking,
savings and money market balances from 1993 to 1998. Says
McCormick, "The industry continues to have a revenue
momentum problem."
In contemplating how to respond to these
developments, managers should consider three factors.
First, capitalizing on profitability segmentation requires
far more work than many people probably realize. Adherents
must be committed to substantial organizational change
and be prepared to deal with a host of transition issues,
such as re-pricing products and re-thinking service and
delivery. In retrospect, many institutions probably held
unrealistically high expectations about what their segmentation
projects could accomplish in the near term, especially
given all of the implementation issues.
Second, relationship profitability metrics
must be put in their proper context. Such metrics often
work best as a supplement to other decision factors, such
as customer needs. Institutions must look beyond statistics
to the individual. Relationship profitability is dynamic,
reflecting the unfolding financial situations in which
people find themselves.
Third, the industry needs to redouble
efforts to stake out places in the fastest-growing areas
of financial services, such as brokerage and mutual funds.
How much long-term value can be derived from the profitability
segmentation framework when people are making less use
of the major types of banking products on which it is
based? In many cases, investments in elaborate segmentation
schemes offer less return than comparable deployments
of organizational resources in new product areas and value
propositions.
Description,
Not Prescription
Are institutions simply failing to execute
segmentation strategies effectively, or is the profitability
analysis itself flawed? A lot hangs on the answer to that
question. For two decades, banks have been losing both
deposit and loan business to nonbank competitors. Many
managers were counting on segmentation strategies to help
reverse those trends.
Consensus is now hardening around the
view that profitability analyses and associated remedial
programs are helpful only to a point. They do not substitute
for more sweeping retail banking imperatives, such as
lowering overhead expenses and expanding affiliated brokerage
and mutual fund businesses. Also, when dealing with profitability
segmentation, managers need to understand that analysis
does not necessarily provide prescription.
The profitability skew 20% of
customers contribute most retail profits would
seem to suggest a strategy of coddling the best customers.
But profitability metrics provide no guidance on whether
high-value customers will be flattered or annoyed by regular
calls from account managers. Nor can they predict the
next account a customer will open let alone whether
the new account will be used in a way that is profitable
to the bank. For people in the unprofitable relationship
segment, the emphasis is on getting them to pay their
way by maintaining higher deposit balances, paying steeper
fees and using lower-cost delivery channels. But here
again, profitability metrics don't reveal how to pull
that off.
Decision support is another area where
profitability metrics fall short. In a vacuum, profitability
measurement might help determine the financial consequences
of a re-pricing decision. But in the real world, customers
react to product re-pricing in unpredictable ways, throwing
off the projections. For example, profitability measurement
sheds no light on which customers are likely to decamp
following a price hike. And it offers no guidance about
the best way to communicate changes to customers.
Finally, obsessing about the 20% to
40% of customers who are the least profitable may lead
to seriously misguided pricing decisions. When subtracting
from individual relationship revenue an expense calculation
that includes both variable costs and an allocated share
of fixed costs, large numbers of customers appear unprofitable.
Significantly, this profit drain nearly disappears when
only the variable cost of servicing an individual customer
is subtracted from the customer's revenue. Institutions
may, in fact, ameliorate this problem by simply reducing
overall institutional overhead.
Coming up with the optimal measurement
system is no small accounting issue. Banks that use flawed
metrics to drive product design and pricing decisions
may self-destructively encourage "low value" customers
to take their business elsewhere. The result will be unchanged
fixed costs spread over a smaller customer base, thereby
impairing the profitability of all the customers who remain.
"In theory, an infinite number of things can be done
with customer relationship profitability information,"
says Peter Carroll, a consultant with Oliver, Wyman &
Co., New York. "In practice, the number of decisions
it can support is limited."
Segmentation's
Promise
Banks didn't have to worry much about
relationship profitability in former decades, when interest
rate regulation virtually guaranteed them attractive returns.
The removal of rate ceilings in the 1970s, however, brought
banking into a more competitive environment. Bankers responded
by emphasizing selling. Virtually every institution heralded
its new "sales culture."
Sales programs didn't seem to work as
well in banking as in other businesses, however. Bankers
gradually came to understand that profitability in this
industry depends on the complex interaction of balance
levels, fees paid and transaction patterns of individual
customers. Furthermore, the contribution of individual
customers to bank earnings varies widely. Though the math
works out differently in individual cases, the most profitable
customers generally keep high balances and/or pay substantial
fees, and make modest use of live tellers.
With this insight came the idea that
banks should employ different strategies for different
customer segments, depending on their profitability contribution.
The ultimate promise of this exercise was that institutions
could boost earnings by improving the selection and retention
of high-value customers while at least bolstering the
contribution of everyone else.
A typical program was introduced by
PNC Bank Corp. in the fall of 1998. PNC offered price
incentives to customers who would bring more of their
financial business to the Pittsburgh-based bank, and it
imposed fees for heavy teller usage. While teller fees
raised the cost of banking for customers who visited PNC
branch offices day after day, the price breaks rewarded
many clients having high current or potential relationship
profitability. The minimum balance threshold for interest-bearing
checking was lowered. In addition, instead of granting
free checking to customers based only on deposit balances,
the bank began counting loan and brokerage account balances
toward the target.
Early results are promising, according
to Joseph C. Guyaux, executive vice president and head
of PNC's retail business. After a period in which deposits
grew by less than 1% annually, they rose by nearly 3%
in the first eight months of 1999. Average balances per
savings account rose by 10%, while related teller transaction
volume fell by 20%. "Our business will produce double-digit
net income gains in 1999," Guyaux predicts.
Analysts are divided, however, on whether
such projects really make a difference. Taking the positive
view is analyst Robert Patten at Lehman Brothers. He says
banks "have gotten much better at moving customers
to non-personal channels," and cites increased usage of
direct payroll deposit, automated teller machines for
cash withdrawals and automated phone systems to check
account balances. Lowering the volume of transactions
handled by tellers has helped drive down efficiency ratios
at many banks, Patten asserts, allowing significantly
more revenue to reach the bottom line.
A contrary opinion comes from Lawrence
Cohn, director of research for Ryan, Beck & Co.: "The
companies keep telling me they are doing this and how
wonderful it is. But when you look at the aggregate revenue
growth in their retail banking business, it doesn't seem
to be any different than anybody else's."
Carrots
and Sticks
Though it is difficult to establish
linkages between profitability segmentation strategies
and bottom line improvement at individual institutions,
analysts do cite certain companies where some benefit
is apparent. These include Centura Banks Inc., Rocky Mount,
N.C.; BB&T Corp., Winston-Salem, N.C.; Firstar Corp.,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and First Tennessee.
Profitability segmentation "is
ingrained in the way we develop our retail strategies,"
says David W. Miller, senior vice president for customer
information and delivery strategy at high-performing First
Tennessee. The institution grew earnings per share at
a 14% compound annual rate from 1996 through the first
half of 1999.
First Tennessee is addressing both sides
of the profitability skew. The bank provides priority
call center service to top customers, for example. When
these clients key in their account number on a touch-tone
phone, their calls get priority routing and are answered
by the most skilled operators. Customers also receive
rewards for progressively higher balances. These benefits
include free overdraft protection, the waiving of stop-payment
fees, $25,000 in accidental death insurance and 5% discounts
on brokerage commissions.
At the low end, products have been re-priced
and re-packaged to encourage customers to consolidate
their accounts at First Tennessee, keep higher balances,
and either do more of their business through self-service
channels or pay extra for continuing to use the branch.
As part of First Tennessee's ongoing data mining project,
customer service representatives in the branches will
soon be able to access profitability rankings of customers
on their computer screens, which may help guide them in
allocating their time and energy. "It's not necessarily
a good business decision to spend a half hour with certain
customers helping to balance a checkbook each month,"
Miller says.
But therein lies one of the potentially
costly pitfalls of profitability segmentation: while there
is little risk in pampering the best customers, remedies
for the unprofitable segment can easily backfire.
The basic objective of most segmentation
strategies at the low end of the profitability skew is
to keep these less-valuable customers from getting too
much face time with high-cost tellers. But some institutions
have been accused of using blunt tactics to get these
customers to use ATMs and other automated delivery channels.
First Chicago Corp., for example, touched off a firestorm
of controversy in 1995 when it imposed fees for teller
transactions. Mac Rabb, a consumer financial services
partner in the Chicago offices of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP,
says one $40 billion-asset bank lost a third of the 210,000
checking accounts it held in a certain territory within
a year of re-pricing them.
To avoid similar backlashes, banks are
using less stick and more carrot. Centura Banks, for example,
created a checking account having no minimum balance requirement
and a fee structure that rewards the use of alternative
delivery channels. By arranging for direct payroll deposit
and avoiding using a teller in a given month, the customer
reduces the monthly account fee from $8 to $1, a setup
that emphasizes the carrot of reduced fees rather than
the stick of penalty charges.
Effective communication between front-line
staff and customers may be even more important in making
a smooth transition. This requires schooling tellers and
call center operators in the thinking behind segmentation
strategies. Beginning in October 1998, bankers at PNC
spent nearly a year calling all 1.8 million retail deposit
customers to tell them about impending account changes.
Guyaux says the calling program succeeded in convincing
customers to roll small accounts into larger ones and
created goodwill among customers who were pointed toward
better deals.
Even so, such elaborate groundwork underscores
the enormity of the commitment that profitability-based
segmentation requires. Essentially, institutions are using
profit metrics as a basis to recast relationships across
the full spectrum of retail customers. That's a big job,
with the analytical portion being only a small part. To
make the most of the exercise while avoiding myriad pitfalls,
managers must re-think products, information systems,
pricing strategies, sales and service practices, delivery
channels, marketing campaigns, and so on.
Acknowledging that bankers haven't used
profitability segmentation as productively as he envisioned,
First Manhattan's McCormick now advocates a simpler initial
approach. He advises banks to form two groups to address
profitability issues: one to think up ideas for bolstering
the business of high-value customers; another to focus
on the least profitable customers. Eventually, he says,
research will identify other useful groupings within these
broad segments.
Limits
to Profit Segmentation
Beyond tactical adjustments, there are
clear limits on what an organization can do with relationship
profitability insights. Banks will always have a difficult
time achieving breakeven with low-balance, high-transaction
customers. Consumer groups and politicians are already
steamed by the escalation of fees on routine transactions.
Moreover, banks are required by law and regulation to
serve everyone in their market area. In the name of community
service, banks must offer low-fee checking accounts and
loan pricing concessions for low-income people, and that's
not likely to change.
Retaining the most profitable customers
may prove no easier than cutting losses on the unprofitable
ones. Retention programs alone are unlikely to reverse
the continuing flow of funds from insured deposits to
uninsured investments that pay higher rates. To deal with
that problem, banks need to do a better job of marketing
their own brokerage and mutual fund services. It's true
that some people still keep unusually high levels of deposits
in relatively low-interest accounts. But it isn't clear
why they do so, or where to find more of them. Nor can
a bank be too confident that it knows how to keep such
customers satisfied.
Some banks, such as BB&T, have their
relationship officers call the highest-value customers
quarterly, just to check in. BB&T executives claim this
practice helps boost annual retention rates on top customers,
all the way up to 95%. But some experts question whether
this tactic will work well over an extended period. "The
first time you get that kind of call, it probably feels
OK," says consultant Hall. But for the time-pressed customer,
repeated calls that bring no value to the relationship
may soon be viewed as a nuisance.
There's also this paradox to consider:
the very effort banks make to retain their most profitable
customers will almost certainly reduce that profitability.
Higher service levels cost the bank more. Revenues decline
when customers are granted concessions on interest rates
or fees, or are encouraged to move bank deposits into
non-insured investments. Banks are further encumbered
by their need to cover the costs of their branch networks.
The higher an institution's overhead ratios, the less
flexibility it has to offer concessions to price-sensitive,
high-value customers.
Even though profitability-based segmentation
schemes alone won't cure sluggish revenue growth, they
still remain valuable in helping marketers assess individual
customer relationships. As long as banking organizations
introduce new services and new delivery channels, as long
as they cut costs by removing services that some customers
want, and as long as they craft new marketing campaigns,
customer relationship profitability will be a key factor
in measuring whether these ventures are paying off.
Mr.
Stoneman is a freelance writer based in Albany, N.Y.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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