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By Kenneth Cline
Building an effective
online banking service for small business customers requires
an understanding of their total needs — online and
offline.
Banks reacted with great alarm a couple
of years ago when online upstarts such as LiveCapital.com
and OneCore Financial Network Inc. started angling after
their small business customers. And no wonder: small business
provides 10% of the typical bank holding company's annual
profits, according to one recent study, and other published
estimates are even higher.
But the ebb of the online threat has
brought little comfort to traditional providers. After
all, they still need to realize returns on their own significant
investments in online capabilities, and they remain mindful
of the possibility that their electronic rivals could
rally. This has prompted some intensive thinking about
what the customer really wants — a hodgepodge of
electronic and physical services, or something integrated?
The emerging consensus is that online
banking, whether for small business or any other customer
segment, constitutes a channel rather than a product.
In other words, small businesses won't gravitate towards
a bank just because it offers a robust online product.
But they will patronize a financial institution that offers
online banking as a supplement to its branch and telephone
banking services. It's the quality of the total package
that counts.
The issue then becomes: how do you
deploy online banking effectively as part of a multi-channel
delivery system? What products and capabilities do you
need? And how do you make the service profitable, or at
least reduce expenses to a tolerable level?
We explored those questions with a
panel of experts in the field: Richard "Ric" Carey, former
marketing director, business banking, for Chicago-based
Bank One Corp.; Jean Martin- Weinstein, practice manager
at the Business Banking Board, Washington, D.C.; and Charles
B. Wendel, president, Financial Institutions Consulting,
New York. We spoke with the three during BAI's Internet
banking conference in San Antonio last April.
Their responses centered on the need
for a back-to-basics strategy. Bankers must identify prime
customer segments and their various needs, and then integrate
online service with branch, telephone and automated teller
machine channels in a way that meets those needs. And
rather than try to migrate the great mass of small business
customers to the Internet, financial institutions should
target those clients who are really disposed to it.
In practical terms, it's a matter of
compiling the relevant offerings, both offline and online,
that will meet the needs of the targeted small business
customer in a manner that capitalizes on the provider's
strengths. "The concept of 'search domain' applies here,"
Martin-Weinstein says. "Companies come to the Web site
of a given provider with a certain set of activities in
mind. The provider must understand customers' search domain
and then leverage its core offerings to meet their needs."
Banking Strategies:
What are the opportunities to serve small businesses online?
Wendel:
Increasingly, online banking capability is a cost of admission
to the market, in terms of a service a financial services
provider must have to be considered by small business
customers. But it's certainly not a major new revenue-generating
source. Rather, it's an account-retention tool, an informational
tool, something needed to retain customers. It is not
the lead channel.
Martin-Weinstein:
Our research at the Business Banking Board suggests that
more than four-fifths of all commercial banking executives
working in the small business market are pursuing an online
banking strategy. Almost all of them plan to migrate product
information, account balance information and transaction
reports to the online channel.
Some institutions are using the Internet
to re-invent their value propositions. One product that
comes to mind is called "electronic financial officer,"
which is offered by Bedford, Mass.-based OneCore Financial.
It serves as an online chief financial officer for the
small business owner, for example by offering real-time
financial status updates and early warnings of insufficient
funds to cover upcoming payments.
But for most institutions, the online
channel is clearly a supplement. During the 1999 dot-com
boom, there was a rush to get all customers online, including
small businesses, because that channel was considered
less expensive. But it's no substitute for a face-to-face
or phone relationship.
Banking Strategies:
At the same time, might there be specific online services
that can't be provided at the branch level?
Carey:
They are emerging. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. has a Web
site for lawyers, for example. At Bank One, we rolled
out a service in which our relationship managers take
customers online to show them how to analyze their industry
and value their company in relation to others.
Martin-Weinstein:
The Internet represents a challenge to product development.
It must be done under conditions of extreme uncertainty,
particularly regarding the nature of customer demand.
Banks will ask customers, "What would you like us to provide
on the Internet?" Customers identify things but won't
actually buy any of the products.
Wendel:
As somebody wrote years ago, nobody knew they needed the
Sony Walkman until there was one. So you're making a mistake
if you rely upon customers to tell you what they want.
In some respects, customers need to be educated and led
along the way. But even under that scenario, they expect
added value. And typically, the benefits of the online
value proposition are unclear.
Banking Strategies:
So how does a provider justify such capabilities?
Wendel:
It can be essential to customer retention. It can also
reduce cost by eliminating the need for people to make
phone calls when they want to check their balances or
transfer funds between accounts. If you can move low-value
accounts and activities online, it can improve profitability.
Martin-Weinstein:
We're also seeing some stand-alone revenue-generating
products. For example, California's Imperial Bancorp,
prior to its acquisition by Comerica Inc., offered an
interesting letter-of-credit product to business customers.
The online product commanded a fee similar to what was
charged for the standard branch product. It also freed
up relationship managers' time.
Wells Fargo & Co. has been a leader
in this area. It built a profitability management system
around the online channel, such that it's profitable most
of the time. Service packages were created that charge
Internet customers lower fees than those who use the more
expensive branch channel.
Generally, we're seeing institutions
turn from customer migration strategies to product-development
strategies. Providers are designing specific applications
that a target market is willing to pay for. One example
is GE Capital Corp.'s fleet-leasing product. Intuit Inc.'s
Quicken.com also has an equipment-leasing product. Banco
Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, a Spanish bank, charges for
participation in an online marketplace, and many banks
charge a fee for developing and hosting a small business
owner's Web site.
Carey:
Every business case that was developed around the Internet
included fee-generating products. In some cases that worked;
in some cases not.
Banking Strategies:
What's the revenue angle at Bank One?
Carey:
We're still working on it. We recently launched an expanded
small business Web site that includes a considerable amount
of functionality to help customers, ranging from building
business plans and marketing plans, to helping value a
company. We also offer health insurance, which is one
of the top 10 concerns of small business owners, both
for their families and their employees.
We charge a monthly fee for a few of
the services, but there are variations. You can make a
one-time payment for e-health insurance, for example,
or sign up for a package of services that includes business
advice, education, business plans, forms, personal e-mail,
company e-mail and storefront development.
Banking Strategies:
Are you encouraged by the results?
Carey:
The only discouragement so far is the financial play.
Our business case projected significant fee income from
non-traditional product sales through the Internet. That
is not happening.
We're going back to basics —
trying to understand customer needs and couch solutions
within the context of a multi-channel delivery strategy,
as opposed to a stand-alone Internet strategy.
Banking Strategies:
Can banks brighten the online revenue picture by broadening
their product array to include non-financial services?
Carey:
Right now, I believe it's better to stick to the banking
basics. When we focused on promoting our Internet partners
and their capabilities, signups for our basic online services
fell. As soon as we returned to emphasizing basic online
services, the pace of signups was restored.
Wendel:
Selling core products to a customer makes all the sense
in the world. But when you start to go into other products,
customers tend to pigeonhole the banks as being good at
some things and not so good at others. Why should I go
to a bank to buy office furniture when I can go directly
to a Staples store or a Web auction site like e-Bay?
Whether it's Web site hosting, or an
e-procurement service, or even investment products, other
nonbank providers already offer those services, and they
do it better than banks ever will. Granted, some customers
prefer to work with banks, and such people are willing
to extend relationships to areas outside of financial
services. But they're a small percentage.
Martin-Weinstein:
The concept of "search domain" applies here. Customers
come to the Web site of a given provider with a certain
set of activities in mind. The provider must understand
customers' search domain and then leverage its core offerings
to meet their needs. As we learned from Amazon.com, it
may not be a good idea to purvey garden tools to people
who log on to buy books. Banks are also starting to make
that distinction as they select activities and products
to move online.
Banking Strategies:
What's the role of the branch and relationship manager
in all this?
Carey:
The branch and relationship managers remain critical.
You have to get your facilities and staff connected to
the Internet and then train employees so that they, in
turn, can provide some training and education for customers.
You also have to incent employees. If orienting customers
to online banking isn't part of their incentive program,
you'll have issues around the use of employee time and
the intensity of their involvement.
Banking Strategies:
So branch personnel will go out of their way to sell a
product to the small business customer over the counter,
but won't necessarily stretch to promote the online product?
Carey:
I am saying that it's critical to incorporate all small
business products, whether offered through the branches
or the online channel, into an appropriate pay and incentive
structure if you're going to be successful with sales
efforts.
Selling small business products is
difficult, online or offline. It's not like the typical
banking center opens hundreds of business accounts a month.
We're focusing on identifying the products
and services that a specific industry sector needs and
is willing to pay for, and working those perspectives
into the online experience. The packaging of the right
products and services is important.
Banking Strategies:
This takes us into the realm of segmentation, since it's
widely acknowledged that a one-size-fits-all approach
falls short. How do you segment small business customers
in the online channel?
Martin-Weinstein:
Some overseas banks have been particularly successful
at identifying small businesses that prefer a certain
type of relationship with their bank, whether it's remote
and technology-intensive, or high-touch and face-to-face.
By reconfiguring on the basis of such preferences, these
banks have carved out a competitive advantage. Lloyds
Bank PLC, United Kingdom, is outstanding in that area.
Carey:
I would add a "Busy Customer" segment to those two categories.
Some clients are so busy running their businesses that
they do not have time to deal with traditional chores
during regular business hours. For them, the online experience
can be attractive. The size and complexity of the small
business can also increase its propensity to use online
services.
Wendel:
The key is, the segmentation strategy must be realistic.
I've seen projects in which institutions tried to focus
on sixteen segments. You can't execute against sixteen
segments; you've got to make it three or four.
Banking Strategies:
Once you've identified the appropriate customer segments,
how do you organize your company to serve them?
Martin-Weinstein:
I'm hearing three themes from executives. One is that
integration is a prerequisite. Even the best Internet
product will fall short of its potential unless it aligns
with the rest of the channel platform and is consistent
with the brand.
Then, you need a dedicated product
development team that spends a lot of time studying the
supply chains of the specific businesses the company serves.
GE, for example, has a small team, which includes many
former business owners, that studies specific business
transactions. The team must not only think of products
that can be purveyed through the Internet, but also tie
them into the overall GE product set.
Finally, there needs to be more emphasis
on teaching customers how to use the product.
Carey:
At Bank One, we conduct "Net meetings," where customers
log on to our site while listening in over the telephone.
We control their screens and guide them through a presentation
of the functionality and benefits of our site.
Generally speaking, we need to better
analyze and understand our customers' needs, and then
match up those needs with online services customers will
actually use. And then we need to find the right partners
to help deliver those services.
Banking Strategies:
What are the major issues involved with these partnerships?
Martin-Weinstein:
I've heard more than one institution say, "I will not
partner with someone unless they have been in the market
at least 10 years."
We're starting to see a winnowing of
the field. When we first started talking about banking
small business on the Internet a couple of years ago,
people were worried that San Mateo, Calif.-based LiveCapital
Inc. might take over the online loan business. That is
simply not a concern at all anymore. Instead of supplanting
banks, LiveCapital now is emphasizing partnering with
them.
Carey:
Before the dot-com implosion, you didn't have to worry
too much about whether a company was in its first, second
or third round of venture capital. If they had a hot idea,
the thinking went, they'd be a good partner. That's no
longer the case. For example, we were in negotiations
to advance our participation in Boston-based PrimeStreet
Corp.'s online loan auction when it suddenly closed.
That raises several issues. These partners
require annual fees from banks. Now that we're in a different
economic environment, I wonder if bankers are going to
have difficulty justifying those fees. What are the consequences
of pulling services off our Web sites? How will customers
react?
There's also a potential "dependency"
issue involved in online banking. It stems from the fact
that, in some cases, we're sending customers software
that provides an immediate link to the bank. If their
computers don't start up tomorrow, whom are they going
to call? There's a whole support infrastructure around
the Internet that puts banks in the position of having
to handle a host of technical problems for their customers.
Banking Strategies:
What are the other risk factors involved in banking small
business online?
Carey:
There's adverse selection. In an automated scoring environment,
when you're dealing with loans under $50,000, you tend
to generate a roughly 60% approval rate on applications
coming through the branches. However, it appears that
people who didn't like being turned down in person don't
mind being turned down by a computer. So we're seeing
online approval rates in the 20% range. I also see a lot
more rejections on deposit accounts.
Martin-Weinstein:
The credit risk issue will continue to be a big problem
because of the ongoing need for face-to-face assessment.
There are some additional challenges.
One is that getting your message to the customer on the
Internet is more difficult than it used to be. Customers
can log on to search engines, identify themselves as a
small business owner, and look at customer comments about
various banks. These comments are typically quite negative.
So that's a disintermediation tool pushing banks one step
away from their customers. Banks need to design a new
marketing strategy to differentiate their products and
keep them from being just one of many on a list generated
by a search engine.
The Internet can also be bad for margins.
Nonbank competitors such as OneCore, for example, don't
charge fees for overdrafts, which represent an important
source of bank fee income. Banks will need to adjust to
these types of changes in their competitive environment.
Finally, there's the service issue.
In 1998, we studied how banks respond to Web site-based
requests for information. We found only 20% of the major
banks in the United States actually responded to those
requests. The situation possibly has changed for the better
since then, but we still have to ask ourselves: are we
truly supporting the service promise?
Carey:
Those e-mails typically end up in the call center.
Martin-Weinstein:
Exactly. So there needs to be a call center support strategy
that goes with the Internet strategy.
Banking Strategies:
What are your key take-aways?
Carey:
My main take-away would be to remain flexible. This is
not an exact science, things do change, and you have to
be able to respond quickly.
Martin-Weinstein:
For me it's integration, making certain all of your channel
strategies are in place. Start with a simple Web offering
and make certain that it is very well integrated with
your branch and phone centers — and your relationship
managers.
A second idea would be: think about
where you can make money. What will customers actually
pay for? It's a simple notion, but hard to implement on
the Internet. You need to design an income-generating
strategy, even if it's a narrow one.
Wendel:
Mine is a back-to-basics message. Strategy is still important.
Knowing your customer is still important. And segmentation
is critical. The Internet may not be a profit-making vehicle
by itself, but it can be critical to profitability. So
banks need to re-think its effectiveness as a channel
and how it complements the branch and other channels.
Mr. Cline is senior
editor with Banking Strategies.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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