| Shrinking
the Portal
By Joseph A. Giannone
Banking's once-grandiose portal
projects have come to naught, but some of the concepts
and techniques have found a place in today's Web sites.
Where have all the bank portals gone?
Far from a "long time passing,"
it's been only a few years since some of the largest U.S.
banks, swept up in e-commerce mania, were spending millions
to build Web sites that would contain enough ancillary
attractions news, weather, games and the like
to serve as home pages for online financial customers.
They spent additional millions as they raced to forge
marketing agreements with popular nonbank consumer portals
such as Yahoo! and Lycos.
In the wake of the dot-com crash and
subsequent economic downturn, "Nobody is talking
about portals anymore," says Jeanne Capachin, a financial
services analyst at Newton, Mass.-based Meridien Research.
"The portal strategy was not a good investment."
That's an understatement. Plenty of
people visited the portals, some even clicked on banner
ads, but few actually bought anything. As banks withdrew
funding, most portal experiments were quietly swept under
the rug, along with the more elaborate online banking
platforms such as Wingspanbank.com.
It wasn't all for naught, though. Banks
learned some valuable, albeit expensive, lessons: define
your strengths as a business, provide services customers
actually need, and don't waste precious capital for the
sake of buzz. Today, the best portal-related ideas are
reflected in the broader Internet offerings of banks.
The "community of interest"
concept, for example, lives on at the "resource centers"
Wells Fargo & Co. maintains at its Web site for student
loans, retirement planning and mortgages. FleetBoston
Financial Corp. operates a Web site for small business
customers. Even some of the advertising in nonbank portals
lives on, albeit with a difference. This time, banks are
driving harder bargains by conditioning their payments
on factors such as actual referrals, sales and relationship
profitability.
"That makes sense," says Octavio
Marenzi, manager director at Boston-based Celent Communications.
"What made no sense was expecting people to come
to your site to check skiing conditions, buy flowers or
get the weather report."
Land
Grab
Back in the late '90s, many bankers
viewed the Internet as a land rush that was being won
by virtual upstarts such as America Online, Yahoo!, Lycos
and Microsoft Network. Web sites operated by these companies
seemed to dominate the Web, the most popular among them
attracting about 15% of all Internet traffic with news,
chat rooms and search engines.
Known as "portals" because
they served as primary entry points into the Web, these
sites mix rich content and utilitarian features to attract
users on a mass scale, as opposed to a niche audience.
Former Bank One Corp. chairman John B. McCoy Jr. likened
them to a city's most valuable real estate, the idea being
that once prime land was taken for development, it was
gone forever.
Worried that they would be crowded out
of the action, banks leapt into action. "We had to
preserve market share. We were trying to understand what
this phenomenon was all about," says Sami Siddiqui,
head of consumer Internet services at Citigroup Inc.
Individual approaches differed, but
a bank portal strategy usually involved one or two main
elements. The first was to advertise heavily on nonbank
Web sites to attempt to draw prospects to the bank's own
Web site. The other, more ambitious, approach was to try
to establish the bank's own Web site as a portal
in other words, a primary destination for customers when
they browsed the Web.
Both courses of action were very expensive.
Chicago-based Bank One inked a $125 million pact with
Excite, while its First USA credit card unit signed a
$500 million deal with America Online. Bank One's Internet-only
subsidiary, WingspanBank.com, then agreed to spend up
to $135 million to advertise on Lycos. A Bank One spokesman
says the company spent less than the stated amounts because
of performance conditions in the contracts.
Citigroup, meanwhile, signed a five-year
deal with AOL Time Warner Inc. in 2000, reportedly valued
at $100 million, giving the New York-based bank top billing
on America Online's financial pages.
These payments were agreed upon before
banks and everyone else realized how ineffective Internet
advertising actually is. While it is true that lots of
people view the banner ads flickering on their screens,
few bother to click on them and visit advertisers' sites
only about 1% by some estimates.
Still, Siddiqui maintains Citigroup's
marketing agreement with AOL yielded useful lessons. "We
learned a lot of new things about consumer preferences,"
Siddiqui says. "We learned about what places to run
a banner ad, and what types of offers are needed to get
a higher response."
Banks still advertise on nonbank portals,
but in a more discriminating manner. They drive harder
bargains with the consumer portals, linking payments to
actual referrals, sales and even profitability per-customer.
"Portal alliances haven't died off, but they're under
intense scrutiny," says Forrester Research Inc. analyst
Catherine Graeber.
Portal
Proliferation
Some banks went beyond advertising on
portals to build destinations of their own, a process
that included securing memorable (and usually expensive)
domain names and then beefing up site content with news,
sports scores, weather and, later on, account aggregation.
The most ambitious of these efforts
was spearheaded by Citigroup, which formed a special e-commerce
"incubator" in 1997 under the direction of former
cable television executive Edward D. Horowitz. Appearing
to focus more on experimentation than on near-term, bottom-line
results, the unit known as e-Citi launched Citi f/i as
a standalone, virtual bank along the lines of Bank One's
Wingspan and Atlanta-based NetBank Inc.
E-Citi also sponsored the development
of more than a dozen independent portals promoting different
products or services. These included bizzed.com, for small
businesses, and finance.com, a consumer portal that didn't
mention its connection to Citigroup but professed to offer
unbiased personal financial advice and links to other
providers. The problem was, each of these sites generated
its own expenses, confused Citigroup's overall branding
message and didn't connect with the rest of the bank.
By early 2001, e-Citi had amassed 1,100
employees and an estimated $1 billion in operating losses,
which proved unsustainable even for a company as large
as Citigroup. Horowitz departed and e-Citi was broken
up, with operations such as Citi f/i parceled out to Citigroup's
mainstream Web sites. Today, if you type in finance.com
on your browser, you'll end up at Citibank.com. Visitors
to bizzed.com are re-routed to citibusiness.com.
Bank officials say the company's banking,
investment and insurance units
still support about 40 different Web sites, but they expect
that number to keep shrinking. While the major citibank.com
and citigroup.com sites continue to support plenty of
hyperlinks to external providers, the emphasis now is
clearly on reinforcing Citigroup's own stable of financial
services businesses.
Charlotte, N.C.-based Bank of America
Corp., likewise, once touted plans to build four portals
focused on consumers, businesses, capital markets and
money management. It even forked over $3 million for an
Internet domain name, loans.com, in order to develop a
multi-lender portal. But if you visit loans.com today,
you'll find yourself at a site that offers credit card,
home equity and mortgage loans from just one provider
Bank of America. And the four portals have been
condensed into two: the commercial bank's home page, and
a site maintained by the company's investment banking
and capital markets division.
Bank One also ended up dismantling its
portal strategy as represented by the standalone Wingspanbank.com.
Typing in that name today brings you to bankone.com's
home page.
Smaller banks were no more able to make
the portal strategy work than large ones. USABancshares,
a tiny, Philadelphia-based thrift, deployed video game-quality
graphics on a portal site that sold both financial-related
and music CDs and provided links to such eclectic material
as the National Space and Aeronautics Administration and
Boolabong surfing apparel. But the expense of developing
these services ultimately proved the thrift's undoing.
Bleeding deposits and capital, USABancshares spent months
under the watch of regulators before selling out in March
to Berkshire Financial Holdings, a private investor group.
No
Blank Checks
All of these players eventually learned
that while customers might have enjoyed getting ski reports,
sports scores and local weather on their bank sites, the
hits didn't translate into real business in the form of,
say, higher loan volumes and new checking accounts. Meanwhile,
these elaborate operations consumed valuable computer
resources, network capacity and lots of cash. "It's
not that the services weren't popular, it's just that
the banks weren't getting paid for providing them,"
says Forrester's Graeber.
Gomez Advisors, an e-commerce research
firm based in Concord, Mass., last year surveyed banking
customers regarding bank Web site features they valued
the most. Entertainment and other ancillary information
ranked very low compared with services that helped people
manage their financial lives.
"We found that customers' awareness
of their bank site offering weather reports, sports or
news didn't correlate with their happiness with the bank,"
says Gomez analyst Christopher Musto. "Banks got
burned badly trying to beat the mainstream portals. They
were paying a lot for non-performance."
Even services that could be considered
more relevant have fared poorly. Small business portal
sites, which offer discounts on office supplies and links
to lawyers and consultants, apparently have so far generated
little customer interest. One problem, analysts say, is
that people don't expect such services from a bank Web
site and consequently don't assign value to them.
All of these ventures are being scrutinized
in today's more austere economic environment, where budgets
are under a tight leash. "Blank check time is over,"
Graeber says. "Now there's pressure to show value."
Despite the expensive misfires, bankers
say their portal efforts did yield some valuable lessons
that are now being applied to improve customer service
and develop more compelling Internet offerings. "We're
getting away from the Buck Rogers futuristic solutions,
to the 'Help me to do the day-to-day things easier solutions,'
" says Kevin Watters, head of consumer Internet services
at Bank One.
WingspanBank innovations retained by
Bank One, according to Watters, include e-mail alerts
telling customers when a statement is ready for viewing
or when a credit card bill is due. Bank One is also working
to create a more efficient "one-click access"
to all of its services from the home page.
Wells Fargo is currently expanding its
single sign-on access to include banking, brokerage services,
credit cards, mortgages and other services. "Our
focus has shifted to 'back to basics.' We try to increase
the usability of the site," says James Smith, senior
vice president at Wells Fargo in charge of consumer Internet
services. "We were learning on the Internet. It was
a lot of R&D."
Sometimes that learning process means
cutting out programs that are popular. About five years
ago, Wells Fargo occasionally sold non-bank products through
its Web site, such as flowers on Mothers Day and candy
on Valentine's Day. Now those amenities, considered a
distraction, have been discontinued.
Some vestige of a portal strategy remains
at Wells Fargo in a series of "resource centers"
that reside on the bank's home page. Visitors can click
on links that take them to sites focused on retail banking,
student loans, retirement planning, mortgages, insurance
and investments. The mortgage center, for example, features
links on refinancing, advice on selling a home and applications
for home equity credit lines. Links for tools, calculators
and search applications are displayed in the margins.
Citigroup likewise still manages dozens
of Internet sites and applications linked to the many
banking, insurance and investments businesses under its
red umbrella corporate logo. That includes retail banking
on citibank.com, capital markets exchanges run by Salomon
Smith Barney, and wholesale services, such as online cash
management. Citibank.com itself is still designed to attract
a broad audience and route those people to areas of increasingly
specific interest. And some of Citi f/i's innovations,
such as customized Web pages, have been retained.
All this underscores how bankers have
learned that bells and whistles don't constitute an effective
online financial services strategy. The key requirements,
rather, are a tight focus on a select audience, i.e.,
the bank's own customers, and the delivery of information
and services those customers really care about.
Mr. Giannone
is a freelance writer based in New York City.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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