| Rapid
Response?
By Lauri Giesen
Cascading from a trickle
to a deluge, customer e-mails have become a major service
challenge for financial institutions. Will automation
solve the problem?
Electronic mail has become a common
way for people to communicate with friends and family,
retailers and business associates. So it should come as
no surprise that nearly one of every three Americans has
interacted with a bank via e-mail at least once.
But in a sophisticated online world
where some major retailers can answer e-mails within seconds,
bank response times generally do not meet expectations.
Many banks typically take more than 24 hours to reply
to electronic customer messages, experts say, and few
are responding in less than 12 hours.
This is a weakness that must be repaired
if banks are to retain their credibility as online providers.
"It is difficult for those who use e-mail routinely
in their business and personal lives to accept the notion
that their financial service provider cannot accept an
e-mail," write Meridien Research analysts Richard
J. Bell and Tom Richards in a recent report. Customers
who can't get their problems solved in a timely manner
and to their satisfaction may look elsewhere.
The urgency of this challenge grows
ever more pressing. U.S. banks will be besieged with 33
million e-mail messages annually by 2005, Meridien estimates,
more than double the current level of 14.3 million. Wells
Fargo & Co. alone handles more than 2,000 electronic
messages a day and expects that volume to reach 10,000
messages within five years, according to Meridien, which
is based in Newton, Mass. "Banks have started to
get religion on the importance of managing e-mail,"
says Ted Josephson, vice president of e-business at Bridgeport,
Conn.-based People's Bank, the operating subsidiary of
People's Mutual Holdings.
No wonder financial institutions are
casting about for ways to improve responsiveness. U.S.
banks spent $39 million on e-mail management systems in
2001, Meridien reckons, and that figure will soar to $158
million annually by 2006. Much of the outlays will go
for systems that electronically sort, prioritize and interpret
e-mail messages. Some systems can actually answer messages
automatically, although executives say such technology
is best used in conjunction with human operators.
| Related
Charts |
| |
| Related
Sidebar |
| |
Beyond these technological "fixes,"
institutions are using more prosaic methods to accelerate
e-mail responses. One obvious technique is simply to hire
more employees to handle electronic messages. Since institutions
have generally found that call center employees trained
on the telephone do not take well to written communications,
many are building cadres of e-mail specialists. Standardized
response scripts can help these specialists improve turnaround
time.
There are no magic bullets, since all
the automated systems and staffing solutions have their
limitations. But a comprehensive approach blending both
technology and skilled personnel seems to work best.
Expectations
Gap
The industry's throes with e-mail are
reflected in recent surveys. For example, 38% percent
of respondents to a Cap Gemini Ernst & Young international
survey published in 2001 said they took between eight
hours and 24 hours to respond, and 22% required more than
24 hours to reply. Only 6% of the 250 surveyed financial
institutions claimed a response time of within one hour,
and 23% reported between one hour and eight hours.
These results make banks look bad in
comparison with nonbank providers such as Amazon.com,
says James Scurlock, New York-based Cap Gemini's senior
manager for the financial services industry. "Yes,
it is much harder for banks to research and respond to
a customer inquiry than it is for Amazon to check whether
a book is in stock. But customers don't understand the
difference," he says. "When they can get instant
responses from other companies, they expect it from their
banks as well."
From the customer point of view, lackluster
bank responsiveness seems particularly glaring considering
that some institutions offer 10-minute approvals on credit
card applications and 30-minute approvals on mortgages.
How come these selfsame providers take 24 hours to get
back on a balance inquiry? "The credit card application
is a straight-through processing application that can
be done quickly, whereas the balance inquiry may require
going through several back-office systems to get the necessary
data," Scurlock says. "The trouble is, customers
don't want a technical explanation."
There is evidence that customers are
unhappy with that perceived service gap. In May 2001,
Atlanta-based Synergistics Research Corp. surveyed 1,000
households about their e-mail response expectations from
online banks and brokerages. Nearly 60% wanted same-day
service, and 16% required an answer within minutes. Only
20% were satisfied with a response time exceeding 24 hours.
Separately, an internal survey at Cleveland-based KeyCorp
found that most customers expect a response within seven
hours.
The quality of banks' online responses
is also being questioned. Among the one-third of Synergistics
survey respondents reporting they had sent at least one
e-mail to their bank, only 30% said they were "very
satisfied" with the response. About 22% were dissatisfied
and 47% were "somewhat satisfied."
Banks can never make all their customers
happy, concedes Synergistics chairman William Adcock,
but he still thinks the percentage of satisfied customers
is too low. "There will always be a certain group
that can't be satisfied maybe they are asking that
a fee be waived and the bank can't do that. But more than
30% should be very satisfied. Part of the problem is that
customers are transferring their expectations from other
industries to banks."
Staffing
Up
Banks around the country are trying
various approaches to improve performance. KeyCorp, for
example, hired more people, says Linda Guddat, online
bank customer contact manager. The bank now dedicates
a dozen employees to e-mail response, compared with nine
a year ago, and those employees typically handle between
8,000 and 9,000 e-mails per month.
KeyCorp opted to recruit its e-mail
service representatives from within its own call center
staff, although some banks hire from outside. Guddat says
the bank was able to locate employees with strong writing
skills who had already demonstrated proficiency at servicing
customers on the phones. These employees then received
additional training in dealing with e-mails.
The bottom line: the company reduced
its average response time from between 10 and 11 hours
to less than six hours, and it says most e-mails arriving
during normal business hours can be answered within an
hour.
One technique U.S. Bancorp uses to speed
up responses is to provide customer service representatives
with standardized scripts to use in answering questions.
This minimizes the need to craft unique responses and
assures consistency in answers. However, Pam Peterson,
manager of the bank's call center, emphasizes that the
reps still read each e-mail and are responsible for deciding
which scripts, if any, to use. They are then expected
to modify and personalize the scripts as appropriate.
The company also devoted more staff
to handling e-mail responses and improved the quality
of the training, says Keith Thompson, manager of customer
service for U.S. Bancorp's Internet banking unit.
Minneapolis-based U.S. Bancorp currently
answers nearly all customer e-mails within 24 hours, with
an average response rate of 12 hours. A year earlier,
by contrast, only about half the e-mails were answered
in less than 24 hours, with the remainder taking up to
48 hours. This improvement came in the face of rising
volume: 17,000 messages last November, up 56% from the
same month in 2000, mostly on account of a change in the
bank's Web site that encourages customers to communicate
via e-mail.
A further step would be to use an automated
response system. Although U.S. Bancorp has investigated
such systems, executives say they currently prefer using
their staff of six human operators, who exercise their
judgment as to whether a standardized or customized response
is needed.
KeyCorp is also evaluating automated
e-mail management systems, but as part of its broader
customer relationship management strategy. "This
is a complex decision and the systems are very expensive,"
Guddat says. Meridien's Bell says the cost of such systems
varies, but vendors typically quote prices to large institutions
ranging from $225,000 for a very low-end system to several
million dollars at the high end.
Judicious
Automation
Whatever the up-front cost involved
with automated systems, using human operators is more
expensive over the long-term. Meridien estimates that
e-mails processed manually cost at least 10 times more
to handle than those answered automatically.
Automated systems have their limitations,
however. If an e-mail message contains multiple questions,
for example, the systems tend to answer the first and
ignore the rest. And efficiency degrades as the message
becomes more complex. Recognizing they can only deploy
automated systems in conjunction with human operators,
banks are proceeding cautiously.
Consider, for example, Atlanta-based
SunTrust Banks Inc., which receives about 40,000 e-mails
a month. SunTrust uses 30 employees to answer 95% of its
e-mails within 24 hours and is averaging a turnaround
of about 22 hours, according to John McGuire, managing
director of SunTrust Online. While executives express
satisfaction with current response times, they also recognize
that customer expectations are rising. New technology
is slated that potentially will slash the response time
average to 12 hours.
This new system will incorporate automated
answers, albeit in a judicious manner. "We want to
keep our customer service representatives in control of
the process," McGuire says. "We may use automated
systems that pop up a suggested answer in response to
a question. But the service agent will still decide whether
or not to use it, and whether the response needs modification."
The system will be able to identify
urgent messages, such as those dealing with bill-pay problems,
and prioritize them. It will further allow customers who
do not bank online to send secured e-mails. SunTrust's
current system uses the bank's online banking security
and passwords so that sensitive questions, involving balance
inquiries for example, can only be sent by customers with
online banking access.
In general, large banks are somewhat
hindered in their use of automated systems by the need
to integrate the new technology into their complex and
far-flung information technology systems. For that reason,
more tightly knit institutions such as mid-size
and community banks, Internet banks and credit unions
have been a bit more adventurous in experimenting
with automated e-mail.
For example, People's Bank, a $13 billion-asset
regional bank and a national issuer of credit cards, receives
more than 30,000 e-mails monthly, 70% of which can be
answered automatically, according to Josephson. The bank's
service standard requires that all e-mails should be answered
within one business day, but it frequently answers messages
within four hours.
A key part of the response technique
at People's is to view each e-mail and prioritize it.
Stop-payment requests, for example, are sent to the top
of the list. The system then identifies key words and
routes the message to the appropriate service agent
mortgage, credit card or checking account specialists,
for example.
When the rep receives the e-mail, the
system automatically suggests a reply. The rep reviews
the answer and then decides whether to forward the reply,
modify it or rewrite the response. The system can also
identify difficult or complex problems and forward those
to the most experienced customer service personnel.
Another institution heavily impacted
by customer e-mail is Atlanta-based NetBank Inc., which
also receives more than 30,000 e-mails a month. An automated
response system has helped this institution accelerate
its response rate to between six and eight hours, compared
with about 24 hours a year earlier. NetBank's system identifies
key words in a message to suggest a response. An agent
then reviews that response to make sure all the questions
being asked have been answered.
NetBank is also trying to make sure
that customer questions receive complete answers. Ginny
Johnston, executive vice president for customer care,
says the institution installed templates that request
specific information before the e-mail response is sent.
For example, if a customer has a bill-payment question
or complaint, a template will pop up telling the rep to
ask for the necessary account numbers, due dates and balance
numbers.
Efforts such as these demonstrate that
while financial institutions haven't yet discovered the
perfect method for handling e-mail, they are at least
taking serious steps to address the problem. And the way
things are headed, human judgment will remain part of
the response equation.
Ms.
Giesen is a freelance writer based in Libertyville, Ill.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
back
to top |