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Plug 'n Play?
By John R. Engen
State Farm's push to sell bank products through
its insurance distribution system depends on motivated agents.
Edward Manahan's two-room office
in a Bloomington, Ill. strip mall certainly doesn't look like a bank.
There's no teller line or lobby, and the only clue that Manahan even offers
banking products comes from stacks of pamphlets on a window ledge.
But the long-time State Farm
Insurance Cos. agent does have one thing that might worry Bank One Corp.
and other banks in the area: strong customer relationships.
When one of Manahan's 3,100 clients buys a house
or a car, has a death in the family, or encounters some other life-changing
financial event, he is called as a matter of course because of the insurance
connection.
Now that Manahan is equipped to sell an array
of deposit and lending products, those customer relationships translate
into a competitive threat to banks. Already, about 500 of his clients
have purchased at least one banking product.
As part of an agent force 17,000-strong, Manahan
represents a bold experiment in the delivery of retail financial services.
Eschewing plans to build bank-like branches, Bloomington-based State Farm
is betting that its insurance agents can sell banking products from their
existing offices. The potential seems enormous. Those agents serve 27
million households in 48 states under a brand name that's well known across
the country.
Already, State Farm Bank has amassed more than
$3.5 billion in bank assets and $2.8 billion in deposits. "Banking,"
says Edward Rust, Jr., State Farm's chairman and chief executive, "is
a natural, logical extension of what we offer."
The years ahead will test Rust's theory about
insurance and banking being a natural fit. To date, only 1% of State Farm
customers has purchased banking products; most are unaware that the insurer
is even in the banking business. Convincing the rest to turn to an insurer
for certificates of deposit, money-market accounts and mortgages will
require a significant marketing outreach.
And none of this will work without the enthusiastic
cooperation of State Farm's agents, who are technically independent contractors
rather than company employees. Although the company has already put most
of those agents through a special training program, its incentive system
is still heavily weighted in favor of insurance products, underscoring
how State Farm executives face some delicate tradeoffs.
The appeal of State Farm's banking products rests
on attractive pricing, so paying the agents too large of a sales incentive
would negate State Farm Bank's advantage as a low-cost producer. And seriously
distracting agents from their core job of selling insurance would be harmful
to the company overall.
For the record, State Farm portrays banking as
a long-term project and seems in no hurry to become a nationally significant
player anytime soon. Rust says he views the banking operation mostly "as
a means of building customer retention," and says State Farm Bank
will be judged on its ability to turn a profit (which it hasn't yet),
while increasing share-of-wallet among the insurer's established customer
base. Banking may, in fact, never amount to more than a niche operation
at State Farm.
On the other hand, this could be an opening shot
in a long-term struggle to make financial services "convergence"
more of a reality by showing that insurers can play on the banking industry's
turf just as banks are learning to sell insurance products.
Banking Play
To be sure, State Farm is far from the only insurer
to jump into the banking business. After the landmark Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act in 1999 opened the door for insurance companies to market bank products
(and vice versa), a number of insurers obtained thrift charters, including
Allstate Corp., MetLife, Inc., and USAA Inc. San Antonio-based USAA, which
markets to military personnel, is the biggest player so far based on assets,
but State Farm is considered a top contender because of its market heft.
The company was founded in 1922 by George Mecherle,
an Illinois farmer who was frustrated that lower-risk rural drivers had
to pay the same auto insurance premiums as their big-city cousins. State
Farm has since blossomed into the nation's largest property and casualty
insurer, with 80,000 employees servicing some 72 million policies.
The decision to seek a thrift charter, granted
in 1999 after a contentious two-year review process, was rooted partly
in the company's experience in marketing auto loans to its insurance customers.
State Farm noticed that these loans, underwritten by partner banks, generated
higher customer retention and cross-sell levels, as well as incremental
fee income, says Stan Ommen, State Farm Bank's chief executive officer.
While State Farm's initial plans called for modest
growth, some bankers quickly sounded the alarm. John McCoy, then-CEO of
Bank One, warned at BAI's Retail Delivery Conference in 1998 that if the
insurer could sell just one product per-office, per-month, it could generate
more than 200,000 new accounts a year.
In fact, McCoy appears to have underestimated
the potential. After two and a half years, State Farm Bank now boasts
more than 500,000 accounts, and is opening new ones at a rate of 1,500
a day, according to Ommen. "State Farm is redefining itself from
a mere insurance company into a financial services company, and doing
it very successfully," says Carmen Effron, president of C.F. Effron
Co. LLC, a consulting firm that works with both banks and insurers.
The growth so far rests on a relatively low-cost
distribution system, which allows State Farm to offer attractive rates
on its banking products an additional 50 basis points over most
competitors on CDs, for example. While there have been layouts for marketing,
administration and centralized loan processing capabilities, it has cost
little to add bank products to agents' product menu, or market them over
the Internet. And those agents are already in place with an office network
that spans the country.
While some insurer-owned thrifts offer a full
range of banking services, State Farm has chosen to focus on a few basic
consumer products: CDs, money-market checking accounts, residential mortgages,
credit cards, consumer loans and auto loans. The latter is a natural sale,
since the agents are often involved in arranging for insurance at the
time a car is purchased.
Today, the company has $1.2 billion in auto and
other consumer loans, about $900 million in mortgage loans and a $200
million credit card portfolio. Deposits include about 31,000 checking
accounts, with total balances of $45.4 million, and $650 million in some
22,000 money-market accounts. But the vast majority of deposits, more
than $2 billion worth, comes from CDs, which underscores how dependent
State Farm Bank is on rate-driven customers pulling funds out of the slumping
stock market.
"State Farm was fortunate, because the company
launched the bank at a time when people were looking for diversification
and good rates," says Jim Rensel, president of Q-Group, a Tempe,
Ariz. market research firm.
Balancing Act
While State Farm Bank's debut may have been propitiously
timed, the long-term viability of its delivery model is not guaranteed.
A certain segment of customers will always be
rate-driven. But what about those who base their choice of a banking provider
on factors such as convenience and security? Even some big online financial
services companies, such as E-Trade Group Inc., have reluctantly concluded
that they must have some branch offices to compete effectively for mass-market
customers.
David Prus, who worked with KeyCorp before joining
State Farm Bank as a marketing director two years ago, concedes many customers
are "challenged" to perceive State Farm as something more than
an insurer. "When they hear 'State Farm Bank,' the first question
they ask is, 'How do I conduct my transactions? Where is the branch office?'
"
Manahan has witnessed this type of confusion firsthand.
He tells of a customer with a sizable sum in a money-market account who
recently called his office to purchase a cashier's check. "I had
to say, 'I'm sorry, we can't do that here; you have to call the bank.'
" Manahan recalls the customer "wasn't very happy" about
that.
Despite such difficulties, State Farm executives
say they have no plans to build branches. Ommen reckons that enough people
are willing to trade branch proximity for a combination of attractive
rates and one-stop shopping (95% of bank customers also own State Farm
insurance). He also argues that State Farm's easily-accessed Web site,
its willingness
to reimburse ATM charges imposed by other banks, and the presence of a
trusted agent nearby should satisfy most customers for now. But he does
concede this structure will likely discourage customers from placing their
primary transactional banking accounts with State Farm.
Instead, State Farm is trying to get its agents
to sell CDs and mortgages as "add-on" products. And the agents
may be well positioned to do that, considering that the company enjoys
a reputation in the insurance industry for a strong sales culture. In
addition to auto insurance, State Farm agents have a good record selling
life insurance clearly a product that is "sold, not bought"
along with mutual funds, variable annuities and other investment
offerings.
But the agents already make a good living selling
insurance products, so why should they exert themselves to push banking
products? Right now, there's not a lot of money in it. State Farm Bank
pays agents $25 for a deposit account, and up to $250 for initiating a
successful mortgage origination. Those are small numbers by insurance
standards, and Ommen admits that some agents are unhappy with this compensation
plan.
Manahan, for example, recently opened two $1 million
CDs for a client, but was paid no more than if the deposit had been $100.
"The banking products aren't like the major insurance products we
sell, because they don't generate residual income," he says.
State Farm Bank has responded to these complaints
by convincing its parent to include bank product sales as part of the
total for agents to achieve company-paid bonuses and end-of-year travel.
But there are limits to how far the company can go without jeopardizing
its relatively low-cost structure. "It's a balancing act," Ommen
says. "We're trying to pass the efficiencies of our system along
to customers with better rates, raising the question of how much we can
afford to pay the agents."
As for forcing agents to sell banking products
forget it. Being independent contractors, the agents are free to
sell whatever generates the most revenue. "I can tell agents I expect
them to sell banking products, but it's really up to them," Ommen
says.
For their part, the agents could face some operational
risk in marketing bank products. A customer turned down for a mortgage
loan, for example, might vent his ire on the agent by canceling more lucrative
insurance policies. "There are synergies between banking and insurance
products," says John Barreis, a senior director for Fitch Ratings
in Chicago. "But the sum of the synergies could actually hurt the
agents' core business model."
These challenges are even greater in today's environment
of rising insurance premiums. Michael Herlihy, a former banker and now
CEO of InsurBanc, a $25 million-asset institution in Farmington, Conn.,
says that independent insurance agents he works with are less willing
to devote much attention to anything outside of their core offerings.
"They're in a very hard market right now," he says. "When
premiums rise like they have, it takes more work to market insurance products."
Training Regimen
In the face of these challenges, State Farm is
doing what it can to prepare its agents to sell banking products. Nearly
all the agents have now been through a training regimen focused on banking
products, compliance issues and the internal systems that are used to
initiate and monitor accounts. The course includes a book-based self-study
program and a CD that walks the agents through systems navigation, followed
by some classroom training.
Ommen says the program includes coaching on "identifying
when it is appropriate to sell a certain product to a customer."
This includes scripted conversations and pointers on getting the right
forms filled out correctly and sent to the right place. "You need
to build a process at the point of sale that enables a transition from
an insurance discussion to a banking discussion," says consultant
Effron, who is based in Westport, Conn. and has followed State Farm's
efforts closely.
To support its agents in the field, State Farm
employs 350 people at loan processing centers in Missouri and Indiana.
Agents help their clients fill out loan applications and then send the
documentation electronically to one of those centers for processing. When
the paperwork is done, the forms are sent back to the agent's office for
signature.
To boost public awareness, the bank has been buying
newspaper and radio advertising in test markets. For established customers,
it's using everything from statement inserts to messages on envelopes.
It also is lobbying with its parent for inclusion of the word "banking"
on State Farm's familiar logo. "We're trying to get the word out
that we have a bank," Prus says.
Like its banking competitors, State Farm is experimenting
with predictive modeling to target direct mail and other solicitations
to customers considered most likely to buy banking products. The bank
has already found that customers with life insurance policies have the
highest propensity to buy, while those with health insurance are next.
Using such insights, State Farm Bank's response rate on direct-mail pitches
is 1%, about double the industry average, according to Ommen.
But as is also the case with banks, this customer
relationship management effort is a work in progress, hindered by the
inability of State Farm's own internal systems to communicate with each
other.
Quest for Synergy
Assuming State Farm Bank can keep the agents on
board and continue its rapid buildup, what are the implications for the
parent company and the financial services industry in general?
First and foremost, State Farm gets some needed
earnings diversification. The mutually-owned company reported a $5 billion
loss last year, due mostly to rising claims in its core property and casualty
business. This year, the company shuttered offices and stopped underwriting
new homeowners' policies in many states.
"They've been hit very hard, especially in
the homeowners' business," says Barreis at Fitch Ratings. While he
says that banking "offers some component of diversification"
to State Farm's revenues, the total amount ($52 million through August
of this year) is still little more than a rounding error for a company
that generated $40 billion in premiums in 2001. And this unit has yet
to cover its startup costs. A spokesman says only that State Farm Bank
will attain profitability "soon."
Beyond that, State Farm's banking venture will
help determine whether financial service "convergence" can evolve
from an attractive buzzword into a real business model. The business rationale
for convergence is based on the concept of "one-stop shopping,"
or providing customers with one destination for purchasing the full range
of financial products.
Gramm-Leach-Bliley may have promoted convergence
by lowering the barriers separating banks and insurance companies (and
brokerage/investment banking companies as well), but the practical effect
so far has been minimal. In fact, some of the visible movement has been
in the opposite direction. Citigroup Inc. early this year announced plans
to sell the property and casualty unit of Travelers Insurance. "They
found there wasn't any synergy between banking and the property and casualty
business," Barreis says.
Synergy has been elusive for banks, as well. Consultant
Effron cites Wachovia Corp., Bank of America Corp., and HSBC Holdings
as banks that have done well selling insurance products. But she says
most institutions have been hindered by overly rigid product silos, technical
integration issues, and incentive systems that do little to encourage
cross-selling.
State Farm's Rust currently serves as chairman
of the Financial Services Roundtable, a Washington, D.C.-based lobbying
group composed of top executives from the banking, insurance and investment
industries. He says insurers are better positioned than banks for cross-selling
because they deal regularly with financial service functions that cement
customer relationships, such as servicing insurance claims. "Once
you place a loan or take a deposit, there's not a whole lot of interaction
required," Rust says. "When you're adjusting a claim loss, you're
putting a value on things or lives that people have lost.
That's very powerful."
Rust expects to see additional synergies with
insurance as State Farm Bank becomes a larger, more integral part of the
company. He envisions, for example, handing beneficiaries of deceased
customers a State Farm Bank checkbook with the death benefit already deposited
in the account. "Our goal is to be a comprehensive provider of financial
services products, and strengthen our long-term customer retention,"
Rust says. "If we can continue to penetrate our property and casualty
book of business, we'll be a major player in this whole game."
It is an ambitious plan, but based on the
progress so far one that banks will dismiss at their peril.
Mr. Engen is a freelance writer based in
Minneapolis.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking Strategies, published
by BAI.
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