| Chat
Gets Serious
By Julie Monahan
Instant messaging presents service
opportunities for banks, as well as some challenges, like
keeping the chat productive.
Ever since instant messaging broke free
of the confines of America Online's private network, the
technology has presented banks with both an improved method
of serving customers online and more risk to data security.
Managing instant messaging has taken on a tone of urgency
as the technology has caught on with the public. The Yankee
Group in Boston says there are already 80 million users
in the U.S.
IM, also known as "live chat,"
presents a grab bag of potential rewards and risks. The
potential lies in offering customers a faster option than
e-mail to communicate with service reps. Customers who
can get their problems handled via a live chat session
are less likely to log off and dial a call center.
"Live chat assists both
service and selling," says Randy Adams, senior vice
president of online customer services at Wells Fargo &
Co. in San Francisco. "It will truly help us get
the most out of our Internet offering."
IM can also help an institution
improve internal communications by enabling a more immediate
form of contact than e-mail. Employees trying to reach
other employees stand a better chance of getting through
the e-mail clutter by depositing a flashing message on
the recipient's computer screen. This flashing message
can be hard to ignore, since closing the IM screen erases
the content, unlike e-mail, which can be opened and saved
at will. Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner, Inc. estimates
that 70% of U.S. businesses use IM to communicate internally
and externally.
The potential risks of IM revolve
around training and security. Employees who interact with
customers via live chat must possess strong writing skills
and conduct themselves appropriately in this medium —
the dialogue must never become so informal as to resemble
a chat room conversation. Since banks need to make this
process as efficient as possible, they are experimenting
with canned or automated responses. This issue has to
be handled with care, however; customers may drop the
session if they're not getting the response they seek
in a timely fashion.
Security can be an issue with
both the internal and external use of IM. Most of today's
business IM traffic occurs over public IM networks operated
by Yahoo!, Microsoft Corp. and AOL. This low-cost approach
has a clear financial advantage, but it's the kind of
uncontrolled exchange that gives IT departments nightmares
— employee usage of IM goes undetected due to anonymous
screen names and the lack of a system to capture and log
messages as they travel back and forth. Also, virus writers
have begun to explore public IM as a new way to wreak
havoc on corporate systems.
All this has raised concerns
among bank regulators and the Securities and Exchange
Commission, which began enforcement this year of regulations
requiring all electronic communications to be logged,
supervised, audited and archived to ensure broker/dealers
and their customers adhere to ethical trading behavior.
Whether instant messages are intended for internal or
external recipients, banks must conform to the same regulatory
requirements for appropriate content and access to searchable
archives as e-mail and other electronic communications.
The upshot is that IM can indeed
be a useful tool for banks, both as a service solution
for customers and as an internal communications system.
But institutions need to keep well within the safety zone
by paying attention to training and security issues.
"Are
You There?"
Instant messaging originated
in 1989 as a technology on AOL's private network to facilitate
chat room conversations. It proved wildly popular with
users, and soon Microsoft and Yahoo! had their own versions.
Since Microsoft and Yahoo! did not require membership
fees to use their basic IM products, popularity spread
across the Internet and beyond AOL to include both business
and personal use.
During a recent BAI conference,
SunTrust Banks Inc. senior vice president R. "Book"
Booker described how his company had implemented a live
chat system designed by New York City-based LivePerson
Inc. and found it useful for sales.
When a customer views the loan
offers on SunTrust's Web site, the system will track that
person's behavior. Certain activities, particularly clicking
on rate information, will generate an intervention from
a SunTrust rep, who e-mails the customer asking if he
or she would like some help. An affirmative answer produces
an online chat session. "We're just playing around
with this to see if it really works," Booker said
at the SmartTactics in Retail Delivery conference, held
in Las Vegas last March.
For now, SunTrust only dedicates
about five people in its contact center to online chat
duties. But customer usage is rising, from 778 sessions
in October 2002 to 3,196 this January. And the experience
so far — about half the chat sessions result in
a loan application — has encouraged the bank to
consider expanding the use of IM to other parts of its
Web site, Booker said.
SunTrust's experience sums up
the attitude of many banks toward IM technology: potentially
useful, worth investigating, but no reason to bet the
farm on it just yet. The past shortcomings of e-mail in
customer responsiveness loom large for some institutions.
Internet banking, almost by definition,
is supposed to be convenient and fast. Yet customers who
try to contact their financial institution by e-mail typically
wait a day or two to get a response, and then the answer
often comes back as a canned rather than personalized
message. This kind of experience compares poorly with
the low-tech telephone call, where the customer service
rep usually resolves your problem once you get them on
the line.
Theoretically, IM should solve
this problem, since the interaction between customer and
rep occurs in real time. But the use of automated responses
and requiring service reps to juggle multiple chat sessions
can degrade the customer experience if not handled carefully.
"You never want to see a customer type, 'Are you
there?,'" says Milton Santiago, senior vice president
of electronic banking at ABN AMRO Services Company, the
technology arm of LaSalle Bank Corp. in Chicago, which
is owned by Netherlands-based ABN AMRO N.V.
Even so, pioneers such as Wells
Fargo, SunTrust and ABN AMRO have found that IM technology
can provide a useful adjunct to established capabilities.
While banks such as SunTrust use it on their consumer-oriented
Web sites, ABN AMRO and Wells Fargo focus the technology
on servicing commercial clients.
Wells Fargo, for example, introduced
live help to 15,000 subscribers of its Web-based "commercial
electronic office," an online portal to the bank's
treasury management, international, trust and investment,
and credit and interest rate management services. Similarly,
ABN AMRO has adopted IM to service the time-sensitive
needs of 28,000 users of its Web-based corporate treasury
management system.
Live chat enables service representatives
to see exactly what appears on the customer's screen,
which alleviates the necessity of trying to explain things
over the phone. Customers also don't have to go searching
for their account manager's business card. "IM allows
us to provide a higher level of service," says Santiago.
"Instead of searching a Rolodex looking for an 800
number, now the customer can reach us just by clicking
a button."
Employee
Skills
However it's used by the bank,
IM technology does present managers with some special
issues.
First, banks need to recognize
online chat as a discrete service and avoid simply grafting
it onto existing call center (or contact center) operations.
It's tempting to take employees who are fielding telephone
calls and simply provide them with some additional training
to handle online chat. But the skills don't necessarily
transfer. A person who is adept at handling verbal communications
may not possess the reading comprehension, grammatical
and typing skills to do a good job with IM. So it may
be necessary to hire these employees from outside the
contact center.
Secondly, training needs to be
IM-specific. It's important, for example, that employees
recognize customer language that indicates frustration
or anger. Employees must be provided with suggested responses
to defuse those situations.
Also, while customers may be
accustomed to the informal speech common to instant messaging,
such exchanges occurring around a business transaction
must still conform to certain rules. "We're careful
to keep it professional," says Wells Fargo's Adams.
"We convey the sense that we are a bank, not a chat
room." The bank reviews IM transcripts every day,
for example, to ensure that its reps stay on track.
This is all a matter of degree,
however. Some institutions, such as ABN AMRO, do strive
to retain some of the casual tone that comes so naturally
with IM. In the cash management area, for example, bankers
know their customers well and online conversations are
sometimes allowed to veer off to more personal exchanges,
such as asking about a spouse's health or a child's progress
in school.
Messages may even contain an
occasional "emoticon," a symbol on the keyboard
used to denote a facial expression such as a smile. "The
technology requires you to be more engaging," says
ABN AMRO'S Santiago. "We don't want it to be too
impersonal."
Speediness is another feature
of IM that banks will want to retain, although this requires
a balancing act as well. To make their online chat services
more efficient, some banks ask reps to handle more than
one session at a time. The trick is to do this in a way
that doesn't slow down session speed too much. Larry Perlstein,
managing vice president at Gartner in San Jose, Calif.,
says he has seen how companies can botch live chat with
long wait times and auto-responses that don't quite match
the question. But it's also hard to predict how much wait-time
a customer will ultimately accept in return for the convenience
of online help.
"It really depends on what
you're used to," Perlstein says. "If you're
used to sitting on the phone waiting for someone to talk
to, IM can seem very fast in comparison."
One strategy to ensure chat remains
quick and to the point is to limit its use to simple requests
for assistance. For anything more complicated, it may
be better to direct customers to a service rep with a
higher level of financial expertise. This leads to a related
issue: systems integration. If a customer tries to solve
an issue online and then follows up later with a phone
call, the call center rep needs to be able to reference
the previous online activity. And management needs to
analyze the service levels provided at each stage in this
progression.
"An integrated system with
content available in context is the best way to go,"
says Robert Mahowald, research manager of collaborative
computing at IDC in Framingham, Mass. The best systems,
Mahowald adds, are those that sit on top of other customer
relationship management systems, such as those from Siebel
Systems Inc. or Oracle Corp. Although some analysts are
skeptical about vendor claims of integrated IM communications,
the technology is maturing quickly. "It's coming,"
Mahowald says.
It's possible that increased
use of online chat will help reduce call center volume.
Republic Bank & Trust Co. in Louisville, Ky., for
example, has observed a slight drop in calls to customer
service since launching IM on its Web site two years ago.
"We've also reduced the amount of time that customers
are online," says Michael Sadofsky, senior vice president
of marketing at Republic, which is owned by Republic Bancorp,
Inc. The bank, the third largest in Kentucky, currently
handles about 1,000 IM sessions a month.
It may not be advisable, however,
to establish cost reduction as a priority when implementing
IM. A typical chat session can last as long as a phone
call, so it absorbs as much of the employee's time, unless
the rep is able to juggle multiple sessions.
Tailored
Solution
The efficiency potential of IM
technology can perhaps best be seen in the arena of internal
communications. IDC researchers estimate that business
users will make up nearly half of the 506 million IM users
expected online by 2006.
The problem here is that users
of public networks, like Yahoo's Messenger and AOL's Instant
Messenger, can't screen messages for inappropriate content,
block corrupted attachments or store messages for regulatory
review. To address these shortcomings, a number of vendors
have rushed in with a new genre of IM, called enterprise
instant messaging solutions.
EIM can be used with both internal
and external IM. It can be applied to closed IM networks
that restrict usage in-house and for communication with
approved businesses only, or to network-independent platforms
designed for broad customer use, which will recognize
all messages regardless of whether the customer uses an
IM application from Microsoft, Yahoo! or AOL.
The value of the latter lies
in its ability to accept messages from any IM client the
customer chooses. The systems also screen messages for
inappropriate or illegal words, store and catalog messages
and generate management reports.
EIM seems tailor-made for the
intensity of the trading floor where customers with fortunes
at stake want their buy and sell orders implemented quickly.
No surprise then, that trading departments have been at
the forefront of EIM adoption, a list that includes Banc
of America Securities, owned by Charlotte-based Bank of
America Corp., and Wachovia Securities, the trading arm
of Wachovia Corp., also based in Charlotte. The new SEC
regulations 17a-3 and 17a-4 (regarding the content and
archival storage of electronic messaging) drive most of
this implementation. Securities departments that want
the convenience and speed of IM will need the data management
tools of EIM to satisfy these new requirements.
Wachovia Securities signed on
to EIM management almost two years ago after attempting
control by requiring traders to print out an IM log everyday.
The resulting reams of data soon became unmanageable.
More than 220 employees now use an IM auditor from FaceTime
Communications, Inc., in Foster City, Calif., which mirrors
the bank's e-mail monitoring application. A similar system
in operation at Banc of America Securities now handles
36,000 IM sessions a day.
Clearly, the effort to adapt
IM to the demands of the financial services industry requires
solutions that neatly integrate the technology with current
service platforms as well as internal standards of external
and internal communications. IM is still a very young
application in the world of Web-based banking, and managers
will need to stay on top of new technologies that will
no doubt improve — and expand — IM efficacy.
Ms.
Monahan is a freelance writer based in Seattle.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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