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Meeting e-Expectations
By
Thomas P. Johnson Jr.
Troubleshooting online initiatives is important,
but the larger challenge is meeting rising customer expectations.
Financial services providers surely are challenged
by the various requirements and opportunities presented by the wholesale
adoption of e-mail by U.S. consumers. Flooded with online customer inquiries,
providers are scrambling to strengthen response capabilities, while also
threading the maze of online marketing.
It is understandable and appropriate that institutions
focus on the many important details of these e-initiatives. Doing so
in a strictly reactive mode misses the larger point, however, which is
meeting what has become a highly sophisticated set of expectations among
customers in the online realm.
It is not enough to solve institution-specific problems
or match what direct competitors are doing. Nor can customers be forced
into a particular arrangement specified by management. Online customers
have built a composite set of expectations based on positive experiences
with providers in multiple industries, and those views must be incorporated
into the developmental activities of the institution.
With e-mail marketing, customers have become disgusted
with the torrent of unwelcome messages being pumped into their online
mailboxes, prompting financial services providers to observe strict protocols
in their own efforts. Most banks are asking permission from customers
before broadcasting e-mail marketing messages, even though they are not
legally required to do so.
To handle the exploding volume of e-inquiries, banks
have been experimenting with automated response systems. Here too, the
customer perspective must be addressed. Because of their service experiences
with other online providers such as Amazon.com, customers expect rapid
and personalized responses. To meet that requirement, banks must specially
train their reps and make sure that the increased efficiency of automated
response doesn't translate into reduced accuracy.
Though the responses in these two areas are sound,
strategists still risk missing the boat if they wait until they are mid-stream
in the next big project before considering the customer's viewpoint.
The new way of life for financial services providers entails continuous
monitoring of online customer perspectives and requirements ? and the
incorporation of such feedback at the onset of developmental activities.
This is not to suggest that providers include every
conceivable bell and whistle in their online offerings. The electronic
channel already is proving overly expensive to operate, given the limited
revenue-generating potential that has been demonstrated to date. Great
sensitivity and selectivity must be exercised in identifying and then
implementing programs that truly make a difference with customers.
Indeed, making a difference is the goal that constantly
must be kept in mind. The companies that have become market leaders in
the online medium achieved that not because they figured out the technology,
but rather because they figured out what customers want.
Mr. Johnson is publisher of Banking
Strategies and president and chief executive officer of BAI.
Copyright © 2003 by Banking Strategies,
published by BAI.
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