| Delayed
Gratification
By Lauri Giesen
Bank debit card strategy, once
focused primarily on interchange fees, is increasingly
focused on strengthening customer relationships.
Banks surprised everyone, including
probably themselves, by not raising fees in the wake of
an out-of-court settlement last year that effectively
lowered the amount of revenue they receive from signature-based
debit cards.
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It remains to be seen, however, whether
the restraint amounts to a permanent shift in strategy
for banks that issue debit cards or whether it's only
a temporary tactic. "A lot of financial institutions still
do not have a clear picture of what debit card strategy
they should adopt. They know their debit revenues are
down, but they are holding off taking any action," says
Les Riedl, a consultant with Atlanta-based Speer &
Associates.
Many industry experts had been expecting
banks to raise debit card fees in the wake of the settlement
reached in April 2003 between the two bank-owned credit
card associations, Visa and MasterCard, and a group of
retailers led by Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Terms of that settlement
lowered the amount of revenue banks receive from retailers
by an average of about 30% per signature-based debit card
transaction. While Visa revised its rates this year based
on merchant size, banks say the average transaction fees
are still about 20% lower than before the settlement.
It was widely predicted that banks would try to make up
for that shortfall in revenue by either charging their
customers fees for the cards or eliminating the pricier
perks that they had offered in hopes of luring customers
to use those cards — such as airline miles or cash
rebates.
But that didn't happen. Bankers evidently
realized that if they started charging for the cards —
either through annual card fees or per-transaction charges
— they would discourage usage. Furthermore, numerous
banks have reported that customers who use their debit
cards frequently, much like customers who bank and pay
their bills online, tend to be more loyal and keep larger
amounts in their accounts than customers who don't use
debit cards. Customers with cards tied to mileage and
other incentives keep even bigger balances, according
to Tony Hayes, managing director of financial services
practices at Dove Consulting.
In short, what's underway is a new
approach to debit cards. Instead of viewing debit cards
primarily as standalone sources of fee income, bankers
are increasingly using them for the broader purpose of
strengthening customer relationships and hastening the
transition from paper-based to electronic transactions.
Wachovia Corp., for example, believes in the debit card
as a vehicle: "There is still a significant upside to
the number of transactions that can be migrated from cash
and checks to debit cards," says Janine Tabaczynski, senior
vice president and director of access services.
"Even though the revenue has declined
on a per-transaction basis, we're still projecting considerable
growth in both the number of customers who use debit cards
and the number of transactions that consumers are making
on those cards."
As long as this growth continues, banks
may be expected to refrain from passing on the lower interchange
rates to their customers. Increased volume may make up
for the lower rate earned.
Volume
Strategy
The make-it-up-on-volume approach can
be seen at TCF Bank, which reported first quarter debit
card revenues of $13.5 million, up 2% from the previous
year. That rise occurred despite the fact that the average
revenue received on a per-transaction basis was down by
17%.
The Wayzata, Minn.-based unit of TCF
Financial Corp. offset the per-transaction decline by
encouraging customers to increase the number of debit
card transactions made on their cards. The promotions
produced a 19% gain over the year-earlier quarter. "I'd
be hard pressed to think of any communication that we
send out that doesn't talk about the value of our check
card," says senior vice president Dan Engel. "There is
information inside every statement envelope and often
we send out coupons that give discounts when cards are
used."
But while TCF has been promoting its
card for years and began another round of such promotions
immediately after the settlement, other banks took longer
to react.
Banco Popular North America, the U.S.-based
subsidiary of the Puerto Rico-based Popular Inc. bank
holding company, saw its debit revenue fall by about 30%
last year. Manuel Chinea, vice president of marketing
and product developing for Banco Popular North America,
admits the company did consider charging debit card fees,
but decided against that option.
"We think we can make up our revenue
shortfall in volume," Chinea says. "If, at some point,
we find we can't make enough revenue with just volume
increases, we may have to resort to fees. But we're not
there yet."
To get more debit cards into the hands
of its customers, Banco Popular North America mailed 51,000
new cards this spring. Chinea says a card issuance program
was essential for his bank because only about 35% of its
customers were using their cards. "We know we are under-represented
in the market because the industry average is closer to
60%. Our customers include a high number of first-generation
immigrants, who tend to rely more on paper payments,"
he says.
But Chinea also believes his customers
will be receptive to debit cards because many do not have
a credit history and can't qualify for credit cards. The
bank plans to emphasize that debit cards offer all the
convenience of credit cards without the credit qualifications
or risk of incurring debt. After the push on card issuance,
Banco Popular will look at programs to spur greater use
of those cards.
Such go-for-growth strategies seem
to have become the industry norm in the wake of the Wal-Mart
settlement. "More banks are focusing on how to use the
card to broaden the relationship between the customer
and the bank, not just to generate fee income," says John
Gould, director of consumer credit for TowerGroup, a Needham,
Mass-based consulting firm.
Some banks are working both sides of
the demand equation — consumers and retailers. In
addition to trying to boost customer usage, they're working
to get both credit and debit cards accepted by a wider
range of merchants, with fast-food restaurants and recurring
utility, newspaper and insurance bill payments high on
their prospect lists. If they are successful — and
there are early indications that such acceptance is growing
— there will be even more opportunities for consumers
to use their cards and increase transaction volumes.
Studies by Boston-based Dove Consulting,
in fact, have shown a gradual increase in the use of debit
cards for in-store payments, from 21% of total payments
in 1999, to 31% last year. Some of that conversion to
debit cards has come at the expense of checkwriting as
the check market share at the point of sale fell from
18% in 1999 to 15% in 2003, according to Dove. "Banks
can fee their way of this situation or they can grow their
way out," says Hayes. "Everyone seems to be agreeing the
latter is better."
Affinity
Marketing
As banks encourage customer activation
and usage of debit cards, they are increasingly adopting
incentives. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. and Keycorp, for
example, both have cards that offer airline mileage rewards
while U.S. Bancorp offers several different debit cards
that allow consumers to select how they want to be rewarded,
including cash rebates, airline miles and other merchandise.
Some rewards programs have an altruistic
bent. Cleveland-based Charter One Financial Inc., for
example, in April introduced a debit card that makes donations
to five different children's charities whenever a cardholder
uses the card to make a purchase. This card is the latest
in an ongoing effort since 2000 by Charter One to promote
its debit cards.
The bank also has its more traditional
"Mega Rewards" program that allows customers to accumulate
points that can be redeemed for airline tickets, gift
cards, gasoline purchases or a host of items. And in the
next few months, Charter One plans to introduce a series
of "affinity" cards that will reflect different customer
tastes and lifestyles. The first card will be for Chicago
Cubs baseball fans, with a Cubs logo on the front. Cardholders
will periodically be able to enter contests for free tickets
or other perks related to the baseball team. Customers
with the card can also participate in the Mega Rewards
program.
"We want to tie our debit cards closer
to our affinity programs," says Julie Robbins, senior
vice president of finance for Charter One. "Ultimately,
we'd like to be able to offer 30 or 40 different debit
card options for customers to choose from. Customers who
use their debit cards a lot tend to be our best customers
and we use our promotions as a means to reward and retain
those customers."
Wachovia is likewise pushing its debit
cards through special promotional programs, including
several held in conjunction with Visa and other Visa debit
card issuers. The Charlotte-based bank is participating
in several sweepstakes in which customers are entered
into a contest each time they use their cards.
Wachovia also sees the value in using
debit cards to reward and ultimately retain its most profitable
customers. It has a gold debit card, for example, that
it provides to customers with high account balances. This
card has many of the same benefits offered to customers
of gold credit cards, such as immediate replacement of
lost and stolen cards and extended warranty guarantees
on items purchased with the card.
In addition, Wachovia has a loyalty
program for users of its business debit cards. With that
card, users get points for every purchase made. The points
can be redeemed for a variety of items that are likely
to appeal to business executives, including gift certificates
at Office Depot or free hotel stays and airline tickets.
While Wachovia is considering adding
similar perks to its consumer debit cards, the emphasis
for now is on small businesses. "The small business market
is a very desirable segment to our bank," Tabaczynski
says. "It is important to us to acquire new customers
in this segment and keep them satisfied."
First Manhattan Consulting Group vice
president Andy Dresner agrees affinity cards can be helpful
— he especially likes the Cubs card offered by Charter
One. But he also says it's important that banks look at
partnerships with other companies whose markets overlap
their own when developing these incentive programs. Airline
cards, for example, make sense for U.S. Bancorp and Keycorp
because they have a large geographic base and their airline
partners serve the same markets they do. Such arrangements,
however, would not make sense for community banks, which
would be better off partnering with local businesses or
charities that appeal specifically to their local markets.
Dresner also likes the idea of developing
affinity cards in line with customer segmentation programs,
noting that a bank should offer various reward options
to appeal to high-income travelers, sports fans, patrons
of the arts and charitable donors.
Both Wachovia and TCF are considering
how to tie their debit card strategies to customer segmentation.
If Wachovia does decide to add incentives to its consumer
cards, for example, it will most likely be part of the
retail bank operation's overall segmentation strategy,
meaning that the rewards and benefits will be targeted
to specific customer demographics.
While TCF does not currently offer
a debit card with an incentive offering, Engel says "in
the not too distant future, it is likely that we will
pull that trigger." While he is not ready to divulge what
type of incentives his bank will offer, he says it is
likely that there will be different types of incentive
cards targeted to different customer segments.
Cost Considerations
As effective as the incentive programs
might be in stimulating usage, they raise questions about
the underlying economics of debit cards, particularly
in the wake of the Wal-Mart settlement. In some cases,
Hayes says, the cost of providing the perks almost equals
the revenue a bank gets from interchange revenue.
Airline miles, for instance, reportedly
cost a bank two cents per mile. With many airline incentive
programs, cardholders receive a free mile for every $2
in purchases. Under the lower interchange rates, banks
could pay as much or more for the miles than the revenue
they would receive, according to TowerGroup.
But Hayes says banks may want to maintain
the programs if they look at the bigger picture. "Reward
costs might eat up all the interchange revenue, but is
the card rewarding and keeping customers who maintain
high balances in their accounts? If so, it might be worth
the investment.
"Everyone used to look at debit cards
as being a bank product," he adds. "But the larger institutions
today are viewing the debit card not as a product, but
rather as an access device to the demand deposit account
(DDA). Then, they look not at the value of the interchange
revenue, but at how the card enhances the value of the
DDA and the customer relationship."
Indeed, some experts argue that the
revenue tied directly to card use is not the point. Banks
instead should look closer at how card perks can be used
to retain existing customers and attract new ones. For
example, First Manhattan's Dresner argues that card revenue
alone is insignificant when assessing a customer's profitability.
According to Dresner's model, as shown
on page 44, a customer uses an average generic debit card
for four to six debit transactions per month, spending
between $200 and $300 per month. Such activity generates
between $1.50 and $2.25 in interchange revenue before
processing and related costs of between $1 and $1.50 a
month. The result: The bank earns about 50 cents to 75
cents per month per customer. At $6 to $9 annually, this
per-customer revenue is insignificant compared to the
average annual $220 pre-tax profit that banks generate
per customer on the entire transaction account.
Noting that cards that offer airline
miles typically appeal to high-income consumers and business
executives who tend to be profitable bank customers, some
observers have suggested banks give the card with perks
free to those customers they want to retain while charging
an annual fee for the card with perks to customers who
do not maintain a high minimum balance in their accounts.
Most banks offering airline miles, for example, already
are charging between $25 and $50 a year for the card.
Some will waive the fees for their best customers.
"What's important is that banks develop
card strategies that are intended to attract new customers,
not just cannibalize existing customer accounts," Dresner
says.
If banks want to make the card part
of a broader customer retention program, they might want
to consider making the debit rewards part of an overall
bank rewards program. Consider, for example, Banco Popular's
Premia card, which is offered only in the bank's Puerto
Rico market.
With the Premia account, customers
accumulate points for paying bills online, using credit
and debit cards, maintaining a large balance in their
checking or savings account and taking out loans. By rewarding
activities associated with a multiple number of accounts,
the bank is encouraging customers to use more accounts.
Points accumulated under the Premia program can be exchanged
for a variety of rewards that fit a customer's desires
and are not tied to just one type of reward.
Not every bank is willing to foot the
bill for such a reward program. Even Banco Popular's North
American sister operation isn't sure it wants to invest
in a similar offering for the U.S. market. "We're still
evaluating various options to encourage customer card
usage and we haven't decided whether we will duplicate
what our sister company offers," Chinea says.
Ms.
Giesen is a freelance writer based in Libertyville, Ill.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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