| Leading
the Way
By Lauri Giesen
To ease customer concerns about
Check 21, banks must lead the way in demonstrating its
benefits.
Financial institutions are understandably
preoccupied with the technological and procedural implications
of Check 21, but smoothing the transition with customers
ultimately may prove to be the key challenge. Millions
of people still love their paper checks and won't be happy
to find facsimiles returned in their monthly statements.
While federal law requires banks to
notify customers of changes associated with Check 21,
a greater outreach will be required to preserve goodwill,
minimize complaints and inquiries, and promote other electronic
services relating to checking accounts. "This is not just
a technological change, but a change in how we serve our
customers, and we need organized efforts that take customer
communication to heart," says Jon Wilk, senior vice president
of payment strategy for Charlotte, N.C.-based Bank of
America Corp.
The Check Clearing for the 21st Century
Act, signed by President Bush last October, doesn't mandate
that financial institutions replace paper checks with
electronic images of those checks. But it does require
that institutions be prepared to accept "image replacement
documents," or IRDs, in place of those checks. An IRD
is simply a check substitute that can be imaged; institutions
must be able to accept a paper version of the IRD if they
can't process the image itself.
The upshot is that customers will start
to see these IRDs in their monthly statements, either
as check look-alikes or in imaged form. For the millions
of customers still accustomed to having their original
paper checks returned to them every month, this could
prove unsettling. Proactive measures will be needed to
avert a tidal wave of complaints.
"You don't want your call centers flooded
with inquiries from people asking, 'What is this funky
substitute?' You want to give people advance notice about
changes and what those changes mean to them," says Phyllis
Meyerson, senior vice president of the Electronic Check
Clearing House Organization, a bank-owned national check
clearinghouse based in Dallas.
Financial institutions are therefore
putting a lot of thought and energy into educational programs,
for customers and employees alike. Since employees are
the key to reassuring customers about the changes wrought
by Check 21, experts say, employees should be trained
first, preferably starting now. Then, customers need to
be contacted.
Institutions such as BofA and Wachovia
Corp. have established task forces to decide what kind
of information should be presented and through which channels.
Check 21 experts recommend that this information go beyond
the standard legal language required by the Federal Reserve and include a marketing plan to educate customers on the
benefits of imaging, such as the ability to view cleared
checks on a PC screen at the branch or in the home.
In this way, providers may be able
to turn a chore into an opportunity.
Education
Required
Although Check 21 has been touted as
a revolutionary change for the nation's payments system,
some customers won't see much of a difference. These people
are already receiving check images in their monthly statements
and probably won't be too rattled by IRDs, which will
carry the same information that appears on the traditional
check.
However, the changes could be unsettling
to those people who still receive cancelled checks with
their statements. Under Check 21, such customers will
start receiving paper copies of IRDs for those checks
that have been imaged. And while the paper IRD will resemble
the traditional paper check, it clearly won't be an exact
copy of the document that the customer originally wrote.
So customers may wonder: is this thing really as good
as my cancelled check?
The problem is compounded by the fact
that the general public wasn't paying much attention when
the Check 21 legislation moved through Congress last year.
"The average consumer does not know anything about Check
21," says Stephen Ward, executive vice president of the
item processing group for Brookfield, Wis.-based Fiserv
Inc., a major check processor. "The only people who know
anything at all about this are those who are directly
involved."
Customers don't take kindly to surprises,
as evidenced with check truncation, a process in which
a customer's check is converted to an electronic form
either at the point of sale or at the bank's lockbox.
"We're already seeing some customer confusion about the
electronic conversion of checks," says Sarah Hartman,
executive vice president for electronic banking services
for National City Corp., Cleveland.
When checks are truncated at the point
of sale, customers at least get their cancelled check
back. When the check is converted by an automated clearinghouse
transaction, either at the lockbox or the point of sale,
customers see the payment listed as an electronic transaction
on their statements, similar to a debit card or an electronic
bill payment. This has caused some National City customers
to call the bank asking for the return of their original
paper checks, according to Hartman, who sees even more
potential for confusion when Check 21 is added into the
mix.
To minimize transition shock, outreach
programs need to begin at least four months ahead of the
Check 21 implementation, says Carol Malicki, Wachovia's
senior vice president of operating services. Institutions
such as hers have already formed task forces to provide
information for customers and training for staff. Wachovia's
task force began meeting in January.
Consistent
Message
It's a given that customers upset with
the Check 21 process will seek answers at their local
branch or call center. Bank employees, therefore, need
to be thoroughly grounded in the mechanics of IRDs and
imaging. Unfortunately, most of them hadn't been following
the legislation either, so there's a steep learning curve
within institutions.
"Large banks need to bring in experts
and conduct on-site training and orientation sessions
at all major locations. These sessions should include
all the product management personnel, call center and
branch employees," says Susan Goold, electronic clearing
services product manager for Small Value Payments Co.,
a New York-based provider of electronic check services.
Even as employees are being trained,
institutions need to plan what kind of information they
will present to customers, and how. "We have to make sure
we have a consistent message about Check 21 that is being
communicated throughout our organization — be it
through our print media, call centers or financial centers,"
says Wachovia's Malicki, who is based in Charlotte. "We
need all these channels to build on a series of messages,
repeated with sufficient frequency, so that customers
understand any impact this will have on them before Check
21 even starts."
Bank of America has a task force, led
by Wilk, grappling with similar issues. BofA, however,
is going a step further — by considering whether
this information flow needs to be customized to fit the
needs of various consumer segments. For example, the message
to customers who still receive their cancelled checks
might differ from the message to those who accept imaged
statements or view their checks on the Internet. In any
case, messages intended for consumers are likely to be
different from those that go out to business customers,
Wilk says.
Since customers will begin seeing IRDs
on their statements after Oct. 28, some bankers think
this is a good time to do some proactive marketing by
reminding customers that they can now view those check
images online — if the bank is imaged-enabled —
and print out copies if they wish.
In this way, Check 21 may actually
offer banks an opportunity to differentiate themselves.
Wachovia, National City and Bank of America, for example,
all plan to use their Check 21 communications to promote
services that allow consumers to view their checks over
the Internet. Since many customers won't be getting their
actual checks back anyway, banks hope to show them that
if they really want to view those checks, the easiest
way is to simply call them up on the computer.
"We would love it if this allowed us
to move more customers to using our online channels. The
benefits and advantages to these online services will
be part of the message we intend to convey," Wilk says.
Already, Wachovia and National City are reporting that
they each get more than one million requests for Internet-based
check images per month.
In touting the benefits of imaging,
however, banks need to be careful not to overdo it. "It
would be a mistake to make too big of a deal about these
changes," says ECCHO's Meyerson. "A lot of people don't
like change for any reason. So when pointing out any differences,
continuity of service should be emphasized as well. With
substitute checks, or IRDs, for example, customers will
still be able to see their signature, the memo line and
any endorsements on their checks."
Even as individual institutions work
to present consistent Check 21 information throughout
their organizations, Malicki argues it's important for
banks to work together to develop uniform industry-wide
messages. Since many consumers have checking accounts
with multiple financial institutions, it doesn't do any
bank any good to have confusing or contrary messages being
communicated by the competition. "Banks need to work together
through industry groups to develop common customer communications,"
she says. "This is not a competitive issue; it is a collaborative
issue."
And the customer education efforts
can't suddenly stop once Check 21 is implemented, or even
a few months after. "This is an ongoing education process,
not just a one-time deal," says National City's Hartman.
Ms.
Giesen is a freelance writer based in Libertyville, Ill.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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