| Not
Everyone Wants a Relationship
By Rick Spitler and Sherief Meleis
Some banking customers —
just like consumers who shop at Wal-Mart or fly on Southwest
Airlines — are happy to trade style or comfort to
get their business expedited on attractive terms.
For one view of what the future of the
banking industry may look like, consider the airline industry,
where Southwest Airlines Co. has ascended to dominance
in just 30 years.
While "full-service" carriers like
American Airlines Inc., Delta Air Lines Inc. and United
Air Lines Inc. focused on building elaborate jet fleets
and "hub" systems at major regional airports, Southwest
adopted a discount fares strategy based on older inner-city
airports and a zeal for efficiency. To control costs,
for example, Southwest re-used plastic boarding passes
and handed out peanuts instead of hot meals — and
passed along the savings to its customers.
Today, Southwest's market capitalization
is roughly seven times that of the nearest U.S. legacy
air carrier. Overall, discount carriers have claimed 25%
of the U.S. commercial passenger market, according to
the National Institute for Aviation Research, based at
Wichita State University. That share is expected to soar
to 40% over the next few years.
This is a harbinger of things to come
in retail financial services. Operating with superior
efficiency and offering various combinations of high yields
on deposits, low rates on loans and low service charges,
a number of large banks already fit the "discount" mold.
And they are strongly outgrowing their traditional rivals.
For example, between 1998 and 2003,
the 58 discount institutions identified in a recent study
of large U.S. commercial banks (more than $1 billion of
deposits) by Novantas LLC grew deposits nearly 50% more
rapidly than the 239 traditional institutions identified
in the merger-adjusted analysis. And even though they
paid sharply higher rates to achieve this growth, the
discount banks still were able to deliver superior profitability
because of their extraordinary efficiency.
Of course, not all of the banks that
we place in the discount category necessarily define themselves
in that manner. But they do share a general set of characteristics,
including exceptional efficiency that enables them to
pay high rates on deposits and still achieve healthy profitability.
Notable examples include Fifth Third Bancorp, Cincinnati;
Charter One Financial Inc., Cleveland; and Citizens Financial
Group Inc., Providence.
These discounters are succeeding by
drawing on an often overlooked and yet broad-based customer
preference for utilitarian simplicity. It's an approach
that contradicts a prevalent view in the market, which
finds many institutions focused on building high-touch
relationships. The assumption is that most customers value
personal interaction with their financial institution
and are receptive to consultative selling. Huge investments
have been made in staff resources and product capabilities
to pursue such strategies.
But that premise is not supported by
a recent national study conducted by BAI and Novantas,
which found that roughly half of all deposit customers
fall into a "utility market" that prefers basic services
and attractive prices and yields. Not unlike customers
of Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Southwest Airlines, banking
utility customers just want their business expedited on
attractive terms.
Based on experiences in other industries,
we believe that discount banks, as a broad category, eventually
could capture roughly one-third of the retail banking
market. This poses a huge problem for what we'd consider
generalist retail financial institutions. Operating with
large networks of full-service branches, these "network
banks" are dependent upon high volumes of general business
to support their standardized franchises. With a more
costly operating model that is not attuned to utility
customers, they are already losing business to discount
banks and stand to lose even more if they don't take immediate
action.
Discount
Inroads
Changes in any industry usually occur
gradually, and it was perhaps understandable that executives
at the dominant air carriers tended, at least early on,
to view the rise of Southwest and other discount carriers
as isolated successes rather than as a challenge to their
tried-and-true business model. The response from United,
American, Delta and other legacy carriers — tactical
tweaks to routes, prices and marketing messages —
proved insufficient to address the systemic shift.
The discount carriers launched hundreds
of new planes into the sky, leaping from a 15% route overlap
with major carriers in the early 1990s to an estimated
55% overlap in 2003. Popular with customers, they also
proved more financially resilient in the wake of 9/11
and the U.S. economic recession, and investors accorded
them nearly half of the airline industry's market capitalization
at the end of 2003.
The airline industry's experience echoes
that of retailing, where discount outlets have made huge
inroads and are outperforming traditional generalist chains.
Prominent discounters Wal-Mart and Target Corp., for example,
respectively posted compound annual revenue growth of
12.7% and 10% between 2001 and 2003. Meanwhile, Sears
Roebuck & Co. limped along at 0.2%; J.C. Penny Co.
shrank by 0.85% and Federated Department Stores Inc. shrank
by 1.24%.
This pattern is now repeating itself
in retail banking as discount players erect hundreds of
new branches in high-density markets, cultivate an unconventional
image and make technology-intensive service a selling
point. With their low overhead and attractive high rates
on deposits, they are following in the footsteps of the
discount air carriers and retailers, converting a huge
banking customer segment that is willing to forfeit amenities
and complex services for a good deal.
As highlighted in a study by BAI and
Novantas, utility customers tend to have fewer resources,
are pressed for time, and are generally uninterested in
financial service relationships. Standing in sharp contrast
to people in the "relationship market," whose resources
and receptivity warrant in-depth service, utility customers
think more in terms of bang for the buck.
Indeed, the discount banks identified
in a separate study by Novantas offered a weighted average
yield of 1.25% on savings and money market deposit accounts
in 2003, nearly twice the 0.67% yield offered by the network
banks. And at 0.52% of average deposits, their service
charges were nearly one-third lower than the 0.74% levy
imposed by the network banks. With inducements such as
these, it's little wonder that discount banks grew transaction
balances nearly half again as quickly as the network banks
— 8.3% compound annual growth, compared with 5.6%.
And how did the discount banks afford
to compete on price? The answer is rigorous efficiency.
Compared with a 56.9% weighted average ratio of operating
expenses to operating revenues posted by the network banks
in 2003, the discount banks operated at a 51.6% efficiency
ratio.
When all was said and done, the discount
banks posted a 19.7% return on average common equity in
2003, overshadowing the 15.3% return at the network banks.
The rise of the discount banks is factual and undeniable.
It presents a challenge that the network banks cannot
ignore.
When a traditional airline operates
a big jet, it looks forward to the premium revenues that
can be generated from first-class service. But the jet
still can't be operated profitably unless coach class
also is filled. The situation is much the same for network
banks. They do a great job with many relationship-oriented
customers and earn handsome rewards from that book of
business, yet their branches can't be operated profitably
unless they also handle high volumes of utility customer
business.
The upshot is that as the discount
banks lure away more utility customers, the long-term
profitability of the network banks comes under increasing
pressure.
Making
the Transition
Our experience suggests that a few
network banks are beginning to recognize this threat.
And we believe that the rest will gradually follow as
the discount threat begins to strike home. Just as the
major airline carriers have been forced to create discount
subsidiaries of their own, so will the network banks be
compelled to adjust their traditional business model to
the new competitive forces.
Strategically, we see the retail banking
industry headed into an era of transition from standardized,
production-centered franchises to variegated, segment-centered
franchises. There are three major phases to this transition:
merchandising, market management, and distribution and
branding. Each step holds the possibility of improved
customer responsiveness and institutional profitability
if handled correctly.
These three stages represent degrees
of difficulty. To get started, the most realistic approach
is to tailor products, prices and packaging for utility
customers. This in itself will be tough; tougher still
is the next phase, when the management structure of the
organization must change so that regional executives play
a larger role in responding to local markets and specific
customer segments. Toughest of all is the ultimate transition,
when separate brand families and distribution models are
deployed to serve specific segments of the market.
In the merchandising phase, providers
will need to use segment insights to tailor various customer-facing
aspects of their businesses, including prices, packages
and targeted campaigns. Through skillful permutations
of established offerings and practices, they will begin
to capitalize on the pronounced differences in needs,
sensitivities, preferences and attitudes among major customer
groups.
The "free checking" product has provided
a good start for many institutions, although it can be
improved and should not be viewed as a complete or final
solution. BAI and Novantas work shows strong demand for
combinations of deposit and credit products, reflecting
the working capital needs of utility customers. As banks
cross-sell loans to free checking customers, the revenue
reliance on exception fees on items such as overdrafts
can be lowered. Customers will be pleased by the reduction
in penalty fees and relationship profitability can be
upheld through cross-sales.
Network banks also could do a better
job of reinforcing the concept of tradeoffs with free
checking, so that customers more clearly see that they
are giving up some benefits in order to gain others.
Tradeoff-based marketing is at the
heart of discount success in other industries. At Southwest,
for example, there is no reserved seating and customers
have learned to show up early at the gate to get seated
where they want. This principle is beginning to be applied
with free checking, for example, as some institutions
require direct deposit as a condition.
Utility
Segment Strategy
Even a refined version of free checking
is not the complete answer, however, because discount
banks will figure out multiple ways to attack the market
over time. They have myriad options for leveraging their
positioning and efficiency advantages in market competition.
Southwest Airlines couldn't be stopped through competition
on isolated air routes, and discount banks can't be stopped
through competition on isolated products.
In this light, a suite of responses
is needed to court the utility segment. It does no good
to position 95% of the brands and products as being relationship-based
when only 50% of the market is interested in that value
proposition. The time has come to specifically tailor
offerings for the vast pool of customers that does not
want all of the bells and whistles. Modern segmentation
tools permit much higher accuracy in targeting particular
customer groups, facilitating campaigns aimed at utility
customers.
For example, major retail banking institutions
operating in the East Coast, Midwest and West Coast are
beginning to offer selective discounts to utility customers.
Twenty years ago, major airlines instituted computer-driven
"yield management" programs to fine-tune pricing on routes
and individual flights. In today's variation in banking,
institutions are using segment information when negotiating
renewals on certificates of deposit and money market deposit
accounts, and in formulating direct offers on new accounts.
Also, research shows a broad-based
opportunity to bundle credit and deposit products for
utility customers, and not just within the context of
free checking. This type of product bundle is especially
attractive because utility customers are less sensitive
to lending rates than they are to deposit yields —
healthy margins on the former can help offset slim margins
on the latter.
Such tailored merchandising initiatives
set the stage for phase two, characterized by changes
in market management. As offers are more closely tailored
to specific markets and segments, success increasingly
will hinge on the execution of local managers and staff
who are close to customers. This has huge management implications.
While it is true that centralization
has been of great help in streamlining large institutions
and improving overall quality and consistency, it can
work against market responsiveness. In coming years, significant
responsibility and authority must be shared with regional
managers, both to assure local responsiveness and to configure
and manage branch capacity so that outlets do the best
possible job of serving particular markets and segments.
This movement is already underway inside a few major institutions.
Regional variations in deposit pricing
provide an excellent example of why this is necessary.
In early 2003, for example, the market price offered on
money market deposit accounts ranged from 1.20% to 1.37%
in Michigan, while the range in neighboring Illinois was
only 0.86% to 0.97%. Elsewhere, two-year CD rates fell
by 10 basis points in Massachusetts during the first quarter,
but climbed 45 basis points in Rhode Island. For the institution
operating in these regions, there clearly was no "single
price" that would be competitive and profitable.
To be prepared to be able to respond
appropriately in each region and for each major customer
group, regional managers must take the lead in understanding
local competitors, analyzing customer elasticity and assessing
local markets. Central management should develop overall
strategies for regions and customer segments, with explicit
local management input, using local data on customers
and competitors. Local management should be responsible
for effective execution to achieve the agreed-upon growth
and profitability performance targets.
As competitor initiatives create new
threats and opportunities, central management should work
with local management in determining how to adjust the
strategy to respond. Most important, we believe there
should be shared accountability for achieving targeted
growth and profitability goals.
Another aspect of this second phase
is that branches in dense urbanized markets, which offer
the business volumes needed to support specialized offerings,
will be managed differently (perhaps even separately)
from branches in sparse rural markets, which offer only
enough business to justify a more standardized approach.
Branded
Segments
In the third phase, it is entirely
possible that some major banking institutions will evolve
into a family of branded segment offers, some of which
might be supported by their own unique blends of employees,
operations and distribution systems. Though not mutually
exclusive, segment considerations will be prominent in
the management and configuration of the enterprise.
Marriott International Inc. illustrates
the brand family concept in the hotel industry. It sticks
with general appeal brands in low-traffic markets, where
you will see the flagship Marriott Hotels (often with
far fewer features than in major urbanized centers), the
Fairfield Inn and Ramada International. In high-density
markets that justify more segment-target offerings, you
additionally will see Ritz-Carlton, Marriott ExecuStay,
Courtyard by Marriott, SpringHill Suites, TownePlace Suites,
and so on.
An example of the brand family approach
in financial services can be found in Canada at President's
Choice Financial. A partnership between Loblaw Companies
Limited, Canada's largest food distributor, and Amicus
Bank, a subsidiary of Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce,
President's Choice operates primarily online and has outposts
in the vast chain of Loblaw grocery stores.
Adhering to the principle of tradeoff-based
marketing, President's Choice customers forfeit a wide-ranging
ability to conduct financial transaction with the assistance
of a live representative. Even at the kiosks within Loblaw
stores, services are limited to demonstrations, product
and rate information, accepting applications and servicing
plastic cards. The reassuring human face is indeed there,
but financial transactions are primarily done either electronically
or by telephone.
In return for the tradeoff of limited
live service, President's Choice customers are offered
the rewards of no-fee accounts, "high-interest savings
and low-cost borrowing," and "free" virtual services,
either online, by phone or through automated teller machines.
The marketing message: "There are no bank branches…savings
on overhead mean that costs are much lower than traditional
banks…and savings get passed on to you."
President's Choice does not invoke
the CIBC brand in its pitches, has a separate work force
and supporting business system, and is implicitly targeted
to utility customers. The unit has more than C$9 billion
of assets under management and more than 1.2 million customers.
Founded in 2000, it turned profitable in the fall of 2003.
As the CIBC/President's Choice example
demonstrates, network banks do have the capacity to respond
effectively to the discounters without a huge modification
of their existing franchises. Their competitive advantages
include deep penetration in the best markets, vast developmental
resources and expertise, and compelling systems and production
capabilities. There is no reason that generalist institutions
could not reconfigure their approaches to accommodate
the needs of important customer segments.
That said, the recent history of American
industry is littered with examples of once-dominant companies
that could not see far enough beyond their own walls to
sense major shifts in how customers view the market. In
their heyday, traditional air carriers and retailing chains
did a terrific job of operating within their business
models. But the models themselves got out of step with
the market, leaving the generalists in the position of
"efficiently" producing something on which the public
placed progressively less value.
For network banks, the number one priority
is to dig deeply to understand the utility market as fully
as possible. Who are these customers? What do they need?
How do they make decisions? What messages resonate with
them? What tradeoffs are they prepared to accept? Along
with this is an assessment of niche competitors: Who are
they? How are they positioning themselves? What is their
operating model?
Combined with self-knowledge about
the direction and strengths of the institution as it stands,
this groundwork sets the stage for utility market initiatives
that will help fend off the discount banks and contribute
to long-term growth and profitability.
Mr.
Spitler and Mr. Meleis are managing directors at Novantas
LLC, a management consultancy based in New York.
Copyright © 2004 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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