| Your
Depositors Aren't 'Average'
By Steve Ledford, Tim Mills and
Tom Murphy
Tailoring your organization's
payments products to the distinct preferences of your
customer base should lead to more meaningful segmentation
— and above-average marketing results.
Financial institutions across the U.S.
compete vigorously for retail depositors. Free checking,
free electronic bill payment and expanding branch networks
have become standard fare as banks, thrifts and credit
unions battle for demand deposit accounts — the
cornerstone of consumer banking relationships.
Once banks acquire an account, they
proceed to bombard customers with mailers, phone calls
and promotions to cross-sell additional products.
Much of this marketing is designed
for the "average consumer," or is based on "typical customer"
responses. Bankers like to believe that they "know what
their customers want," and they may make distinctions,
for example, between the "affluent" and "mass-market"
customer. But in fact, these customer classes are often
based more on what is being sold, and less on whom the
marketing is directed to.
The drawback to this approach is that,
in reality, the typical customer is likely to exhibit
highly atypical behavior. It's important to remember that
an average is just a statistic, and not a particularly
useful statistic at that. If consumer checking accounts
carry an average balance of $1,000, you can bet that there
are a lot of $100 accounts, some $10,000 accounts and
just about everything in between. Is it reasonable to
expect the $100 depositor to react the same as the $10,000
depositor? There is simply no average customer —
and basing products and services on an average customer
profile will miss the mark.
The marketing of consumer financial
services tends to default to traditional ways of segmenting
markets. Categorizing customers according to attributes
such as income, age, education and ethnicity can provide
some useful insights, but they are second-rate predictors
of financial buying behavior. When the subject is money,
people can be highly personal in their preferences. Ultimately,
it's quite difficult to create demographic or psychographic
profiles of real customers. Most of the data is simply
not available — or, if it is, may be of questionable
accuracy.
Surprisingly, financial institutions
already hold the key to information they need for a more
effective segmentation of their customers: Every time
a customer uses a debit card, pays a bill or writes a
check, he or she is making a choice and signaling how
they prefer to use their bank. Moreover, these payment
behaviors are an excellent indicator of overall buying
tendencies. There is no better way to predict what financial
services a customer will use in the future than understanding
the services he uses today.
The Survey
Methodology
In 2003 and 2004, Global Concepts conducted
a series of surveys to identify distinctive payment behaviors
among U.S. consumers. The surveys were designed to obtain
detailed data that would allow us to understand, and perhaps
anticipate, payment system trends. Most important, the
surveys were designed to identify which consumers were
making which payments. Instead of compiling misleading
averages and aggregates, the research was meant to provide
granular information that financial institutions could
adapt for the unique characteristics of their customers.
Each survey was based on a random telephone
sample of 1,000 respondents queried about their payment
behaviors — when they used branches to make payments,
how they paid their bills, how they paid at the point
of sale and how they accessed cash. In addition, the surveys
gathered standard demographic data such as age, education,
income, home ownership, family status, ethnicity and geography.
The data were then analyzed to find correlations between
the payment behaviors and the demographic data.
What we found was that consumers tend
to fall into distinct clusters. Most consumers have distinct
preferences for one type of payment. The research also
found that payment behaviors can be matched to key demographic
characteristics. A significant finding, however, is that
the demographic factors that correlate to payment behavior
are usually quite specific, and different factors are
significant in different situations. While standard market
segments are relatively poor predictors of payments preference,
there are a few bellwether demographic factors that can
be used to craft payment-centric market segments. Perhaps
more important, payments activity can be tied to pools
of consumers with distinctive characteristics.
This information can be used in a number
of ways. If a financial institution can identify a cluster
of customers according to payment transaction data, it
can make educated assumptions about missing demographic
data. This can help in targeting future promotions for
financial products and services. Payments profiles can
also help identify opportunities to get a larger share
of customers' business. A bank may have a customer's checking
account, but if he or she belongs to a group that uses
credit cards heavily, it may want to cross-sell the card
product. If a financial institution is expanding into
new markets, payments profiles can help put together a
compelling product offering based on dominant demographic
factors in the target market. Conversely, this information
can help banks avoid wasting money based on false assumptions
about what customers in a given segment really want.
Some of
the Key Findings
Most People
Play Favorites with Payments
Very few consumers use a mix of checks, cash and cards
for point-of-sale (POS) purchases. Most pick a payment
instrument and use it frequently. Heavy credit card users
tend to be more affluent. Heavy debit card users are younger.
The most dedicated check writers tend to live in rural
areas and keep relatively high balances in checking accounts.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, age
is a poor predictor of check usage. While heavy check
users are a little older than "average," many 18- to 34-year-olds
write a lot of checks. This finding fails to support the
belief of some that attrition alone will eventually spell
the end of checks.
Many Consumers
Rely on Retail Merchants for Cash Access
Cash back from check or debit card purchases is an important
source of cash for many consumers. For heavy check writers,
cash back is often the preferred method. Debit card users
tend to alternate cash back requests with ATM visits.
While most consumers use ATMs at least some of the time,
there is a significant segment that prefers to obtain
cash from a teller.
Heavy Branch
Users Are Also Heavy ATM Users
The world is not divided into branch users and ATM users.
Most consumers use both. In fact, the heaviest branch
users are also heavy ATM users, relying on cash back from
purchases as well. The most frequent branch visitors have
two things in common: they are much less likely to use
direct deposit and they withdraw a lot more cash than
other customers, any way they can get it.
Two other groups stand out for their
branch usage. Branch Avoiders tend to perform the same
volume of non-branch transactions as other consumers —
even though these consumers have eliminated the branch,
they have not added more ATM or POS cashback transactions.
They are also much more likely to have
direct deposit. These consumers conduct three times as
many ATM deposit transactions as other consumers.
Drive-up consumers have a high-transaction
lifestyle. Consumers who rely exclusively on the drive-up
window at the branch are younger, wealthier and perhaps
busier consumers overall. Drive-up consumers conduct 50%
more ATM deposit and withdrawal transactions than teller-only
consumers. They also conduct 18% more branch deposit transactions
per month but they obtain cash through the branch less
often than teller-only consumers.
Payment
Behavior Clusters
When consumers are profiled according
to overall payment behavior, they tend to cluster into
distinct segments. The following are some of the most
significant clusters.
Young, Debit-Oriented
Consumers
These younger consumers use debit and cash to make purchases
at the point of sale, checks to pay bills, and ATMs and
debit cashback to obtain cash.
Rich, Young,
Heavy Transactors
These consumers are the most affluent cluster in the survey,
make the most payments and use the broadest array of payment
methods. These are the users of electronic bill payment;
they pay almost 60% of their bill payments via the Internet,
phone and/or cards. At the point of sale, they use everything
but checks.
Older Traditionalists
These consumers use the traditional payment methods: cash
at the point of sale (and some credit card); checks for
bill payment; and the branch (and some ATM withdrawals)
for accessing cash. They do not use debit cards, obtain
debit cash back or pay bills electronically. They are
older, affluent and more likely to be retired.
"Middle America"
Check Users
These consumers use checks for all types of transactions.
They pay for almost 60% of their POS purchases with checks,
the highest level of check usage at the point of sale.
Almost 40% of the time, they obtain cash through check
cash back. As might be expected, these consumers pay bills
almost exclusively by check.
Unbanked,
Heavy Cash Users
Over 80% of consumers in this cluster are unbanked. They
use cash exclusively for POS purchases, and exclusively
cash and money orders for bill payments.
Using Payments-based
Segmentations
OK, so consumers are predictable. How
can financial institutions use this information?
First, banks would be advised to stop
trying to sell "average" products. Instead, retail banking
offerings can be tailored to meet the needs of current
or prospective customers. This may be the best rationale
for creating checking account packages. It should also
help guide which features belong in a package for a given
consumer segment and which do not.
This presumes, of course, that an institution
knows its customer mix. Most financial institutions know
approximately what share of the retail market they own.
Few have a solid idea of who these customers are. It is
unlikely that one bank has the same profile as the other.
For example, one organization's customers may use debit
cards more frequently than another's. Or it may have a
larger share of young customers. A disappointing response
to online bill payment offers may indicate a dearth of
affluent heavy transaction users.
Segments affect profitability. Heavy
check users, for example, tend to keep higher DDA balances
and are loyal. Young debit-card users keep minimal balances
and switch banks frequently, but generate lots of interchange
revenue. Young, affluent consumers are heavy users of
bank services and can be prime cross-sell opportunities.
The downside is that they may demand convenient branches
in addition to electronic channels.
Fill product gaps. Once you know who
your customers are and what they want, make sure you have
the right products to meet their needs. For example, many
banks have sold off their credit card portfolios. If,
however, affluent customers are an important market segment,
lack of an attractive card product may mean yielding share
of wallet to a competitor. Conversely, fees that discourage
use of on-line debit cards and debit cash-back may put
off young consumers.
Understanding payment type preferences
may help guide customer acquisition. The institution that
knows where its competitors are vulnerable, for example,
may win depositors by offering a checking account that
appeals to disaffected customers. Your competitor may
not realize that some of its best customers are up for
grabs. For example, if your competitors' checking accounts
charge a fee for on-line debit card transactions, you
may be able to attract young, urban consumers who rely
on those cards for both retail purchases and cash-back
by making these transactions free. You don't need detailed
data about the competition's customer base; you just need
to know that these customers are in the local market and
that the competition doesn't have the right product.
The approach just described isn't merely
academic. We know of several financial institutions that
are using payments-based segmentation to improve returns
on marketing, re-target expansion strategies and develop
new products or packages.
Target marketing isn't new or revolutionary.
It's common sense. And it makes sense to use customers'
own behavior, gathered daily and posted to their checking
accounts, to define the targets.
Questions
or comments about this article? Post them at the Banking
Strategies blog.
Mr.
Ledford is chief executive officer of Global Concepts
Payments Systems Consulting. Tim Mills and Tom Murphy
are senior vice presidents at the Atlanta-based payments
consulting firm.
Copyright © 2005 by Banking
Strategies, published by BAI.
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