Final shout for the 2012 FStech/Retail Systems Payments Technology Conference, which takes place next week (Thursday, 01 November) at the IoD Hub, London.
This will bring together leading figures from retail and the financial
services sector to network and discuss cards and payments services, the
present and future. This year, there will be a particular focus on
mobile banking and payments. Senior figures from across the retail,
financial services, technology vendor and telco sectors will come
together to debate the key issues, innovations and barriers to the
mass-market deployment of mobile.
Chaired by Vendorcom chairman, Paul Rodgers, the conference, a mixture
of speaker presentations and discussion panels, will also showcase the
latest developments and services and products in such areas as:
contactless cards, alternative payments, the future of cash and social
payments.
Speakers/panelists will include:
Derek White, Chief Customer Experience Officer, Barclays
Jonathan Vaux, Senior Vice President, Head of UK Market Strategy, Visa Europe
Richard Johnson, Group Strategy Director, Monitise
Ron Delnevo, Managing Director, Bank Machine
Simon Burrows, Director – FinTech, PwC
Paul Makin, Head of Mobile Money, Consult Hyperion
Mark McMurtrie, Director, Payments Consultancy Limited
Simon Barrows, Head of Financial Services, Glue Reply
Ken Cregan, Financial Services Principal, Capgemini Consulting
Gerry Kelliher, Senior Director, UK & Ireland Sales Operations, Research in Motion
Kristian Thure Sørensen, Board Member, Mobey Forum, Senior Manager, Mobile Payments and eCommerce, Nets
The conference is free to retailers and FS organisations. To book your place, visit: http://www.fstech.co.uk/payments/booking_form.php
Thursday, 25 October 2012
Wednesday, 17 October 2012
The consumerisation of private banking
The recent announcement
that personal finance service, Nutmeg, has launched private banking-like
services for all, only shows how few industries are immune to the trend of
‘consumerisation’. We have seen it unfold in the business sphere, with Bring
Your Own Device policies, social networking and collaborative trends influencing
existing working models and spawning completely new businesses and ways of
working, but now it is increasingly making in-roads into the banking and
financial sectors.
Banks have already
started tailoring their customer communications to suit the individual’s
preference. This includes developing and harnessing multiple channels of
communication for customers to pick and choose how they wish to engage. From
traditional letter and phone-based interaction to online and social media, many
financial institutions are embracing new ways of working. Many mortgage brokers
or bank managers will now use tablets to show the customer the different options
available, making the experience more intuitive and akin to their own
experiences at home.
This consumerisation
drive is only set to increase and private banking is a surprising, if
inevitable, next step along this journey. The likes of Nutmeg, but
also PayPal, Square, Google Wallet and others are examples of disintermediation,
whereby the retailer is removed from the chain between the producer and the
consumer, offering time and cost savings in delivery. It is thanks to the rise
of the internet and online-based services, as well as this consumerisation trend
that the industry is facing a shake-up and retail banks facing disintermediation
need to be agile in how they respond.
Private banking has
traditionally been exclusive and relatively expensive, which is why it was until
recently the domain of large companies and the extremely wealthy. However, as
retail banking faces increasingly challenging times – subject not only to a
difficult economic market but also to ever stringent regulations and
restrictions – private banking and wealth management are emerging growth areas
that can help large banks protect some of their eroding
margins.
In all areas of banking,
but especially in private banking, trust is vital. As long as all players,
including newer ones, are FSA regulated and can offer more transparent and
flexible services that are more easily accessible than other existing banking
players, it will cause positive competitive tension in an extremely lucrative
market.
The consumerisation of
private banking is a young market, but has huge potential. The question to ask,
however, is whether consumer demand for it exists
yet.
Guest blog post by Cognizant's Tony Virdi.
Wednesday, 10 October 2012
I support Little Miss Geek
This week I have mostly been reading Little Miss Geek, Bridging The Gap Between Girls And Technology.
Excellent stuff, punchy and informative, passionate but reasoned. You can buy a copy via Amazon.
Further info on Lady Geek here.
In the book, Belinda Parmar, aka Lady Geek, highlights that only 17 per cent of technology jobs are held by women and that number is continuing
to shrink. She also outlines a series of steps for bridging the gap between women and
technology.
Further info on Lady Geek here.
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
2013 FStech Awards update
A few 2013 FStech Awards announcements for you.
The judging panel will include:
Simon Barrows, Head of Financial Services, Glue Reply
Simon Burrows, Director, PwC
Glenn Murphy, Head of IT, London & Capital
Richard Norris, IT Director, Cullum Capital Ventures
Aksana Pekun, Managing Director and Technology Specialist, Altium
Further judges to be announced in the near future.
You can follow the event on Twitter.
Details on how to enter, deadlines etc can be found here.
The judging panel will include:
Simon Barrows, Head of Financial Services, Glue Reply
Simon Burrows, Director, PwC
Glenn Murphy, Head of IT, London & Capital
Richard Norris, IT Director, Cullum Capital Ventures
Aksana Pekun, Managing Director and Technology Specialist, Altium
Further judges to be announced in the near future.
You can follow the event on Twitter.
Details on how to enter, deadlines etc can be found here.
Monday, 1 October 2012
Modern trends in improving customer experience in banks
The banking sector is to be commended for being pioneers in embracing new technology in the field of customer self-service. It was the banks who first pushed the boundaries of Interactive Voice Response (IVR) systems and web self-service or, online banking as it’s now known, which ensured getting account balances and making payments over the phone and web become a common household experience.
However, given this propensity to innovate, it
will be interesting to see how the banking sector will harness mobile devices
in the customer service field, particularly the smartphone. Additionally, with latest figures suggesting
that 22 per cent
of mobile finance users access content from their bank almost every day,
this demographic is shifting from online banking to mobile banking, and
consumers will soon expect to do all aspects of their banking via a mobile
device.
Customers
now expect to be able to reach your organisation anytime, and expect an instant
and meaningful response from your organisation instantly and 24/7. If not, it’s
simple; with consumer perceptions of the banking sector already at an all time
low, and customer loyalties eroding with the countless incentives for people to
switch banks, bank customers will simply take their business elsewhere!
This
new mobile self-service channel offers banks an unprecedented opportunity to
provide an improved self-service experience. Plus, given the exponential growth
in smartphones, it’s vital that banks evolve their customer self-service
strategy to incorporate mobile technology, and do it fast. And yet, while banks
are once again pioneers in the field, the true power of mobile has not fully been realised. For many
banking organisations, their mobile strategy has not yet evolved much beyond
treating it similar to a web self-service channel.
For all its merits, existing web self-service
is limited when a customer needs to speak with someone. The moment the
transaction becomes complicated and requires customer service assistance, the
user experience totally breaks down. There is no continuity between the web
channel and the voice channel. As a result, when the call comes in to the customer
service agent, there is no continuity and the transaction has to start from the
beginning again, resulting in increased call handle times (increased costs to
the Bank) and increased customer frustration.
By properly adopting mobile as the
new engagement channel, the opportunity exists for banks to break down those
silos and provide a seamless connection between their self-service organisation
and customer care organisation.
Mobile enables customers to
engage in a self-service session through an app that visually maps out the
steps of the banking organisation’s customer service process, including the
IVR. Customers are in control and able to visually journey through the app,
with full support for data entry and sophisticated self-service capabilities.
These sessions can proactively extract knowledge and retrieve or update
customer information from back end business applications instantly. This gives
your customer controlled access in real-time, resulting in more effective
problem resolution.
Many customers prefer to
interact with a visual IVR on their phone, which includes the ability to easily
enter alphanumeric data. This level of interaction enables customers to enter
pin-codes and pass-codes in a way that they are already familiar with from
unlocking their phones, helping to increase security and authentication. The
banks can also benefit from this as features such as a customer ID is enhanced.
Additionally, banks can provide customers with a more personalised experience,
customising content relevant specifically for them, therefore enabling
increased cross-sell and up-sell opportunities.
There’s no getting away
from it, there will always be a need for agent assistance in some interactions,
so the goal has to be to provide a seamless transition to the voice channel
from the self-service channel. Cutting edge mobile customer service
technologies enable all the steps traversed by the customer, as well as any
data entered, to be visible to the agent. This eliminates customers having to
repeat information enabling more effective problem solving and a shorter call.
These
self-service sessions extend far beyond the capabilities of a traditional IVR or
web self-service interaction as mobile can leverage the inherent capabilities
of the device, thereby dramatically innovating and improving the customer
experience. New apps and mobile wallet technologies are being
launched all the time by the banks and operators.
Mobile
devices will become the largest engagement channel for customers, and banks
have an incredible opportunity to be technology pioneers once again.
Additionally, banks can differentiate themselves in the customer
service arena, now more than ever, by
utilising innovative customer service and banking apps. Today,
around one in every four of bank customers owns a smartphone, and
according to leading analysts, in a year or two it’s likely that this figure
will be three out of four.
The latest figures from the US are even more worrying for the banks that
have hit the headlines this year for all the wrong reasons; around 50 per cent of mobile finance users will stick with
a brand and user experience that they like. With that in mind, banks really do need to adopt a mobile self-service
strategy that engages customers sooner rather than later, or risk losing this
dynamic mobile customer. The question is will you be ready for them?
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