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Market Research Report

Managing the Multi-Channel Experience: Who's Satisfied?

Published by Mercator Advisory Group, Inc.
Published July, 2010 Product code 125855
Content info 41 Pages
Price
US $ 2950 PDF by E-mail (Single User License)


Managing the Multi-Channel Experience: Who's Satisfied? published by Mercator Advisory Group, Inc. in July, 2010. This report consists of 41 Pages and the price starts from US $ 2950.

Introduction

Abstract

With the rapid growth of online banking over the past decade, banks have started to measure the quality of the online experience from the customer's perspective and are using this data to improve how well their solutions meet customer needs. As a result, customer satisfaction scores for online banking compare very favorably with other businesses and rank higher than the top 100 Online Retailers long considered the gold standard for online performance. Bank's overall satisfaction scores however, lag their online scores by almost 10%.

Mercator Advisory Group's new report Managing the Multi-Channel Experience: Who's Satisfied? examines the challenges banks face and maps a set of strategies that banks can implement to improve overall customer satisfaction.

Highlights of this report include:

While the majority of customers now chose the online banking as their preferred channel, they also want the convenience of the other self service channels and the person-to-person interaction provided by branches and contact centers.

To improve the multi-channel experience, banks need to overcome the challenges created by a diverse customer set, complex technology infrastructures and sub-optimal product centric organizations.

A comprehensive Voice of the Customer program and enterprise agreement on customer experience objectives are essential.

To improve multi-channel satisfactions banks need to focus on: relationship products, staff motivation and incentives, standard cross channel sales and service processes, consistent customer information and multi-channel interaction management for data continuity and transactional context across channels.

“Quality customer experiences lead to high levels of satisfaction which in turn increases loyalty. High satisfaction and loyalty correlate with increased customer retention, revenue and profitable relationships,” states Mercator Advisory Group's Bob Landry, vice president, Banking Group Advisory Services. “Companies with high satisfaction deliver significantly higher shareholder value than organizations with low satisfaction. Banks have long focused on channel specific issues and must broaden their perspective to improve experience across channels. Quality multi-channel experiences are the key to leveraging the investments banks have made in branches, contact centers, ATMs, IVRs, online banking and now mobile phones. The banks that succeed will improve overall customer satisfaction and that will deliver results to the bottom line and increase shareholder value.”

One of the exhibits included in this report:

Multi-Channel Experience: Who's Satisfied? contains 41 pages and 19 exhibits.

Companies covered in this series include: ACI, ACSI, Ally Bank, Argo, CFI Group, CompuCom, Diebold, FIS, First Data, Fiserv, ForeSee Results, ING Direct, Intuit, Harland Financial Solutions, Jack Henry & Associates, J.D. Power and Associates, NCR, Open Solutions, Oracle, Pegasystems, Raymond James, S1, Sybase, TD Ameritrade, TD Bank, Unisys, USAA, and Wal-Mart.

Table of Contents

TABLE OF FIGURES

INTRODUCTION

I. CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

II. CUSTOMER INTIMACY AS A STRATEGY

III. CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT VS. CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE MANAGEMENT

  • CRM's Evolving Role in Banking Driven by Product Diversity
  • Expanding Self Service Channels Drive CEM Adoption

IV. WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES FOR BANKS?

  • 1. Retail Banking Serves a Diverse Customer Set
  • 2. Technology Complexity Makes a Consistent Experience Difficult
  • 3. Who Owns the Customer Across the Enterprise?

V. MULTI CHANNEL MANAGEMENT: GETTING SATISFACTION

  • Voice of the Customer Metrics Necessary for Success
  • Setting Long Term Goals and Guidelines
  • Six Areas to Target for Improving Customer Experience
    • 1. Enhanced Products to Expand Relationships, Revenues & Profits
    • 2. Motivated & Knowledgeable Staff Are Key to Overall Satisfaction
    • 3 & 4. Improved Sales and Service Processes
    • 5 & 6. Consistent Customer Information and Coordinating the Multi-Channel Experience

VI. SUMMARY

Table of Figures

  • Figure 1. Relationship between High Satisfaction and Shareholder Value
  • Figure 2. Bank Customer Satisfaction Levels Relative to Multi-Channel Peers
  • Figure 3. Impact of Investments on Customer Satisfaction is Non-Linear
  • Figure 4. Customer Experience Value Chain
  • Figure 5. Alternative Business Strategies
  • Figure 6. Customer Relationship Management VS Customer Experience Management
  • Figure 7. Retail Financial Products by Value, Level of Service and Technology Role
  • Figure 8. Delivery Channel Capacity Growth from 1980 to 2015
  • Figure 9. Total Household Income and Net Worth Grouped by Percentiles
  • Figure 10. US Population Grouped by Median Household Annual Income and Net Worth
  • Figure 11. Retail Banking Application Landscape
  • Figure 12. Channel Applications, Technologies and Vendors
  • Figure 13. Inconsistent Customer Information & Processes Across Channels
  • Figure 14. Six Areas to Target for Improving Customer Experience
  • Figure 15. Product Innovation Spectrum
  • Figure 16. Standardized Sales Processes
  • Figure 17. Optimized New Account Initiation Process
  • Figure 18. Bank Selection Factors (all ages)
  • Figure 19. Multi-Channel Interaction Manager

Press Release

Banks Seek to Improve Customer Satisfaction in the Multi-Channel Experience

July 30th, 2010

Global Information Inc. would like to present a new market research report, "Managing the Multi-Channel Experience: Who's Satisfied?" by Mercator Advisory Group, Inc..

Rapid growth of online banking over the last decade has spurred banks to measure the quality of their customers online experience. Banks desire to understand consumer perspectives directly from the customer. Online banks are gathering such data in order to improve their solutions and to better match the needs of their customers. According to Mercator Advisory Group, "customer satisfaction scores for online banking compare very favorably with other businesses and rank higher than the top 100 Online Retailers long considered the gold standard for online performance." This report investigates the challenges banks face in the multi-channel arena. It also examines a set of strategies that banks can employ to increase customer satisfaction in general.

The core areas banks need to focus on in order to improve multi-channel satisfactions:

Relationship products, staff motivation and incentives, standard cross channel sales and service processes, consistent customer information, and multi-channel interaction management for data continuity and transactional context across channels.

Additional key points in Mercator Advisory Groups report:

  • The majority of customers now choose online banking as their preferred channel, but they also want convenience of other self service channels and face-to-face interaction of branches and contact centers.
  • Banks need to overcome challenges created by a diverse customer set, complex technology infrastructures and sub-optimal product centric organizations in order to improve the multi-channel experience.

Bob Landry, Vice President of Mercator Advisory Groups Banking Group Advisory Services, states:

"Quality customer experiences lead to high levels of satisfaction which in turn increases loyalty. High satisfaction and loyalty correlate with increased customer retention, revenue and profitable relationships... Companies with high satisfaction deliver significantly higher shareholder value than organizations with low satisfaction. Banks have long focused on channel specific issues and must broaden their perspective to improve experience across channels. Quality multi-channel experiences are the key to leveraging the investments banks have made in branches, contact centers, ATMs, IVRs, online banking and now mobile phones. The banks that succeed will improve overall customer satisfaction and that will deliver results to the bottom line and increase shareholder value."

Companies covered in this report series:
ACICFI GroupFirst DataIntuit
ACSICompuComFiservHarland Financial Solutions
Ally BankDieboldForeSee ResultsJack Henry & Associates
ArgoFISING DirectJ.D. Power and Associates
NCROpen SolutionsPegasystemsRaymond James
S1SybaseTD BankTD Ameritrade
UnisysUSAAWal-Mart 

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