McKinsey & Co, Insights
The average consumer’s banking relationship is dominated by making payments. So why are banks doing so little to defend this critical beachhead?
August 2014 | byOlivier Denecker, Sameer Gulati, and Marc Niederkorn
One in three people in developed markets now carries a smartphone, and few doubt that banks will rely increasingly on digital channels to serve the fast-growing population of consumers who rely on multiple devices to conduct daily business online. In the United States, where smartphones account for more than half of mobile subscriptions, one-third of consumers are using their phones to make payments. Unfortunately for banks, many of these payments are transacted through mobile apps controlled by online-payments specialists and digital merchants. Payments represent the beachhead for the entire banking relationship, and this beachhead is under attack. Offering a strong payments plan as part of a comprehensive strategy for digital banking is therefore an imperative for banks. But to compete in this emerging arena, banks must meet the expectations of digital natives, delivering diverse tools to help customers make smart decisions across a range of financial services. They should begin by capturing their customers’ most frequent transactions with the new mobile channel and then proceed toward a fully digital relationship.
Beachhead under fire
The average customer interacts with his or her bank at least twice a day for payments-related matters, such as buying a financial product, checking on a payment, or paying a bill. These interactions represent more than 80 percent of customer interactions with banks, making payments a superb platform, or beachhead, for cross-selling other financial services.
But the contest for the beachhead is intensifying, particularly in the area of mobile payments (any payment initiated with a portable handheld device) and digital payments (transactions initiated with a digital device—phone, tablet, computer—in which the service provider’s business model relies to some degree on leveraging the data around the transaction for added commercial value). Armed with deposit accounts, lending relationships, an enduring reputation for security, and a robust infrastructure for clearing and settling, banks are currently the only players with the ability to achieve the scale required for mobile payments. They also enjoy huge advantages as digital-payments service providers, to the extent that they leverage these strengths against digital attackers.
While banks such as Danske Bank (with Mobilpay) or Barclays (Pingit) are reaching substantial new customer communities, it is nonbank attackers, ranging from large telecommunications companies to small and nimble technology players, that are defining the standards for digital banking. They have blurred the lines between media content, product merchandising, order, and payment, all while tailoring cross-functional offers to individual, real-time needs. In addition, nonbank digital players enjoy some important advantages, including fewer regulatory constraints, a higher risk appetite, and greater leeway from customers. For now, the payments business remains squarely within the core bank franchise, but attackers such as Google, Apple, and PayPal threaten critical sources of revenue (Exhibit 1).
Exhibit 1
The more that customers use digital channels, the more they want human interaction.
Nonbank challengers are operationally built for continuous innovation, and frequently upgrade their arsenal. They leverage the existing banking and payments infrastructure and can maintain a narrow focus on their value-added offerings by virtue of the marginal role they play within this infrastructure. They are thus often more agile and efficient, launching updates with remarkable speed. Adyen, for example, releases updated payments software every two to three weeks. Nonbank challengers also serve their customers much faster; for example, Square and PayPal allow merchants to start accepting payments within one day, almost a week faster than most banks (Exhibit 2).
Exhibit 2
Emerging nonbank competitors operate at a higher level of operational productivity.
Crafting a compelling digital-payments offer
If the payments beachhead falls into the hands of cutting-edge banks and nonbank competitors, the losers will remain in a defensive posture, burdened with chronic slow growth and thinning margins. Banks need to drive traffic to their digital banking channels with new customer experiences, starting with payments capabilities.
As it happens, the absence of a new and distinctive value proposition for the mobile channel has become a common barrier to consumer adoption. Offering little more than a view of balances, transactions, and transfers between accounts, many of the mobile-banking applications available today actually offer less functionality than online banking. The alignment of product development with the traditional silos of deposit accounts and cards has failed to deliver the new service experiences that digital natives crave.
Digital payments as high-growth opportunity
Not only does the digital channel multiply customer interactions, but mobile and online payments—which together form the bulk of “digital payments”—are the beachhead from which banks can extend their commercial territory and grow revenue. Digital payments give banks the platform to do the following:
Boost fee and interest income: On the retail side, mobile-payments solutions, including mobile peer-to-peer (P2P) money transfers, international remittances, and small-merchant mobile card readers, not only increase the frequency of consumer interactions but also boost both the number of charged transactions and the cash flowing through bank systems (for example, prepaid, current accounts, consumption-related lending). On the corporate side, transaction banks that execute well on digital cross-selling stand to increase their market share of corporate deposits and lending.
Reach a broader set of customers with more diverse services: By tailoring payments solutions to underserved segments, including small and informal merchants, the youth market, international travelers, migrant workers, and low-income customers, banks can shift a bigger share of payments to bank-owned channels. Banks can develop applications for small payments, unattended vending, and ambulant sales to extend the reach of electronic payments and reduce the costs associated with less efficient payments instruments, such as cash.
Extend the value proposition. Banks own rich reserves of raw behavioral data. The mobile channel enhances this data pool with location and search data, which can provide valuable insights into future customer choices. Banks should leverage their data strengths to create new services along the full span of the consumer decision journey, reaching beyond payments transactions to manage the customer’s entire digital wallet (by, for example, optimizing loyalty awards and special offers, payments terms, and instruments).
If banks cling to the traditional, narrow view of the payments ecosystem, attackers will not only take the additional revenues described above, they will also enjoy prime access to the “digital trail,” including essential transaction information, and direct traffic to preferred service providers within the digital sphere. Having entered the payments space through profitable, underserved niches such as P2P and cross-border commerce, attackers are now venturing into adjacent segments, which are at the core of banks’ offerings, such as point-of-sale (POS) lending and financial planning. From there they are in a position to modify the actual value chain, targeting new revenue sources and reducing existing ones, such as interchange and transaction fees.
On the other hand, by leveraging the data surrounding digital payments, banks could potentially double their payments-related revenue, beating new entrants at their own game. This new thinking about the core value proposition of banking will require an entirely new approach to operations and solutions innovation (see sidebar, “Supporting the digital experience”).
Sidebar
Supporting the digital experience
Beyond the beachhead
Each bank must reflect on its evolution along the digital-banking continuum: from mobile payments to a unified access strategy for all channels, and, ultimately, a consolidated digital platform to manage and deliver the full range of financial services. This reflection will necessarily span the entire organization, from front-end commercial activities to back-end technology and operations and across all business silos.
Banks should plot the incremental launch of increasingly robust tools to help customers make smart financial decisions. For example, while the initial digital-payments application would include at a minimum POS payments, bill payments, and P2P transfers, a “digital wallet” would go further, optimizing transaction and funding costs, the use of loyalty points and special offers, and so on. The next level of digital integration could support a digital financial planner to manage monthly income, recurring bills, and savings and investments, bringing the bank truly to the heart of the consumer’s portable device and increasing interaction even more. Taking advantage of further multichannel, cross-silo integration, a portfolio app for liquidity and investments might include preset thresholds for buy/sell alerts, special offers triggered when current account balances reach a certain level, and periodic reports and market alerts benchmarking portfolio holdings against standard and custom indexes.
As they reevaluate their core value proposition and contemplate the digital banking continuum, banks face a choice between three strategic postures (Exhibit 3):
As fast followers, banks need to track the progress that other banks are making and develop service models that can react to customer needs when a new concept stabilizes. These banks can invest in “competitive innovation centers,” picking up ideas as they hit the banking market.
Some banks will prefer to act as catalysts for growth, inviting others to innovate while they ensure client security, account management, and system stability. One way of doing this is by opening the bank’s IT platform to a select community of developers or allowing others to provide services under their client platform.
Other banks might seize the opportunity to be leaders, competing on innovation not only with other banks but also with digital leaders such as Google or Facebook, on banking as well as some nonbanking services. Such leaders stand out as delivering comprehensive digital solutions, and while they bear the risk of market adoption, they maintain a reputation for innovation and industry leadership.
Exhibit 3
Banks can adopt one of three strategic postures in digital payments.
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Behavioral segmentation as a spur
Regardless of a bank’s posture, it will need to define customer life-cycle itineraries, mapping incremental milestones and the proper allocation of resources for each stage of the customer’s journey through the digital revolution.
As with each previous transformation, banks must design hands-on education campaigns to expose the broadest cross-section of customers—from cash users to check writers to early adopters—to the advantages of digital banking. This means changing the way consumers shop, pay their bills, and manage their finances. Banks will need to outline a set of journeys to bring occasional users into the circle of loyal digital customers. Internet powerhouses such as Google and Facebook excel at this; why would banks, with all their customer knowledge, do worse?
To capture this opportunity, banks will need to consolidate data across deposits, consumer finance, and other transaction accounts for a unified view of customer activity and a clear understanding of the specific behavioral patterns that distinguish various customer segments. Customer in-store payment choices, for example, are far more accurate than conventional profile data (for example, age, income, geography) in predicting future needs (Exhibit 4). Banks are therefore well placed to identify key transaction pain points and adjust channel priority, pricing, service levels, and other levers for each segment. In mapping these incentives and milestones, banks should consider the full journey toward digital banking, rather than targeting a single digital solution.
Exhibit 4
Based on point-of-service payments preferences, consumers fall into one of eight profiles.
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Promote the evolution of industry infrastructure
Beyond the transformation of individual financial institutions, the industry as a whole must also reflect on the new requirements for payments infrastructure and how to benefit from change.
In many geographies, regulators have been instrumental in driving payments infrastructure, such as automated clearing houses (ACH), to adapt to new customer requirements (for example, 24/7 multichannel access, real-time execution and interoperability). These initiatives have triggered the creation of upgraded ACH solutions, including Faster Payments in the United Kingdom, Express Elixir in Poland, and the New Payment Platform in Australia. Infrastructure developments have also generated a series of new mobile solutions, such as Pingit in the United Kingdom, IKO in Poland, and Kaching in Australia. These solutions seem well adapted to the digital world and serve the needs of many customers in P2P, B2B, and POS contexts. More important, they are deeply embedded in the deposit-account services of incumbent banks.
To maintain and raise control over the essential payments part of the financial ecosystem, the banking industry should review its legacy infrastructure to ensure that it continues to strengthen the industry’s position in the digital world.
Banks are the natural owners of the payments space, as payments are the gateway into the financial relationship. However, attackers are developing payments-service capabilities and operational skills superior to those of banks. They are not smarter, just more focused. Banks’ customer relationships, structural security, multichannel capabilities, and stability should ultimately combine to win the game. But banks will succeed only if they can match the solutions, operational efficiency, and client-service skills of attackers. And they must get there quickly. In the digital world, tomorrow is already too late.
About the authors
Olivier Denecker is a senior expert in McKinsey’s Brussels office, Sameer Gulati is a principal in the London office, and Marc Niederkorn is a director in the Luxembourg office.