BANKING IN A DIGITAL WORLD: HOW WILL CUSTOMERS
Transcription
BANKING IN A DIGITAL WORLD: HOW WILL CUSTOMERS
BANKING IN A DIGITAL WORLD: HOW WILL CUSTOMERS INTERACT WITH YOU IN THE FUTURE Call 020 7605 6151 Email kkelly@caci.co.uk web caci.co.uk twitter @CACI_iCX 2 Introduction The societal and technological changes that have taken place in the last decade have fundamentally changed how customers interact with their bank. The digitisation of banking means that consumers’ needs for the branch and telephone channels of ten years ago have been greatly extended with the digital channels today. And the pace of change isn’t slowing; more and more people are using their mobile devices to connect to the internet and manage their lives. Mobile is increasingly taking its place as a key channel for retail financial services (RFS) either via apps or via new secure mobile-optimised sites. The explosion of digital channels means that, in the future, while branches will still be important as brand anchors, they won’t be needed everywhere. Those branches that remain will need to change their format, purpose and micro-location (pitch) to stay relevant. While we know the demand for digital channels will continue to increase, the pace of that increase isn’t going to be equal across the country. The biggest driver of consumer channel usage is related to demographics and these clearly vary from location to location. Branches and locations need to be assessed individually before any decision can be made regarding the appropriate channel strategy for any market. 11,500 branches 3% increase in UK population 2014 © CACI 2014 9% increase in UK FS market 37% decrease in branch sales 400% increase in DIGITAL transactions 7,700 branches 35% decrease in branch visits 2020 www.caci.co.uk We are predicting an enormous increase in the use of mobile devices to manage current accounts, with traditional desktop-based access declining by 2016 as mobile usage becomes more widespread. 3 Using CACI’s Channel Impact forecasts to Understand Changing Consumer Behaviour This rapid change in consumer behaviour will have a huge impact on banking in the future. To effectively predict this change we have developed our Channel Impact forecasts. We start with individual-level behavioural forecasts, built from historical trends on GFK’s Financial Research Survey on channel usage since 2009. We have overlaid our individual-level financial segmentation Fresco to assess how the different types of consumer have changed their behaviour. We have then built a series of forecasts that predict how that behaviour will continue to change through to 2020. These forecasts were calibrated against output from a number of market forecasting organisations and commentators. We then overlay this with where people live, work and shop, so we can assess how this will affect local branches, whole towns, cities and regions. The outcome is an effective tool for optimising your future investment across channels. These two charts show our predicted trend in using digital channels to manage a current account across different Fresco segments. It shows the % of users who use a) a mobile device/tablet and b) a desktop computer to manage their current account. The years 2009–2013 are based on actual behaviour and the years 2015–2020 are forecasts. We are predicting an enormous increase in the use of mobile devices to manage current accounts, with traditional desktop-based access declining by 2016 as mobile usage becomes more widespread. This trend is seen across most segments; however it is important to note the differences between the older and younger segments. © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk 4 The predicted mobile and internet usage in some of the older segments will never reach the usage seen in some of the younger segments today. This difference is a clear indicator that considering individual consumer behaviours is essential to getting the branch network and channel strategy right. The forecasts show how key differences in consumer behaviours can have a huge impact on the ways in which they interact with a bank through the branch network and other channels. The two infographics below show the variation in channel preference for two different Fresco segments: “High Income Professionals” and “Road to Retirement”. These segments are fairly similar in terms of their financial sophistication and demographics, and could quite easily be two individuals who live next door to each other anywhere in the UK. However, the stark difference between their current and predicted channel preferences will have an impact on the way banks need to serve these high value customers. Channel Preference for the High Income Professional segment Channel Preference for the Road to Retirement segment % of individuals using each channel to manage their current accounts Source: CACI/GFK; Channel Impact © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk 5 The infographics below highlight the difference in channel preference when managing savings investments, as well as the predicted change in investment value. In both there is a significant decrease in the use of branches to manage savings products and a huge increase in the use of digital, following many of the trends we’ve already explored in this paper. Savings by Channel Forecast for the High Income Professional segment Savings by Channel Forecast for the Road to Retirement segment % by value of new savings accounts coming from each channel Source: CACI Market Databases/Channel Impact © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk 6 How Many Branches Do You Need? One of the key questions we are asked by clients is: how many branches will we need in five years’ time? One inevitable side-effect of the technological and consumer change is branch reduction. However, this doesn’t mean it is a bad thing. The remaining branches will be more relevant because their locations will be concentrated in the biggest centres. This means greater choice (more brands together) and consumers can tie in a visit to the bank with a range of other activities, therefore reducing the need to make multiple trips to different places. With 24/7 banking via digital platforms, consumers truly have access to their finances “EEE” – that’s Everything, Everywhere and Everywhen! Using Channel Impact we have developed a Master Score for more than 3000 individual Financial Centres to determine the Market Opportunity for each city, town, suburb and village in the country. Master Score is derived from a number of KPIs: Footfall (residential, workforce, shopping) – i.e. consumer choice; Value (£) of total savings, mortgages and loans held by the visiting footfall; Volume of new accounts opened in-branch. Cumulative ranking of Master Score, 2014 Source: CACI Financial Footprint/Channel Impact © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk 7 We rank each centre based on its Master Score and the chart above shows the cumulative score (1st + 2nd + 3rd + 4th etc.). The steep curve on the left side of the chart means larger centres have a disproportionate share of the Market Opportunity. The flat curve towards the right shows that there is a large “tail” of very small centres (typically suburbs, smaller towns and villages). In fact, to reach 10% of the UK’s banking opportunity you only need to be in 19 different centres (mostly large city centres like Belfast, Birmingham, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Manchester and Central London). To reach 20% you need to be in 50 centres, 30% requires 96 centres and so on (see the table on the chart above). Working with most of our clients, we all agree that a significant milestone is met at the 200 centres/45% coverage junction. We suggest that these are the centres that a bank or building society MUST be in if they are to call themselves a NATIONAL player. At present, most organisations are content with an upper limit of around 80% coverage, which in 2014 equates to 800 locations (for 81% coverage). We believe that this zone should be classified as COULD (or indeed should) be in for national coverage and support to the primary 200 centres. Beyond this junction the return-per-centre diminishes rapidly and this is why we call it NOT required – although each bank and building society will have branches in this zone that are required because of local performance and commitments – there will always be some inevitable horse-trading at the junctions between the zones. How Many Branches Do You Need? We can also forecast how the picture of centre usage will evolve, using a Master Score for 2020. We have more than 5 years of trend data about where and how people are buying FS products which we can use to predict how the future will look from a town-by-town perspective. In addition, we have access to local government forecasts for births, deaths and migration, which means we can predict where consumers will be living in 2020. Finally, in association with Estates Gazette, we have built a property development pipeline database. This means we can assess where people will be working and shopping (when not online) in 2020. © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk 8 The outcome is that we can age Master Score, as the following chart shows: Cumulative ranking of Master Score, 2020 Source: CACI Financial Footprint/Channel Impact At the left-hand side the curve steepens, but not as much as it does in the Zone 2 area. This tells us that the top 200 locations still dominate and the list of individual locations is very stable compared to 2014. The real gains are to be made in Zone 2 where to reach 80% will require just 600 locations – down 200 from 2014 such is the pace of change and concentration into fewer, larger centres. © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk 9 Of course with any of this, CACI always recommends overlaying your own network to make sure we sense-check any predictions for your individual organisation. The following map shows the Zone 1 and Zone 2 centres for 2020, but modified to ensure at least 80% coverage in all four constituent countries of the UK: Modified to ensure 80% in each country England: 543 Wales: 39 Scotland: 81 Northern Ireland: 20 UK TOTAL: 683 Zone 1, Zone 2 Centres, 2020 Source: CACI Financial Footprint/Channel Impact The Zone 1 centres are concentrated around the main centres of population and commercial activity: in London and the UK’s conurbations and largest cities. The Zone 2 centres provide a commuter-based support network around the Zone 1 centres and also provide infill, covering smaller market towns and coastal locations. © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk 10 Practical Application – What does this mean for the Leeds Urban Market? We expect the following changes between 2014 and 2020 in the Leeds Urban Market, based on CACI’s Channel Impact model: • Overall adult population will grow by 5.1% (544k–574k) • Overall market for FS core products will grow by 9.4% (473k–518k) • Branch-based market for FS core products will decline by 39% (182k–112k) • Non-branch channels will account for 68% of the total market in 2020 (44% in 2014) • Branch visits will decline by 40% • We therefore estimate that the “need” for a branch in the Leeds Market will decline by 35% There are currently 62 bank branches in the Leeds Urban Market (to say nothing of the 44 retail bank and building society branches). If we applied the 35% decrease in branch usage across these bank branches, this would mean 40 bank branches in Leeds by 2020 (assumes all change is equal across brands) – a reduction of 22 branches: Other Black branches = actual branches, 2014. Grey branches = closures to deliver equivalent level of business, 2020 Source: CACI Branch Base/Channel Impact © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk 11 Getting the Branch Strategy Right We all believe that there will be a role for the branch in 2020 and beyond: its ability to generate and retain business will still be essential as a brand anchor on the high street. However, its location, purpose and format will have to change to stay relevant: • To get a new customer to sign up online is still heavily dependent on having a local branch to promote the brand and provide the comfort of knowing a human being is nearby, if required. We know this because we can map new account openings by channel and the strongest correlation of uptake in non-branch channels, for any brand, is still their branch footprint. • It does seem that you no longer need to have a branch in all of the places where your customers live, work and shop. CACI is finding that having a branch in their principal retail domain is enough to provide customers with the brand anchor they need. In the UK these major domains are places like Birmingham, Glasgow, Leeds, Manchester and Newcastle. It isn’t just a case of closing all the low-use/marginal branches, though this should be considered, but also refocusing and reformatting the retained branch network so that it is fit for purpose. We estimate that the Big Four UK banks alone still need to dispose of 3000 branches between them, at an estimated disposal cost of £800million, but with net cost-savings of around £2billion – which can be reinvested into the retained estate and the digital platforms. About the Author Ian Goodliffe - Consulting Partner Integrated Marketing Ian Goodliffe is the Consulting Partner at CACI responsible for delivering branch network and channel optimisation solutions in the Financial Services & Insurance sector. He joined CACI in 1999, after having spent 10 years working with geography academics at Leeds University (GMAP). Over the last 15 years he has transformed the technical capabilities and reputation of CACI in the areas of spatial analysis and strategic locationbased optimisation solutions. Ian’s team use spatial modelling techniques to measure how consumers interact with an organisation; analysing customer behaviour patterns against branch location, market opportunity and performance as well as measuring the impact of change on high streets through economic, social and technological developments. In the past three years Ian has led a number of projects for several leading UK and European banks on the future of branches, cash and digital transformation. © CACI 2014 www.caci.co.uk