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The COVID-19 pandemic rapidly accelerated widespread digitalization across the retail banking industry. Even before the pandemic, 55% of Americans said they were using digital banking offerings, with an 11% increase in usage over the previous three years among consumers over 40. Many financial institutions had already digitized their systems and services and were able to weather the change in consumer needs last year, but many others were left further behind. That doesn’t mean, however, that financial services firms that held their own (or even grew from the disparity in preparation) will have it easy this year. In fact, some financial brands, particularly traditional ones, have some ground to regain.
Banks and financial institutions need to evolve the ways they interact with current and future customers and the role of precision marketing is more important than ever. Who to talk to, via which channel, when, and with what message, is a set of questions marketers face every day. In this report, Nielsen will deconstruct each of these questions and provide a recommendation of how to design an impactful marketing program by selecting the right audience, optimizing your marketing mix and establishing the organizational discipline to execute.
Download this report to learn how both traditional financial institutions and financial disruptors can win with consumers in this new digital banking age including:
Why it’s important to connect or reconnect with your consumers
How to transition from virtual to meaningful relationships around true financial needs
Ways to engage with consumers especially beyond traditional banking offerings
As Digitization Permeates, Financial Services Brands Need More than Adaptations of Traditional Experiences
The acceleration of digitization across global industries over the past year enabled businesses to continue operating in a world without face-to-face interactions. As impressive as it is to bring a business into a virtual experience, however, digitization is merely the starting point for brands seeking to cultivate active and healthy relationships with consumers.
This is particularly relevant for financial services companies that have historically maintained relatively passive relationships with consumers. That’s because staying operational doesn’t guarantee brand loyalty, especially as traditional banks continue to cite the need to improve their customer experiences. Awareness is key, as the recent Digital Banking Report acknowledges that consumer trust in traditional banks continues to recede. The pullback in ad spend last year is another factor reducing top-of-mind awareness among consumers.
The call to action for marketers in financial services is no different from other industries: connect with people and build meaningful relationships based on true needs. For some financial services companies, however, that will mean overcoming preconceived notions and offering more than virtual replications of existing experiences. Even before the pandemic, 55% of Americans said they were using digital banking offerings, with an 11% increase in usage over the previous three years among consumers over 40. And Nielsen Commspoint data shows that online channels are becoming the dominant way consumers obtain most financial products, including credit cards and new bank accounts.
The downside amid the progressively digital landscape is that financial services consumers are increasingly gravitating to new companies—not their primary banks—for their financial services needs. To many people, banks are steadfast financial services institutions, but the relationship between traditional banks and consumers has been fragmenting for years. Fewer than half of U.S. bank customers consider their bank to be their primary financial services provider, according to data from Nielsen Scarborough, and the number is declining. What’s more, consumers are increasingly less inclined to use their primary bank for financial services products like home loans and credit cards.
Tech-driven democratization has been a factor in the fragmenting relationship between banks and customers. In fact, digital bankers are 20% less likely than non-digital bankers to use their primary bank for ancillary financial services needs. The increase in non-traditional players in financial services has the same effect as new entrants in the video streaming space: more choice means more for consumers to investigate and try. When you combine this choice with the historically passive nature of relationships between financial services organizations and consumers, a new product or service entrant with a vocal marketing effort is often all it takes to get people thinking about making a change.
This means that while consumer demand for digital services has grown, virtual experiences that mirror traditional ones don’t capture the full opportunity. Facing a world where habits and preferences have shifted, the marketers in financial services that are leading the way are doing so by engaging with customers in meaningful ways—they are focusing on always-on marketing strategies that build familiarity and connection.