Friday, October 17, 2008

What’s coming…

I attended the Finovate 08 conference in New York yesterday. For those of you who are unfamiliar with the event, it is a deep immersion into emerging companies in the financial services space. Twenty-four companies present and demo their offerings in one day, with each getting just seven minutes to make the sale. There are opportunities for deeper conversation and questions in a separate forum, but the real focus is on the demo.

So after 24 presentations, what’s my take on innovation in financial services and its impact on the customer? It’s going to be good -- very, very good. Let’s play out a scenario:

I’m a 20 or 30 something, and I’m starting to make some good money and get serious about my financial situation. I sign on to Mint, Quicken Online, Thrive or Wesabe, where I can see all of my accounts, bills and investments in one place so I know where I am. And, if I want to do it all on FaceBook, I can get the MyMoney app and run my banking right out of my home page. I go to CreditKarma to check out my credit rating and based on my rating, it looks like I can get a better deal on my credit card and some other stuff as well. Then I check out my credit card choices at FiLife, BillShrink, or RateSurfer and discover a couple of cards that match my lifestyle and can save me money. If I'm looking for a great rate on a mortgage, I can go to SmartHippo.

It’s time that I start thinking about investments but I’m really clueless and intimidated, so I go to WeSeed to learn how to invest and share ideas with others who are learning as well without risking my money. Once I get more sophisticated, I can go to Boulevard R for some financial planning guidance and then when I’m in the market, I can analyze my positions at Inner8. To add to my portfolio I can visit MoneyAisle and have banks compete for my CD in an automated reverse auction, or I can invest in person to person loans at Lending Club or Loanio.

After a couple of years, I decide to start my own business so I use Small Business Finance Works through my bank’s online banking service (Note: This won't be live until December).

There’s a remarkable explosion in the integrated delivery of information and services going on and what we saw provided some great examples. The value of the customer experience is being enhanced and customers are going to benefit.

The question is how do existing, physical world organizations capitalize on this explosion and move to the next level of customer service? Embrace new applications and new technologies, allow customers to use and accept them on their own terms, and find ways to build them into the overall service delivery strategy. The opportunity is there to create a financial services enterprise that completely changes the playing field. It will take strategic vision, and a lot of hard work at the street level, but it will be worthwhile.

The truth is that the alternative will probably be to watch an entire generation move to a different way of managing their money. Not necessarily a good thing.

8 comments:

Matt H. said...

Great info and a great blog, Thad. Keep em' coming.

Jeffry Pilcher said...

Will people be willing to consider online channels more or less in the wake of the financial meltdown? Will they see "risk" in online channels? Or will these be the kinds of alternatives people seek when looking for something other than a megabank?

Or will people be looking for safe versions of what they know and are comfortable with today: banks and credit unions?

Anonymous said...

Thanks Thad for the great sum-up! I'm not sure I could have put it so clearly if I tried--I walked out of Finovate with an information overload it took a few days to recover from. So glad you could join us there, and that you enjoyed it as much as we did.

Caitlin Rosberg
WeSeed

Netbanker said...

Great one-page summary. Thanks for attending. --Jim

Thad Peterson said...

Jeffry - I'm not sure that the answer is necessarily generalized. It seems to me that there is a cohort that will never trust anything but a bank, and there is a cohort that really doesn't care at all, and there are bunch of people in between. Over time, the distinction between physical and virtual "bank" will go away as bricks and mortar become increasingly less valuable to customers.

Kelly Rusk said...

haha great wrap-up, love how you put it all together.

Rockon said...

Thanks Thad for the great sum-up! I'm not sure I could have put it so clearly if I tried--I walked out of Finovate with an information overload it took a few days to recover from.

matt @ Thrive said...

Thanks for the mention, Thad. We pride ourselves on our customer support. You can call the office, the phone is on my desk, I always answer if I'm not already on the phone or in a meeting. You send an e-mail you get an answer back, from a real person: no form letters, no automated systems.

We really like what you said in a later blog about people who face customers every day, and there are times when we get worn down, but honestly, it is also our customers that pick us back up. We had one girl that was so excited about Thrive, she came to NYC on her Christmas vacation and came into the office to have lunch with us. That's some Thrive love, and no matter how bad a day may be, we always have that up our sleeve.

Which goes back to why a Good Customer is so important: they keep you doing what you do - they make it worthwhile.

 
Clicky Web Analytics