Published by Gbaf News
Posted on October 7, 2016

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Published by Gbaf News
Posted on October 7, 2016

Daniel Gonzalez, Design Strategy Senior Manager, SapientNitro and Karwai Ng, Design Strategist, SapientNitro.
Are we all turning into digital magpies? Financial institutions seem to be jumping on the ‘botwagon’, with Amex launching a Facebook Messenger bot that sends out real-time notifications to customers when they make a purchase (it even comes with its own FAQ page), and Bank of America soon to be releasing its own version to help customers “stay connected to their finances whenever and wherever they choose”.
Given the hype around payments in messaging and bots, how should banks respond to this new technology?
The battle for payments
Payments are a gateway product for customer acquisition across the whole banking experience. As BBVA puts it, “the prevailing logic dictates that whoever offers the best customer experience (CX) in payments will own the customers for other products/services and create additional upselling or cross-selling opportunities”.
Payments have become even more pertinent with the incoming PSD2 legislation, which grants permission to third party providers to process payments on customers’ behalf. As customers increasingly migrate to third party platforms, banks risk being pushed further down the value chain and reduced into dumb pipes.
Given this, how can banks reverse the tide of losing direct customer relationships while addressing the emergence of new payment technologies?
Two years ago we spoke about the unbundling of apps. Today we’re talking about bots, and possibly the end of apps and websites.Tomorrow it may be the singularity of AI that will ‘disrupt’ bots altogether.
Rather than jumping on each of these bandwagons, banks should embed greater agility into their organisations, building and testing atomised products and services with their customers. Remember, disruption in and of itself is not a strategy. Even Facebook’s head of Messenger David Marcus admitted that the bot craze was ‘overhyped, very, very quickly’. So let’s not forget that bots are only one form of atomisation, a tiny piece of the technology puzzle.
When it comes to payments, banks shouldn’t focus only on building bots, but distributing services in even more relevant ways to customers’ lives.
Daniel Gonzalez, Design Strategy Senior Manager, SapientNitro and Karwai Ng, Design Strategist, SapientNitro.
Are we all turning into digital magpies? Financial institutions seem to be jumping on the ‘botwagon’, with Amex launching a Facebook Messenger bot that sends out real-time notifications to customers when they make a purchase (it even comes with its own FAQ page), and Bank of America soon to be releasing its own version to help customers “stay connected to their finances whenever and wherever they choose”.
Given the hype around payments in messaging and bots, how should banks respond to this new technology?
The battle for payments
Payments are a gateway product for customer acquisition across the whole banking experience. As BBVA puts it, “the prevailing logic dictates that whoever offers the best customer experience (CX) in payments will own the customers for other products/services and create additional upselling or cross-selling opportunities”.
Payments have become even more pertinent with the incoming PSD2 legislation, which grants permission to third party providers to process payments on customers’ behalf. As customers increasingly migrate to third party platforms, banks risk being pushed further down the value chain and reduced into dumb pipes.
Given this, how can banks reverse the tide of losing direct customer relationships while addressing the emergence of new payment technologies?
Two years ago we spoke about the unbundling of apps. Today we’re talking about bots, and possibly the end of apps and websites.Tomorrow it may be the singularity of AI that will ‘disrupt’ bots altogether.
Rather than jumping on each of these bandwagons, banks should embed greater agility into their organisations, building and testing atomised products and services with their customers. Remember, disruption in and of itself is not a strategy. Even Facebook’s head of Messenger David Marcus admitted that the bot craze was ‘overhyped, very, very quickly’. So let’s not forget that bots are only one form of atomisation, a tiny piece of the technology puzzle.
When it comes to payments, banks shouldn’t focus only on building bots, but distributing services in even more relevant ways to customers’ lives.