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Banks are coming up short in trying to keep pace with other more advanced app providers, but emulating these five steps taken by nonbanks can help drive mobile engagement.
February 10 -
Millennials, who alreadymake up a third of banked consumers in America, are used to transacting life in clicks and swipes. Institutions must embrace their needs now or risk extinction.
July 6 -
Hefty investments in customer-facing technology such as person-to-person payments, mobile check deposit and fingerprint recognition have given big banks a decided edge in attracting and retaining younger consumers.
May 5 -
There is seemingly endless research on the attitudes of millennials toward banks, but the major takeaway from all of it is that banks can't expect millennials to want to bank only one way.
March 16 -
Large incumbents can effectively pursue and cultivate disruptive innovation without buying a disruptor. Here's how.
July 26
Investing in developing digital tools is a critical strategy to attract one of the most coveted customer demographics: millennials. In March,
The good news is that a number of large banks, like
To get ahead of incoming competition, banks must embrace these three startup principles.
Adopt startup speed
Traditional banks often leverage expensive and lengthy processes when they deploy new services. Fintech startups that attract millennials, meanwhile, are unafraid to debut new services even if they are not entirely polished at the outset. Banks need to adopt this fearlessness and stand up new offerings quickly, but at a smaller scale.
By building one feature of one potential service for, say, one branch, banks can use consumer responses to refine and eventually scale the project across other branches. In taking this approach to developing new products and services, banks may also help internal stakeholders feel more comfortable with the perceived risky innovation.
Gather feedback in real time
When identifying new services to deploy, today's banks typically use a blend of quantitative feedback, surveys and focus groups. These methods are often poorly timed, impersonal and, quite frankly, outdated. Focus groups are held in isolated environments that are divorced from the situations in which customers would ever use a banking service. Further, synthesizing feedback also happens after the fact, and therefore, doesn't provide the opportunity for a real back and forth with customers.
Instead, banks should run small, live experiments with prototypes that allow them to observe customers using the service. Co-creating along with a customer yields constructive feedback in real time.
Brainstorm legacy tech integration
Many banks today develop new services in labs that are completely isolated from other teams. This "innovation in a vacuum" approach is in total opposition to startup methodology. In order to test prototypes effectively, banks need to take into account how their existing infrastructure will be able to support the launch and growth of new services and integrate into the bank's existing service offerings. For example, many banks currently use legacy software systems. If a new app ties back to this system, the bank needs to test how they would work together.
Gordon Hui is vice president of strategy for Smart Design, a design and innovation consultancy.