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Branch to Broadband: Channel Evolution in Financial Services - UK

Product Type: Market Research Report
Published by: Mintel International Group Ltd.
Published: April 2008
Product Code: R560-3177
Description
With the understanding that a live branch transaction costs as much as ten times as much as a self-directed Internet-based transaction, the need to understand the relationships that exist between the various channels of service provision in financial services, particularly banking, becomes clear. Some providers have a passive view towards the management of the channel relationship, simply concentrating on making each channel operate as effectively as it can. Others have chosen to offer products solely through one channel, or to actively encourage customers to shift online. This report looks at the shifting balance in the marketplace, with a particular emphasis on consumer attitudes and behaviour.

There has often been a broad assumption that it’s the young and the affluent who are driving the trend towards online banking and product arrangement. While it’s true that the online population is skewed towards these groups, this report seeks to understand how the online community as a whole interacts with the financial services world - whether they are deserting the branch, how the telephone fits into their channel usage and what factors are preventing them from conducting more of their finances online.

As well as investigating the variation in behaviour across different age and social groups, this report provides background to the changing face of financial services distribution, as providers look to move from branch to telephone to broadband and - potentially - to the mobile phone. An overview of the growth in each of these channels is provided, and the advantages and disadvantages of each are assessed.
Table of Contents
Issues in the Market

Market in Brief

Branches remain the key

Figure 1: Number of bank, building society and Post Office branches, 1996-2006

Telephone and Internet registration

Figure 2: Accounts registered to be accessed by telephone and computer, 2001-06

Buying financial services products online

Figure 3: Purchased a financial services product online in the past three months, 2005-07

How we buy

Figure 4: Method used to switch/open new account, by product type, April 2008

Day-to-day, or a one-off?

Figure 5: Preferred means of servicing current accounts, credit cards and ISAs, March 2008

Different channels - different options

Internet penetration reaches a plateau

Figure 6: British Internet penetration at home, work, place of study or elsewhere, 2001-07

Market Environment

Key points

What a difference a warm body makes

Changing lifestyles

Figure 7: Percentage of women employed, 1991-2008

Fraud - damaging trust in online financial services

Doing it ourselves

Different channel, different attitude

Figure 8: Best and worst performers for word association of channels for advice, January 2008

Security a given? Or not?

Industry view of channel appropriateness

UK Online - Internet Penetration, Usage and Purchasing

Key points

Internet penetration reaches a plateau…

Figure 9: British Internet penetration at home, work, place of study or elsewhere, 2001-07

…but broadband powers ahead

Figure 10: Broadband and dial-up penetration, 2001-08

Online activity

Figure 11: Types of activity undertaken on the Internet in the past three months, 2002-07

Browsing to buy

Figure 12: Websites browsed for information purposes with a view to possibly buying in the past three months, 2002-07

Financial services - powering ahead…

…but still issues to confront

The Branch and ATM Network

Key points

End of the decline?

Still more than 10,000 bank branches

Figure 13: Number of bank, building societies and Post Office branches, 1996-2006

Bank by bank

Figure 14: Selected banks and building societies, number of branches, 1996-2006

Mintel Inspire and the ‘Corner Store’

ATM numbers grow rapidly

Figure 15: Number of ATMs, 1996-2006

Convenient cash

Figure 16: Number of ATMs, by bank, 2005

Service minimisation at ATMs

Figure 17: Services available from ATMs, 1996-2006

Developing the branch proposition

Financial Services Online

Key points:

Buying history

Figure 18: Purchased a financial services product online in the past three months, 2005-07

What users do

Figure 19: Number of transactions by computer, 2001-06

Heavy traffic for the finance sites

Figure 20: Most visited financial websites, by category, 2007

The Telephone

Key points

Is it just for service, not sales?

Figure 21: Transactions by telephone, 2001-06

Service - not sales

Mobile Financial Services

Key points

The next frontier…

…but are customers interested?

Figure 22: Attitudes towards mobile banking, April 2008

Money transmission, rather than account maintenance?

Industry Views

Broadly, what is your strategy when it comes to channel usage?

The question of security online

How do the various channels fit into your strategy for generating customer loyalty?

Cross-selling

How much of a future is there for mobile phone finance?

The branch experience…how are you designing the physical space and training of staff to meet current strategic goals?

Call centres, how are you currently operating them in order to manage customer relationships?

The future…five to ten years down the road, how do you expect the channel relationships to have changed?

The Consumer - Product Switching and Arranging

Key points

Capitalising on switchers…

Figure 23: Account switching behaviour in the past three years, by product type, April 2008

…at the top end of the market

Figure 24: Key switcher groups, April 2008

Engaging with the products

Figure 25: Method used to switch/open new account, by product type, April 2008

Cards and insurance shifting online

High earners and broadsheet readers moving online

Less connection to socio-economic status…

…and little sign of an Internet-savvy younger generation

The Consumer - Account Management

Key points

Internet users - Internet banking

Figure 26: Preferred means of servicing current accounts, credit cards and ISAs, March 2008

Time to kill

Long day at the office, dear?

Figure 27: Preferred means of servicing current accounts, by household income, March 2008

Reading up on the alternatives

ISAs and cards follow similar pattern

Happy to go online - but more demanding?

More danger for the high street

Still waiting for the postman in the mortgage market

Figure 28: Preferred means of monitoring mortgages, pensions and insurance policies, March 2008

Again - high earners head for the PC, not the branch

Pick your channel - and stick with it…

Figure 29: Average number of channels used, by product, March 2008

…especially if you bank online

Figure 30: Range of channels used to manage current and savings accounts, March 2008

Opening the account online - but are they deserting the branch?

Figure 31: Preferred means of monitoring current and savings accounts, by means used to open account, March 2008

ATM functionality leaving cardholders cold

Figure 32: Preferred means of monitoring credit card accounts, by means used to open account, March 2008

Greater cost of servicing telephone buyers?

Figure 33: Preferred means of monitoring annual insurance policy, by means used to arrange policy, March 2008

The Consumer - Channel Preferences

Key points

The Internet - banks’ new shop window

Figure 34: Perceived strengths of key channels for annual renewals/low-value products, April 2008

Personal service still benefits the branch

When it really matters, the branch has the edge

Figure 35: Perceived strengths of key channels for long-term/high-value products, April 2008

Mobile banking - a service still looking for a market

Figure 36: Attitudes towards mobile banking, April 2008

Some interest among the young

Figure 37: Attitudes towards mobile banking, by age, March 2008

Is the Internet good enough?

Figure 38: Attitudes towards mobile banking, by channels used to manage current/savings accounts, March 2008

Two thirds will be a hard sell

Figure 39: Balance of opinions regarding mobile banking, March 2008

The Consumer - Building Usage

Key points:

Moving online - but still looking for the personal touch

Figure 40: Factors that would encourage greater usage of online channels, March 2008

Missing the call?

Broadband opening new opportunities?

Reassurance for the nervous

Figure 41: Key ways of encouraging greater take-up of online financial services, by age, March 2008

Paying the price

More to lose - less to worry about?

Figure 42: Key ways of encouraging greater take-up of online financial services, by socio-economic status, March 2008

Easily distracted? Or not?

Figure 43: Online browsing behaviour, April 2008

Prepared to ask for help

Affluent - and focused

Figure 44: Online browsing behaviour, by Internet usage, March 2008

Time to get out more?

The future of broadband?

Figure 45: Key target groups in the online banking market, March 2008

‘Future Mobile brokers’ (31% of Internet users)

‘Tech Sceptics’ (17% of Internet users)

‘Old Fashioned Afraids’ (17% of Internet users 16+)

‘Mobile Foes’ (20% of Internet users)

Appendix: The Consumer - Product Switching and Arranging

Current/savings account

Figure 46: Channel used to arrange new current or savings account, by gender, age, region, working status, socio-economic group, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Credit cards

Figure 47: Channel used to arrange new credit card, by gender, age, socio-economic group, working status, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Mortgages

Figure 48: Channel used to arrange new mortgage, by gender, age, socio-economic group, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

ISAs

Figure 49: Channel used to arrange new ISA, by gender, age, socio-economic group, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Annual insurance

Figure 50: Channel used to arrange new annual insurance policy, by gender, age, socio-economic group, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Appendix: The Consumer - Account Management

Current accounts

Figure 51: Preferred means of monitoring current accounts, by gender, age, socio-economic group, region, working status, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Credit cards

Figure 52: Preferred means of monitoring credit cards, by gender, age, socio-economic group, region, working status, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

ISAs

Figure 53: Preferred means of monitoring ISAs, by gender, age, region, working status, socio-economic group, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Mortgages

Figure 54: Preferred means of monitoring mortgages, by gender, age, socio-economic group, region, working status, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Annual insurance

Figure 55: Preferred means of monitoring annual insurance, by gender, age, socio-economic group, region, working status, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Pensions and life insurance

Figure 56: Preferred means of monitoring pensions and life insurance, by gender, age, socio-economic group, region, working status, media usage, household income and Internet usage, March 2008

Appendix: The Consumer - Channel Preferences

Figure 57: Attitudes towards mobile banking, by gender, age, socio-economic group, region, working status, media usage, household income and Internet usage, April 2008

Target group analysis - mobile banking

Figure 58: Confidence in mobile banking services, by demographic group, March 2008

Appendix: The Consumer - Building Usage

Figure 59: Most popular factors that would encourage greater usage of online channels, by gender, age, region, working status, socio-economic group, media usage, household income, tenure, presence of children and Internet usage, March 2008

Figure 60: Less popular factors that would encourage greater usage of online channels, by gender, age, region, working status, socio-economic group, media usage, household income, tenure, presence of children and Internet usage, March 2008

Figure 61: Online browsing behaviour, by gender, age, socio-economic group, region, working status, media usage, household income, tenure, presence of children and Internet usage, March 2008

Figure 62: Target group analysis, by demographic group, March 2008

Figure 63: Factors that would encourage people to bank online more often, by target groups, March 2008

Figure 64: Attitudes towards mobile phone banking, by target group, March 2008

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