#added for google Analystics

Wednesday, November 24, 2004

TekChand's ATMRewards Software Platform Becomes more Smarter

The new version introduces an integrated content distribution system and CRM components for ATM personalization, targeted marketing and two-way interactive messaging at the ATM.
ATMRewards Software Platform, Version 1.0, introduced in 2000, provided banks and ATM processors with a solution for managing screen and receipt content changes on ATMs. Hardware and software changes at the ATM are not needed to implement the solution because the application interfaces with the ATM switch, instead of with the ATM.
The platform is able to manage and deliver real-time advertising content for both OS/2 and Windows-based ATMs through a single Web interface.
The new version adds a file distribution system to the platform. TEKchand provides an agent that is installed on TCP/IP ATMs to enable graphic file distribution. The Web interface offers a suite of features, including future content scheduling and ATM content preview.
The new release also includes CRM modules: a customer marketing database, data collection engine to collect customer information at the ATM, a content management system to support real-time and auto-updating content, a rule base scripting engine for one-to-one targeted content based on card numbers and transaction types, and an ATM personalization module to allow customers to personalize language, fast cash, and receipt preferences.
The application can also connect to any external CRM database for content. Banks can use the application to offer targeted coupons and provide up-to-date information such as daily updated bank CD rates.
EFunds Corporation, a TEKchand customer, demonstrated the product from Nov. 16-19 at BAI's Retail Delivery Conference & Expo in Las Vegas.

Feather in Cap for DIEBOLD - Alexander Hamilton Award

NORTH CANTON, Ohio — Diebold Inc. (NYSE: DBD), which provides self-service delivery and security systems and solutions, has earned the Alexander Hamilton Award, according to a news release. The award is an honor bestowed once a year to the top treasury/finance projects in the country by Treasury and Risk Management magazine.
Diebold earned the award for taking a whole new approach to its order-to-cash process, which includes customer order placement (that drives manufacturing, delivery and installation), contract management, billing, collections and credit, the release noted. The changes to is OTC process have resulted in "more satisfied customers," "faster turnaround time to collect payments," "a reduction of past due receivables by 49 percent" and "a reduction of write offs by 56 percent," to name a few.
"The award is usually won by very large companies like Lucent and Sun Microsystems, who were also recognized this year," said Robert J. Warren, Diebold vice president and treasurer, in the release. "Diebold may be the smallest company to ever receive it, making this award even more impressive and very exciting."
As with most companies, the OTC process belonged to multiple functions, which made it difficult to drive improvements. To address that, Diebold reorganized its OTC departments under the treasury group.
DIEBOLD's Initatives:

Diebold has exhibited great corporate goverance, process implementation and operational efficiency drive to achieve such order.
To promote awareness of the OTC effort and generate interest throughout the company, OTC members wore special pins and shirts. The promotional "attire" helped provide new opportunities to engage colleagues in discussion on the change initiative that generated improvement ideas. Additionally, the team identified process improvements applying Six Sigma techniques and created scorecards for each area to track progress. Benchmarking other companies was also an important step to improving the OTC process.
"A key to our success in implementing this change was demonstrating its companywide benefits to various internal functions outside of the finance area," said Timothy J. McDannold, vice president and assistant treasurer for Diebold, in the release. "When we evaluated our processes and compared them to benchmark data, it was clear we could do better. As a result of this team's work, and with our recent national recognition, we've now become one of the companies that others benchmark."

Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Taiwan Post Office Expanding

22 November 2004

PADERBORN, Germany — The Taiwan Post Office (TWPO) in Chunghwa has awarded Wincor Nixdorf an order to upgrade its network of ATMs with 532 Wincor Nixdorf self-service ProCash 2000xe ATMs.

The Taiwan Post Office runs the largest ATM network in the country, with 3,100 machines installed in its 1,300 branches. The ProCash 2000xe machines will be customized to meet the specific needs of the TWPO branches and will be able to be upgraded to handle extra services if required. According to a news release, the rollout will be finished by March 2005.

"This project shows that we are consistently implementing our strategy aimed at expanding our core business, continuing our international expansion and opening up new areas of growth," said Javier Lopez-Bartolome, senior vice-president at Wincor Nixdorf International. "We will certainly be continuing to use the expertise gained in our core businesses to expand into areas like postal services."

E-commerce Growing in 2004

Looking to fire up the troops (or yourself) as your business heads into the holiday shopping season? Here is good news for e-commerce business of all shapes and sizes. The U.S. Department of Commerce (DoC) statistics on retail e-commerce released last Friday illustrate it's on the rise and actually outpacing total retail sales in at least one metric.

On a non-adjusted year-over-year basis, the DoC reported that e-commerce sales grew by 21.2 percent over the same quarter last year. In the same period, total retail sales increased by only 6.5 percent. On the whole as a percentage of total retail sales in the third quarter, e-commerce sales represented 1.8 percent.

The third-quarter numbers also represent a respectable increase of 5.4 percent over the second quarter of 2004 on a non-adjusted basis, while total retail sales only marked a 0.5 percent increase.

In terms of dollars, what that means is that on a non-adjusted base, e-commerce sales totaled $16.5 billion in the third quarter of 2004. Total retail sales for the quarter on a non-adjusted basis were estimated at just over $923.4 billion.

For the first time with this report, the DoC also included sales estimates on an adjusted basis. The adjusted numbers are intended to statistically compensate for trading-day and holiday differences, as well as seasonal variations, though not for price changes. On the adjusted measure, e-commerce was actually worth almost a billion dollars more than on a non-adjusted basis, chalking up $17.6 billion.

On an adjusted base, total retail sales for the period were actually estimated lower at $916.5 billion, which increases the reported e-commerce sales as a percentage of the total by 0.1 percent to 1.9 percent.

On a year-over-year basis, (both adjusted and non-adjusted) e-commerce as a percentage of total sales has inched up by 0.2 percent on an adjusted basis (1.9 percent in the third-quarter of 2004 from 1.7 in the third quarter of 2003) or 0.1 percent (1.8 percent in the third quarter of 2004 from 1.6 percent in the third quarter of 2003) on a non-adjusted basis.

Forrester Research has predicted that online holiday sales will grow to $13.2 billion, which, according to its data, represents a 20 percent increase over 2003.

A new forecast estimate of the 2004 holiday online sales from JupiterResearch predicts $21.6 billion in sales, a 19 percent increase over 2003. (JupiterResearch and ECommerce-Guide are owned by Jupitermedia.) Jupiter expects that the increase will be driven by the amount each buyer will spend (up by 2 percent) and a greater number of online users (18 percent).
Article originally appeared on Internetnews.com.

Monday, November 22, 2004

Driving Toward a Holistic View of Payments

It's early in the trip down a long, winding road, and those at the controls will benefit from a dashboard.

For more than a year, banks have been advised by consultants and other industry observers that it was time to focus more on their payments businesses, specifically by managing payments outside their traditional product silos. While a few banks heeded the call, most continue to take a wait-and-see approach.

Such caution is ill-advised and could be detrimental long term. A strategic focus on payments is one of those few "imperatives" that is both doable from an organizational point of view and also promises an early return on investment. The key is to approach the task with a viable strategic framework, using an information collection and presentation tool known in some quarters as a management "dashboard."

Fundamentally, a dashboard provides a framework for analyzing competitive and economic issues within the context of specific market metrics and precise options for product, pricing and positioning. A dashboard provides an institution with an at-a-glance view of how it's performing in various areas and measures its progress against its goals. Management dashboards are designed to help foster understanding, align commitment, focus attention and often, but not always, allocate resources on a transitional emphasis that transcends normal, day-to-day activities — essentially prompting the institution to prioritize and commit the entire organization to certain activities.

Typically, the new emphasis can be articulated only by less-baked and unproven benchmark measures (e.g., market size, product margins) of initiative and performance because necessary assessment mechanisms and accounting/IT tools have yet to be developed. Over time, transitional dashboards either go away, or become a part of the normal complement of information technology (IT) reports and business unit monitoring. That's what happened during the Y2K period, for example, and when banks were subject to money laundering scrutiny in the wake of 9/11 and the passage of the Patriot Act. Essentially, a dashboard allows an institution to turbo-charge its response to a specific issue before that response settles into a day-to-day routine.

Control Threat

The rationale for using a dashboard approach to deal with the converging payments environment is three-fold. First, payments provide the core of many banks' business overall, accounting for between 35% and 40% of revenue and income — this tends to be demonstrated once payments activities across various product lines are defined and accounted for.

Second, payments operations and processing have been systematically outsourced to processors for two decades, resulting in banks directly controlling less than 20% of the $220 billion in payment industry revenues today.

Finally, many components of the retail payments business are under attack by non-banks and non-banking products, threatening to erode, perhaps permanently, the ability of banks to benefit in the future from their historical franchise. As the mass migration of payments from physical to electronic forms marches on, the threats to this most genuine of bank heritages will only grow.

Beyond the considerable danger of surrendering full control of their payments destiny, the nation's retail banking institutions face additional challenges.

Most retail banking customers don't care how or why banks can't make payments the way they want them made. They just expect payments to be handled efficiently and cost-effectively, and will shop their business accordingly.

Forecasters such as the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) project a steady 3% to 4% decline in revenue-per-unit on payments products for the foreseeable future, meaning that banks must invest in both better productivity for existing products, as well as newer products that have better margins, in order to maintain or grow profits.

Wall Street has caught on to the strategic importance of payments, with analysts routinely grilling bank executives on how they're doing in this core business sector. Lapses in articulating and demonstrating prowess translate into lower market valuations.

Having set the backdrop, then, for the need to develop a payments dashboard, the following is a point-in-time report on the work involved in creating a payments measurement discipline. We'll discuss the challenges of taking such a project on and the drivers of a dashboard prototype in the context of a relatively new payments product that might otherwise be relegated to a payments silo operating well under management radar.

Early Lessons

Mounting a proportional and sustained response to the emerging payments "mandate" is a far from trivial task. The forces of change across the payments space are compelling banks to rethink their decision process on products, markets and competitive positioning along several dimensions.

This sort of sweeping change in a core part of the business has prompted many financial institutions to take the plunge and get started with re-engineering their payments strategy and operations from soup-to-nuts. Getting started down this path, however, has proved daunting for most banks, owing to the lack of IT tools and approaches for extracting the necessary data about payments from legacy product silos.

Historically, these silos came about as new banking products aimed at specific markets emerged and were managed in a monolithic way. There was no real mandate to look across the enterprise for a holistic view of things until the turmoil in payments began. While IT support vendors, such as Oracle and IBM, are busy fielding purpose-built database management tools to achieve an enterprise-wide view of payments, banks still face the daunting task of getting started, relying largely on manual methods.

As the table above suggests, early embracers of payments dashboards are often forced to start from scratch, developing and applying new data definitions, new data collection techniques, new cost accounting calculations and new report formats.

As experience grows, these manual tools are iteratively tested and improved, and eventually work their way into mainstream IT tracking and reporting activities — generating true and relevant dashboard metrics automatically.

We contend that there are four basic drivers in creating a payments management dashboard:

Step #1: An internal assessment of the importance of the payments businesses to the institution;
Step #2: An evaluation of the customer perception of the institution's payments capability;
Step #3: An analysis of the institution's operational performance and efficiency;
Step #4: Communication of the institution's relative market position and performance in the industry.

The table extends the drivers by providing key components, typical metrics and examples of the types of analyses to be done for each.

The Difficulty Inherent in Understanding Payments

A 1999 Federal Reserve study revealed that among the top 25 bank holding companies, payments revenue and income averaged 40%. But, the range was between a low of 4.5% to a high of 74.9%, meaning that there's considerable variation between the extent to which our largest banks rely on their payments businesses.

Typically, one of the highest hurdles is extracting the specific portion of revenue and cost from a given product line. For credit cards and wire transfers, almost all of the activity is payments-related, so it's easy to count. DDAs are a bit trickier. Do you count the interest arbitrage for a relatively dormant set of deposits earning a less than 2% rate of interest the same way you would a non-interest-bearing checking account, which is primarily used to make payments and transfers? Probably not. Another consideration: fees from overdrafts can carry huge margins of 90% or more but put customer satisfaction and loyalty at risk. Should they be netted out for customer attrition and retention offsets? Probably so, if the financial institution wants to remain viable in the business.

Trickier still are lending products. A car or home equity loan is essentially a one-time, interest-bearing obligation between the borrower and the lender. Yet the monthly payment aspect is central to the value proposition. Payment amounts are directly correlated to loan amounts, interest rates and risks. Additionally, there are a wide variety of payment mechanics that affect the relationship, such as pre-payments, accelerated payments, partial payments, and late payment penalties and fees. Managing the payment aspects of loans has a lot to do with repayment performance and ultimately line-of-business profitability.

The Electronic Bill Payment Example

The difficulty in transitioning to a payments dashboard and approach can be vividly seen with electronic bill payment (EBP), one of the most dramatic examples of consumers finding their own paths to payment efficiency and cost-effectiveness. Researchers estimate between 20% and 30% of American households pay at least one bill online a month; some pay a dozen or more. Gartner Group projects that 65 million adults will be paying bills online by 2006.

But three out of four electronic bill payers choose to go directly to the biller rather than use bank payment portals or consolidate payments through a third party because this "biller-direct" model enables the payer to be certain that the payment is made as late as one to two days before the due date with no risk of incurring a late fee. EBP is a great battleground and testing area for banks remaining in this potentially huge payments business of the future.

BCG provides an analysis of EBP impacts that illustrates the assessments, knowledge, analysis and new thinking that has to take place in all four of our generic payments dashboard drivers, and the following draws on BCG's work.

Step #1: Internal Assessment of Importance to the Institution

Counting customers who sign up for and use EBP is straightforward since customers must enroll online with their payment account. Assessing and segmenting customer activity levels is also easy. What and how much they pay is readily discernible. And detecting competitive use is easy, too, since online access to the payment account can be monitored. But that's where the simple part ends.

Calculating revenues and income per-unit in a nascent, fast-growing market where external competition (biller-direct models) has the dominant market share proves to be much less straightforward. Although these electronic payments cost significantly less than processing paper checks from the bank's perspective, most banks try to charge EBP customers monthly account or usage fees. Many banks outsource electronic bill payments to third parties like CheckFree Corp., paying per-account fees of up to $5 a month, and it's understandable they want to recover those costs. EBP customers, who are quite savvy and willing to shop their payments business for better deals, resist paying fees, however, resulting in banks waiving those fees about 40% of the time, according to BCG.

And, BCG thinks waiving the fees for these customers is a good idea and tells payment councils to take note: A typical bank with two million DDAs and 144,000 EBP accounts (a 7.2% penetration) could waive all of the standard fees (about $5.5 million a year in income, based on average rates with 60% retention) and recover the lost income merely by increasing EBP account penetration to 7.9%, or just 15,500 households!

Step #2: Customer Perception of Performance

This is true because, as BCG's analysis of a number of large banks shows, active electronic bill payers (those doing six or more payments or transfers a month) are twice as profitable on average than the typical customer. BCG's metrics estimate that the average retail banking customer generates $350 a year in margin, so the EBP customer is worth $700 a year, or an incremental $350.

That $350 a year in extra margin per EBP customer is due to the typical EBP customer using more bank products, maintaining higher balances, conducting more and larger transactions, etc. Not a bad segment to target and prioritize product and marketing resources against. But how many banks have done the spade work necessary to conduct a similar analysis? And how many have examined online account access logs or ACH receiving streams to know what portion of this activity they're actually getting from these customers?

Step #3: Operational Analysis

Moreover, how do banks conduct a proper build-versus-buy analysis, calculating a correct ROI, for deciding whether to outsource electronic bill payment? A monthly per-account cost of $5 for an average bill payer making six payments a month comes to about 80 cents each. Consumers often don't pay that, for reasons cited in Step #1, although there is some evidence that they might pay something for higher value-added features, such as e-mail alerts and notifications. If banks rely on their historic accounting systems, treating products as silos and fully costing each activity within those silos, including payments, the burden of fixed costs and other overhead can often make even the 80-cent charge seem attractive — which is why so much of the EBP business is outsourced. In reality, marginal costs of incremental electronic payments are more like 20 cents to 25 cents, and those fall quickly as Web-based technology takes over operations.

Step #4: Communication of Positioning and Perspective

Doing the preceding cost analysis and channeling efforts to recruit active electronic bill payers would appear to be well worthwhile. To return to the BCG example, the bottom-line benefit of 14,000 incremental customers generating $350 a year in incremental profits translates into $5.25 million a year in profits from this line-of-business initiative alone. At a stock multiple of, say, 19 times, discounted over some assumed lifetime of the customer (EBP customers are much "stickier" than average), the bank's reward for garnering this relatively small number of new customers could amount to more than $750 million in incremental market valuation! It's hard to find many other bank initiatives delivering that kind of upside.

It's also difficult to identify clear-cut cases of banks that have been able to get this process right. Based on some presentations during BAI's TransPay 2004 Conference + Expo, however, one can point to a few institutions that clearly understand the problem and are taking concrete steps to meet the challenges of this new payments environment.

Charlotte-based Bank of America Corp., for example, appointed a payments leadership council with a focus of driving payments business growth across the enterprise, identifying threats, synergies and opportunities; resolving conflict; and influencing the industry/shaping the payments landscape (Step #1). Senior vice president Jonathan Wilk serves as chairman of this council.

For Bank of America and others, much of the early work in upgrading management understanding, direction and control of payments has been focused on these kinds of organizational initiatives, and rightfully so. Appointing a payments guru who then interacts with a payments council typically made up of business-line managers and executives from across the enterprise is a necessary first step.

As time goes on, institutions will surely see the need to continue deeper into the process as the industry mobilizes to once again steer its own future in payments.


Mr. Mott is principal of BetterBuyDesign, a payments system consultancy based in Stamford, Conn.

For More Information
Financial institutions that are interested in creating a payments dashboard as a means of setting a holistic strategy toward their payments businesses have a few options. Several consulting firms can be engaged to do the analysis and set up the parameters specific to an institution's individual payments portfolio, lines-of-business, specific markets and competitive situations. In addition, BAI will be developing self-help sessions and analytical tools for use in building a payments dashboard. If you're interested in additional information, please send an e-mail to PaymentsMetrics@bai.org.


Relationship Management By the Book

Customer "books" are one tool to focus front-line efforts on retention and cross-selling.

As an increasing number of banks embrace a customer-focused strategy for their higher-end retail customers, some are using a relationship management tool called "book of business" to help manage retention and achieve a deeper household penetration.

Banks tend to divide their retail customers into two basic categories: a group of highly profitable customers they wish to hold on to, and a second group of less profitable customers with whom they'd like to have a deeper relationship. Book of business is a tool that enables banks to track and manage how they handle each of these two groups.

Book-of-business data typically contains detailed information about a customer's relationship with his bank, and usually indicates how much annual revenue he provides. This data is then aggregated by branch — generally it's the branch where the customer maintains a checking account if he has one, or the branch where the most transactions are performed. The customers so selected become part of that branch's "book of business."

For More visit BAI's Retail Strategy digest.


Paper to Pixels

Check 21 poses challenges for large and small banks alike, yet the entire industry will benefit from a swift transition from paper to electronic processing.

"Fasten your seat belts" might be an apt phrase when it comes to assessing Check 21's likely impact on the banking industry. The legislation signed by President Bush in October 2003 may not by itself constitute a full-scale payments revolution, but it will certainly help provoke major changes in the way banks process payments.

Technically speaking, the Check Clearing for the 21st Century Act is rather limited in scope, only requiring that financial institutions be prepared to process image replacement documents, or IRDs, by Oct. 28, 2004. But the expected repercussions of the legislation make it a big deal indeed.

By hastening the proliferation of electronic imaging, Check 21 places institutions in the position of losing efficiency in their traditional paper-based payment operations even as they incur new expenses for imaging technology. Mitchell A. Christensen, executive vice president for payment strategies at Wells Fargo & Co., is bullish long-term, but believes that the paper-to-electronic transition will pose a financial drag on institutions over the next three years.

To overcome thorny technical issues, intermediaries of all types and sizes will have to temper their competitive instincts and work together closely, especially on so-called "Day Two" processing issues involving exceptions, corrections and overdrafts. Overall, the pace of the transition from paper to electronics will be strongly influenced by the degree of participation across the industry.

The good news is that substantial cost savings are on the horizon, perhaps more than $2 billion annually industry-wide, reflecting the efficiency of processing electronic files versus paper checks. But attaining that happy state will be expensive and challenging, as Banking Strategies demonstrates in the following special report.

Meeting the specific requirements of the federal law has more to do with customer service than technology. But how will institutions handle the larger imaging revolution? That question has institutions convening task forces and designating Check 21 "czars" to plot payments strategies. Each intermediary will need to figure out its role in a payments system likely to be increasingly dominated by electronic transactions.

The more specific challenge is figuring out the approach to imaging technology and its ancillary issues, such as image exchange and archiving. In a recent BAI online survey, large numbers of the 225 respondents from financial institutions anticipated that Check 21 would drive their strategies in image exchange and archive, check truncation, electronic check processing, remote image capture at branches and remote image capture at automated teller machines.

Cost Bubble

Although Check 21 is inevitably linked with imaging in public discussion, the law itself is silent on the issue of whether financial institutions should adopt imaging technology. It only requires that they accept IRDs, which are paper documents that include a copy of the electronic image of a check.

Banks can decide for themselves whether to accept the electronic image of the original check or the IRD (which looks a lot like the original check). The problem, however, is that IRDs represent 1) an intermediate step to full imaging, and 2) an unsatisfactory intermediate step, since they are not electronic.

One bank-owned technology consortium estimates that mixing IRDs into the current paper check processing system will boost per-unit costs to a range of between seven and 11 cents. That exceeds the range of between six cents and eight cents that it currently costs to process paper alone. Full-image processing, by contrast, would drive those per-unit costs to below four cents.

Clearly, there is a powerful incentive to move beyond IRDs toward full-fledged image processing. And that's where things get complicated, and expensive. While many major banks have already installed the technology necessary to transform paper checks into electronic images, some technical hurdles still must be overcome before they can easily exchange those files between institutions.

One issue involves image quality. The industry has yet to agree on standards, which raises liability issues. What if one bank in the processing chain deems the image quality of an electronic payment to be unacceptable? How is the dispute resolved?

Another issue is Day Two processing, which refers to the exception items, such as illegible checks and overdrafts, that must be handled after the "clean" checks have run through sorter-readers, typically a day later. Since these items still have to be handled manually, in a paper format, the cost benefits of imaging on Day One are diminished.

Then there's the larger issue of declining check volume, which inevitably drives up per-unit processing costs. As Christensen explains in one of our articles, this places banks "in a difficult situation, in that the volume of checks is declining at the same time we're being asked to invest capital and resources in re-tooling the infrastructure."

Christensen says the paper-to-electronic transition will turn into a net positive only when a critical mass of banks has adopted imaging and new imaging-based products are helping make up some of the revenue lost from the decline in check processing. One respondent to the BAI survey summed up the situation succinctly when he predicted that Check 21 would lead to reduced costs and improved efficiency "in the long run, but a cost bubble in the short term."

Differing Perspectives

Another key finding of our reporting concerns the differing perspectives of large banks and small banks regarding the opportunities and challenges of Check 21. Large institutions, by and large, are better prepared for the transition to electronic processing and express a higher degree of optimism about its benefits.

This partly reflects the fact that the largest banks have already made substantial investments in imaging technology. Likewise, most have by now settled on their image exchange and archiving strategies. So where 35% of respondents from banks with more than $5 billion of assets in the BAI survey say they're "in the process of implementing a strategy" for Check 21, only 19% of respondents from smaller banks make that claim.

It's also significant that respondents from large banks were more likely to anticipate benefits from electronification, such as new product development (84%), lower collection costs (69%) and improved customer service (61%). The corresponding percentages for respondents from banks with less than $5 billion of assets were 68%, 50% and 50%, respectively.

That's not to say that small banks have nothing to gain from electronic processing. Like their larger brethren, some expect to earn incremental revenue by providing their customers with real-time access to imaged statements. Atlanta's NetBank Inc. believes that digitizing the deposits it receives at ATMs and the checks sent from merchants will save several hundred thousand dollars a year in processing costs, allowing it to shift more of that work from outsourcers to its own employees. Other small banks expect to participate in the digital revolution by going in the opposite direction and outsourcing their imaging activities.

Despite the differing approaches, banks of all size share some common concerns. One is the need to help their customers through the transition away from paper checks. In the short term, Check 21 is as much about customer handling as it is about technology. The millions of people who are accustomed to receiving their cancelled checks every month, as opposed to imaged statements, are likely to be particularly put off by the appearance of IRDs, even in a paper format.

So banks face an educational challenge, and potentially a marketing opportunity as well Ñ if they want to migrate their customers to electronic transactions. The key to allaying customer fears and selling them on the benefits of imaging is providing appropriate training for bank employees. More than two-thirds of all financial institution executives responding to the BAI survey anticipated that Check 21 would affect customer communications. "Customer and employee education will be one of the biggest challenges to the industry," one respondent predicted.

A final concern that cuts across all asset size categories is the need for the industry to harmonize its adoption of imaging technology. It does no institution any good to get too far ahead of the crowd because the benefits will be wasted. As Christensen says, "A payment, by its very nature, creates an exchange of value between two partners. If one partner isn't image-capable, you're stuck dealing with the paper."

In that light, it's encouraging that large banks have been working effectively through industry organizations such as the Small Value Payments Co., Viewpointe Archive Services LLC, the Financial Services Technology Consortium, and the Electronic Check Clearing House Organization. Smaller banks, meanwhile, are participating through their technology vendors and the Federal Reserve. Everyone involved with these various efforts seems to understand that electronic processing is something that must be pursued on a cooperative basis if individual institutions are ever to enjoy its promised benefits.


Discover to purchase PULSE - EFT mega merger

RIVERWOODS, Ill. and HOUSTON — Discover Financial Services, a business unit of Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MWD), and PULSE EFT Association (PULSE) have signed a definitive merger agreement.

Discover Financial Services will acquire PULSE for an aggregate purchase price of approximately $311 million and other strategic value.

The merger agreement, which is subject to regulatory and PULSE member approval, is expected to close in approximately 60 days.

"We believe the combination of the PULSE and Discover networks will create a leading electronic payments company offering a full range of products and services that will represent an attractive choice for financial institutions, merchants and consumers," said David W. Nelms, chairman and chief executive officer of Discover Financial Services. "Together, we intend to be a robust competitor in the important and rapidly growing debit market."

Nelms added, "The combined entity will provide financial institutions of every size and type with a full-service debit platform and a complete product set, including credit, signature debit, PIN debit, gift card, stored value card and ATM services."

PULSE will become a business unit of Discover Financial Services and will retain its brand, pricing and operating platform as well as its management team, staff and Houston headquarters.

Stan Paur, PULSE president and chief executive, said, "We believe that PULSE's experience in debit, combined with Discover's signature capabilities, will create a highly appealing alternative for small to large institutions across the country."

Trojan logs e-banking habits

ZDNet UK November 11, 2004, 14:45 GMT
An antivirus company has detected a new Trojan attack that steals e-banking details when users log into legitimate banking sites. Security experts say they have discovered a Trojan horse that records e-banking user details and Web surfing habits.

Antivirus company Sophos is warning that the Banker-AJ Trojan is targeting online customers of banks such as Abbey, Barclays, Egg, HSBC, Lloyds TSB, Nationwide and NatWest.

"This type of Trojan is something [we] have been aware of for some time. We are working with industry to identify the next steps to help combat fraud and are interested in educating customers."

For Detail report visit the ZD NET link


Sunday, November 21, 2004

TOUCHPOINT Posting (In Case Missed)

Latest Listing of TOUCHPOINT Blog.

Why Core Banking is suddenly Important

Analysis of KMART and SEARS Merger

Key Bank Channel Strategy


GE Restructuring ( Jack Welch Wave Started)

General Electric (GE) has proved again again in coming up with good restructuring exercise. It started 24 years back when Jack Welch started consolidating GE from presence in 166 business lines into just 52.

Jack's Formula was simple.

1. Classify business lines which contribute in slab of >50, >25, >15 and <5>

2. Close the business where GE is not in Top Two.

3. Give opportunity to such business to become no. 1 or 2 or close down in Six months.

I think similar excercise started in ASIA Pacific.

Visit
http://all2ponder.blogspot.com/2004/11/ge-consumer-finance-eyes-malaysia.html
for the Movers and Shakers in GE business line.

Interesting Retail business outlook for GE and quite acceptable changes espcially in India.

ING is also thinking of Smart Move in acquition. Finger's are crossed.

Mckinzey Report on Retail Channel

Mckinzey Report on Retail Channel and forcast on where the Big 5 US banks went wrong in handling their channel strategy.

Full report is on my Blog >> http://all2ponder.blogspot.com/

U can lay your hand on most interactive tool - Chatter Box. - Might find enjoyable and good Java code for Chat Engine.

or alternate link to nose dive
http://all2ponder.blogspot.com/2004/11/mckinsey-report-steering-customers-to.html

Cheers... Enjoy Publishing your thoughts.

UK Branch Banking Survey

I come across interesting customer preference survey which
emphasis that, banks need to raise their bar from mere
successful CRM to CEM (Customer Experience Management).

Visit for the details:
http://all2ponder.blogspot.com/2004/11/branch-sales-and-service-creating.html

Hope it will be interesting.

Happy Diwali Vacation.


Regards

Hitesh

Branch Mechanics

visit for branch banking challanges and proposed strategy.

http://all2ponder.blogspot.com/2004/11/maximising-returns-from-branch.html

Cheers,

Hitesh

Design for the customer's experience

Successful kiosk projects need to have a strong business case, be
developed within technical constraints and meet the end user's goals
by providing a valuable service. However, there is often enormous
pressure to get the kiosk to market, and many kiosk projects focus
more on deadlines, than ensuring success.

Since most kiosk solutions include software, which is relatively easy
to change compared to the hardware, often the mindset is, "we can add
functionality later" or "we can improve this over time." Just
remember, you only have one opportunity to make a good first
impression on your kiosk customers, so the quick fire approach may
lead to project failure.

One of the easiest ways to control costs is to get feedback from your
end users throughout the kiosk's lifecycle. To accomplish this,
usability specialists have a defined process called User Centered
Design (UCD). It is a systematic and scientific approach to designing
ease of use into the customer experience.

User Centered Design

UCD is an interactive process with four phases. It analyzes the user,
the environment, and the tasks a user will accomplish. This analysis
provides the details that determine usability goals and begins the
application flow and User Interface. The UI includes everything that
the user sees, hears, and touches including the kiosk surround,
signage, hardware, software and audio clips.

The UI is determined during the design phase via prototypes that users
can use. Users test the prototypes during the evaluation phase.
Results of evaluations may lead to new ideas and new requirements that
cause the analysis and design requirements to change. Iteration
between the first three phases continues until usability requirements
are met. The goal is a usable design that's implemented in the final
development phase.

Analysis phase

The analysis phase is the first step in the UCD process. For kiosks,
it's important to understand the goals and requirements of the three
project stakeholders. Conducting face-to-face interviews,
observations, surveys and focus groups are techniques used to gather
this information. The stakeholders are:

End users: This is the group the kiosk is intended to serve. End users
are the primary target audience. If their requirements are not met,
the kiosk will not be highly used. When gathering data from end users,
it is important to learn:

* How will they use a kiosk in this environment?
* What will make them use this in-store kiosk as opposed to using
the Internet or talking to a store employee?
* What type of technology do they currently use, how frequently
and for what types of tasks?
* What are the current problems with the way they handle a
specific task related to the kiosk functionality and how what would
they change to make it better?

Management: This is the group that defines the business case for the
kiosk. They are expecting the kiosk to increase sales, improve
customer service, reduce labor costs and possibly more. They should be
able to explain:

* What are the business goals for the kiosk?
* How will they measure project success?

Store employees: This group interacts with the end users when the
kiosk is installed in the field. They can provide useful input such as:

* How will the kiosk help or hinder them in their daily tasks?
* What functions would help them and their customers?
* Where should the kiosk be placed and why?

The resulting data from the stakeholders is valuable in defining the
functionality that makes the kiosk a success. This type of analysis
also leads to a list of easily prioritized features and functions
based on actual user data.

Design

Data collected during the analysis phase provides insight into the
desired functionality, users relate to when performing kiosk tasks.
This input is used to design the kiosk's physical surround, hardware
layout and the software's look and feel.

The first step in the design process is to flowchart the application
in a way that best matches the steps from the user task analysis. This
helps to identify what information goes on which screen and how to
navigate through the entire application.

The next step is to prototype the design. Prototyping provides a means
of building something that end users can actually see and use to
evaluate the early design concepts. A prototype may be designed with
just partial functionality in order to get user feedback on the most
common tasks or ones that may cause usability problems. Prototyping is
critical to finding out the big problems early when it is still
cheaper to fix them.

Evaluation

User evaluation is the only accurate measure of the design meeting
usability goals. Often there are no right or wrong designs; there are
just some designs that work better (for users) than others. By setting
usability goals, you can determine when your design meets the criteria.

Informal evaluation methods include design walk-through and expert
reviews. Evaluation at this level helps to validate functionality,
task flow and utility. Expert reviews involve a usability expert that
evaluates the design and determines where potential usability problems
exist. These types of reviews can eliminate a majority of usability
issues.

More formal evaluation methods include usability testing. Usability
testing involves recruiting end users to perform specific tasks and
then measuring how well they succeed. Measurements often include time
on task, number of errors made, number of requests for help, ease of
use ratings and other subjective ratings. This data is used to
identify any usability problems and better ways to perform tasks.

It's critical that the kiosk go through usability testing prior to
pilot. This testing needs to be done with a prototype or beta version
of the physical surround, hardware and software since the user will
eventually use all of these components.

Implementation

Once met, usability goals can be implemented in the design. In the UCD
process it's important to specify all aspects of the design that
impact usability such as the layout, navigation and graphics.
Typically, UI specifications are written to describe the details of
the layout, the navigation and explain why design decisions were made.
The implementation document is useful to make sure old ideas are not
revisited.

Finally, a style guide that describes the behavior of each of the
various controls (buttons, lists, data entry forms, error messages) as
well as the defining the look and feel in terms of font style, color
usage, typeface, and graphic effects is very useful. A style guide
helps ensure that different developers follow the same standards when
implementing the design.

Kotak Mahindra Bank - SB account with 10% interest

Ind: Kotak Mahindra Bank launches Kotak premium return plan

Kotak Mahindra Bank, which offers complete practical financial
solutions, announced the launch of a unique and convenient
insurance plan - Kotak Premium Return Plan, for its Account
holders, today. Kotak Premium Return Plan provides all Kotak
Bank Account holders a monthly premium payment option with
direct debit to their bank accounts. This makes premium payment
convenient, without the hassle of writing monthly cheques.

The maturity amount depends on the term of the policy chosen.
The Bank also ensures that the beneficiary receives the death
benefit (sum assured less premiums unpaid during the year of
death) in case of the unfortunate death of the life insured.
Moreover, no medical check up is required to buy this policy.

The launch of this product is in keeping with Kotak Mahindra
Bank's proposition of being a one stop shop for all investment
needs of a customer. Kotak Mahindra Bank has recently launched a
couple of other features that make investments quick and
convenient. Some of these features are:

Kotak MF Sweep, which provides the convenience and liquidity of
a bank account with returns of a mutual fund. Daily balances,
above a predetermined level, in the savings account are
automatically swept out into a Liquid mutual fund. These 'swept
out mutual fund investments' sweep back into the account to meet
fund requirements the moment withdrawals exceed the balance
available in the account.

Mutual Funds on Net enables purchase or redemption of Mutual
Funds online through the Bank's Net Banking service. Thus
customers can access their Investment accounts in addition to
Deposit and Demat accounts with a single sign on. This facility
also allows customers to see their mutual fund portfolio updated
as per the last day's NAV.

Converged ATMs-kiosks predicted as future trend

With ATM and kiosk vendors investigating the potential for supporting transactions such as mobile phone top-ups, bill payment and check cashing, convergence is becoming a buzzword in both industries, reported ePaynews.com.

Apart from the payment-enabling opportunities that this trend creates for payment solution providers, convergence is evident in the hardware and feature functionality spaces. With 93 percent of ATM transactions known to involve cash dispensing and balance inquiries, ATM vendors are investigating additional functions such as recirculation bill acceptors, which accept cash or cards and return change to the customer if required.

Kiosk vendors are said to launch more innovative new services, while ATM vendors appear to prefer the adaptation of existing products or services in favor of introducing entirely new functions, the report said.

7-Eleven's Vcom kiosks are the earliest example of a converged ATM-kiosk and over 1,000 have been deployed, although transaction volumes are not published.

Some insiders argue that retailers may install ATMs and kiosks side by side on their premises to attract new revenue streams and drive foot traffic, but the reality is that convenience or other stores with limited floor space may prefer a single ATM-kiosk terminal.

Retailers seeking to draw underbanked customers into their stores could for example deploy ATM or kiosk-based bill-payment and check cashing-enabled devices as a way to achieve new revenue streams and increase sales. If such ATMs were PC-based, as current trends indicate, additional functionality can be built into the machine with minimal effort.

Virus Protection for ATMs

Trend Micro intros virus protection for ATMs
LONDON — Trend Micro, a provider of network antivirus and Internet content security software and services, recently introduced its Network VirusWall 300 outbreak prevention appliance, designed to protect mission critical devices such as ATMs against the increasing threat of Internet worms.
According to a news release, Trend Micro Network VirusWall 300 deploys threat-specific knowledge from TrendLabsSM, Trend Micro’s global network of antivirus research centers, at network endpoints to help organizations proactively detect, prevent or contain and eliminate outbreaks. "Network worms continue to be problematic as financial institutions and enterprises deploy mission-critical devices such as ATMs and self-service kiosks on TCP/IP networks. Experience has shown that network worm attacks are particularly difficult to contain with traditional, signature-based client and parameter virus filtering," said Maria Kun, a research analyst at Gartner. "Enterprises are looking for proactive protection policies, rapid identification of rogue/infected devices, and the ability to isolate and remotely repair infected
devices during an outbreak."
Trend Micro Network VirusWall 300 is deployed in front of network endpoints such as ATMs to protect them from network threats. The appliance incorporates a Web-based management
console, Trend Micro Control Manager, for Network VirusWall 300 which allows network managers to centrally control Network VirusWall 300s. Raimund Genes, Trend Micro's president of European Operations,
said the product offers protection against network worms for IP-enabled ATMs from any ATM vendor. Trend Micro Network VirusWall 300 and Trend Micro Control Manager for Network VirusWall 300 are expected to be available in December. The Trend Micro Network VirusWall 300 is sold on a per-unit basis; The Trend Micro Control Manager for Network VirusWall 300 management software is sold on a per-system basis. Volume discounts will apply to both products.
Tokyo-based corporation Trend Micro has its European headquarters in Marlow, England, and business units worldwide. Trend Micro products are sold through corporate, value-added
resellers and managed service providers.

Asian Market Survey Results : Credit card penetration rates evaluated

Asian Banker Research evaluates the credit card penetration rates of five Asian economies and examines the challenges faced by the financial institutions in each of these markets.

There are varying ways of measuring `credit card penetration' of economies. Some groups define it as the total number of cards issued over the total population, while others gauge it as total card
spending over personal consumption expenditure (PCE).

The Asian Banker reviews the credit card penetration rates in five Asian markets – Hong Kong, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand and Singapore – tweaking it slightly to consider not only PCE, but, also, total number of cards issued by banks over the total working population, rather
than just total population. This combines both the demographic and economic dimension.

These two `scales' as a measure of credit card penetration should provide a better indication of the potential growth in volume and share for credit cards, as well as the challenges faced by the credit card issuers in the respective economies.

he six economies under study rank the same when either total working population or total population is used as a base, although there is a significant difference in absolute terms. The difference in average annual variation in relative terms from the annual mean for both
methodologies is minimal, though increasing since 2001. This trend results form the effect of a divergent expansion of the workforce in the various economies.

In the last five years, Singapore and Tha iland have experienced a significant increase in their workforce, enjoying currently, among Asia Pacific's credit card markets, the highest workforce
participation, with 62 percent and 56 percent respectively. They are reflective of a substantial proportion of female contribution in the workforce to overall population.

In contrast, Taiwan's workforce participation to overall population has only expanded about one percent in the same period. And Malaysia workforce participation hasn't changed at all, scoring the lowest of the six Asian economies at 40 percent.

Using both scales of cards issued over total workforce and card spending over PCE, Thailand and Malaysia emerge as the economies with the lowest credit card penetration rates among the five economies. Both countries credit card markets have been rapidly expanding with total cards issued rising by 28 percent in Thailand from 2001 to 2003 and by 22 percent in Malaysia for the same period.

In Thailand, if credit cards issued by banks only are taken into account, 13 percent of the working population already possessed a credit card as of the middle of this year, with a concentration in the
urban centers. When cards of non-bank issuers, which hold a share of 54 percent of cards issued in the entire credit card market, are added, Thailand has a credit card penetration of 23 percent of the working population. In the case of Malaysia, 56 percent of the working population holds a credit card issued by a bank.

Given these circumstances, low penetration rates and high growth in card numbers, Malaysia and Thailand are indeed the most dynamic markets in Southeast Asia. By contrast, Singapore and Hong Kong and Taiwan appear saturated as credit cards issued surpass the number of
people who work. At least for Singapore, though, the number of cards being issued is still growing at a steady pace.

In countries where there is a high level of cards issued vis-à-vis the total working population, but there is low level of card spending against PCE, competition is focused on co-branding and micro
segmentation of customers. This is the case in Taiwan. Here, financialinstitutions, generally, should direct their efforts to increasing card spending than issuing of cards to grow their customer base.

In the last five years until 1H12004, cards issued/workforce has grown 33 percent in Taiwan, the highest among all newly industrialized economies in Asia Pacific countries. With 77.6 million cards issued and an active card in circulation rate of 53 percent, nearly the entire workforce are credit card holders. There is still room, however, for deeper credit card penetration. The economy has a low card spending to overall consumer expenditure of about 16.5 percent while other mature markets such as Hong Kong or Australia, the figures are 22.5 percent and 23.5 percent, respectively.

South Korea and Hong Kong have high levels of credit card penetration both demographically and economically. The situation in these economies is similar to countries with medium-level penetration except that financial institutions do not only have the challenge of trying to increase average card spend, but they have to focus on retaining customers. Notably, these markets have seen a decline in the ratio of cards issued to workforce and card spend to consumer expenditure.

The above research note was written by Christian Kapfer, a contributing researcher for Asian Banker Research. He can be contacted at research3@theasianbanker.com and +65 6236-6520.