Just
when you thought you had the evolution of banking channels figured out I am
here to explain the flaw in the latest evolution of banking channels;
omni-channel banking.
The
progression of banking channels has evolved from credit union and bank focused
to being about the member or customer experience. From a single banking channel
(inside out), which involved an in-person visit to the credit union or bank to
omni-channel (outside in) which is designed to allow the member or customer to
access banking services and products using multiple channels, in a seamless and
consistent manner.
Here
is the problem. Successful implementation of omni-channel offers a member or
customer access to banking products and services across and between multiple
interactive channels in a customer focused seamless manner; but what happens
when they encounter a problem? As much as self-service, automated processes,
intelligent workflow and automated decisioning are designed to simplify and expedite
a transaction, invariably problems occur that require communication or
assistance from bank or credit union personnel.
You
know the drill. You have a service problem and you know what happens next. You
call your credit union or bank and get that annoying automated call tree. Once
you finally get someone live you explain the problem and they say, “Just one
minute, I will transfer you to Jane in the XYZ department”. Your call is
transferred and you get a message saying, “All personnel are on the phone
please hold”. After waiting on hold for 5 minutes listening to promotions you
have no interest in hearing, someone answers the call and you again carefully explain
the problem. After hearing your problem explanation the person says, “Sorry,
but that is another department”, and promptly transfers your call. This time
your call is immediately answered. For the third time you try to patiently
explain the problem. The employee says, “So what are you trying to do on our
website”? You respond, “I am trying to apply for a loan and a credit card”.
“OK, I can help you, but I have to access two systems. Our loan system and our
credit card system”. The conversation goes on-and-on and it is like the
“customer is from Mars and the employee is from Venus”. There is a total
disconnect.
Why?
Because you and the employee are accessing different systems, seeing different
information and even worse, the customer is accessing the customer facing
interface while the employee is accessing the administration module. It happens every day in retailing, banking,
cable, phone, and most service industries, but it is changing, led by companies
like Amazon and FedEx.
For
a true low friction member or customer experience the customer/member support
team must be able to access and view in real-time the path the customer has
taken and have access to support data, regardless of the problem trying to be
solved. To accomplish that goal silos
must be broken down, training provided, the user experience (UX) of banking
systems must be consolidated, and what application architects and business
analysts call the “non-happy path” must be incorporated into the system. When
something goes wrong the best opportunity to solve the problem is if both
parties are accessing the same system with the same data and error messages,
not front-end and back-end systems.
Omni-channel
banking is an important initiative, but it must move to what I call “bi-direction
channel banking”. Omni-channel focuses on the member or customer experience,
which is 50% of the solution. Bi-direction channel banking brings customers and
the employees together on single user experience (UX) platform and completes
the circle.
We
know banking is complex and is driven by multiple banking applications. There
is the core data processing system, payment systems, general ledgers, cash
management, credit origination systems, credit servicing systems, online and
mobile banking systems, account opening and the list goes on. How can a bank or
credit deliver a single system view to both its customers and employees with
all these different banking systems and applications?
Through
a user experience platform (UX presentation layer) that uses an enterprise
services bus middleware as an integration layer, connecting to the bank’s or
credit union’s multiple banking systems.
Simple……
no but achievable, and replacing all those legacy banking systems is not an
option for most banks or credit unions.
Instead of replacing core data processing systems and other critical
banking systems, embrace them for what they do, process and manage
transactions.
Using
a UX presentation layer provides credit unions and banks a customizable
solution displaying what and to whom information is displayed. Within the presentation layer customized automated
processes, intelligent workflow, business rules and automated decisioning can
be incorporated, which allows each credit union or bank, regardless of their
existing legacy systems to be able to develop their own solutions that fit
their banking model.
In one of my blogs, “Do We Need Better System Integration or Fewer Systems to Integrate?” I argue Gonzo Banker’s position that rewriting all the
bank’s systems into a single system is the right way to go. For all but the
largest national and super regional banks, rewriting multiple systems into a
single application is not viable.
Multiple banking
systems are a fact of life for credit unions and banks. The complexity,
processes, external transaction networks and regulation involved in banking
makes having a single banking system impractical. Instead of focusing on a
single system, embrace what each of these individual banking systems do, …. process
and manage transactions. The vast majority of banking systems were developed for
internal back-end use by bank or credit union staff. As the transition from
brick and mortar banking to digital banking has evolved, those legacy banking
system have not evolved with the change. As a result, credit unions and banks
are trying to deploy customer/member facing banking systems that were designed
to be back-end employee facing systems.
By focusing on the presentation layer and integration middleware layer, banks and credit unions have an opportunity to maximize their investment in existing banking systems, while being able to deploy bi-direction channel banking using customizable user experience (UX) presentation/middleware platform. In order to deliver a seamless customer experience credit unions and banks need to deploy technology, re-organization, processes and training that are externally focused while closing the loop so employees and customers are working from the same playbook. The future of banking is bi-direction channel banking, the next step beyond omni-channel banking.