Fair Isaac Corporation

09/20/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/20/2024 04:41

Shifting Customers from Branches to Digital Account Opening

Every day, 307.2 million people are online in the US. That's 85% of Americans. Across the globe, it's 5.44 billion people - 62% of the global population.

Organizations across all sectors have been developing ecosystems to cater to these digital natives, who want convenient, personalised and seamless digital experiences.

While financial institutions are also moving in the same direction, some consumer behaviour in this space remains at odds with the general trend towards digital.

In our recent global research to understand what drives consumer behaviour when it comes to their interactions with financial institutions, we found a clear "willingness" to open most financial accounts digitally. For example, 73.9% of US citizens would be willing to apply for a credit card online. 62.1% would be willing to do the same for a savings account, 65.9% for a mobile phone and 58.5% for a personal bank account.

For "bigger ticket" financial products, however, this willingness drops substantially. Only 20.3% of Americans would apply for a mortgage digitally, 21.9% for a car loan, 24.2% for a personal loan and 27.1% for a BNPL loan. The picture across the globe is similar, with 58.1% willing to apply for a credit card digitally, 69.9% for a savings account, 63.3% for a mobile phone and 56.3% for a personal bank account, but substantially lower numbers for those big ticket items, particularly mortgages and car loans - 14% and 17.9%.

Moreover, we discovered that despite the willingness to open most financial accounts digitally, people overwhelmingly still prefer an in-branch experience.

This raises the question: What are the primary opportunities that financial institutions have to improve the digital journey (or maybe experience) for their customers?

A More Personal Approach to Originations

Although complexity varies between certain products - mortgage, car loan, personal loan - many of the details required from consumers are the ssimilar for each product. It suggests that customers may not be getting the information or the experience they need from the journey they are on.

This is particularly true of the younger generation, aged 18 to 24 years old. Despite being the digital generation, they are more averse to applying online for a mortgage (10.7%), car loan (13%) or personal loan (18.3%). Lack of financial resource will of course be a factor here, but lack of financial knowledge and experience will also be key. This group is more likely to want guidance when applying for more complex products.

At a time when convenience and speed are increasingly separating the front runners from the rest in the digital journey, this consumer preference to apply for products in branch must be viewed as a sign for financial institutions to assess and understand what needs to change in the existing customer journey, especially in the digital space.

Fraud Remains at the Heart of Consumer Concerns

While most people in the US see value in the ease (60.6%), speed (57.9) and flexibility of being able to open an account anywhere (57.7%) and at any time (62.8%), only 37.6% believe the digital route is secure.

Concerns about becoming victims to bank-related fraud are very real, particularly when it comes to stolen cards and identify theft. One in five (22%) US consumers worry that their credit or debit card details would be stolen and used to apply for credit, while one in three (32%) worry that their identity would be used by a fraudster to open an account in their name.

And it's a reasonable concern. The Federal Trade Commission received 5.7 million fraud and identity theft reports last year, while cybercrime losses according to the FBI reached $10.2 billion.

Financial institutions have moved quickly to address soaring levels of fraud with the implementation of additional security measures. American consumers have certainly noticed this. 45% have noted the increase in identity checks when making a purchase online, while 39.7% have noted it when logging into their bank accounts.

This isn't necessarily negative. For nearly a third of consumers in the US, good fraud protection is the number one consideration when it comes to choosing a financial services provider.

However, there's only so much friction customers will endure. One in four (24.4%) US consumers have still abandoned opening a bank account when identity checks proved too difficult or time consuming. One in five (21.6%) have stopped or reduced their use for the same reason.

A deep sense of security without increased friction levels is the balance needed here.

Addressing the Gaps and Siloes in Banking Decisions

The internal make-up of many large financial organizations is a siloed one. Each department undertakes its own distinct workflow to manage credit risk, detect fraud and ensure regulatory compliance. The checks can be extensive and customers are repeatedly asked to provide the same information. This information is not shared, so it leads to fragmented and frustrating customer experiences, as well as significant levels of unnecessary costs. It also creates major gaps and blind spots that criminals take advantage of.

This disconnect between departments and data has resulted in some complex fraudulent schemes. For example, criminals have taken the details of deceased individuals and applied for loans, which have been approved. How? The inability to link the right data together at the right time. Banks must make fast decisions in succession across multiple channels and through many facets of different account and product lifecycles.

These siloed organizations also have multiple point solutions that suffer from limited integration. Individually they contribute value. Combined into a cohesive ecosystem, however, they have the potential to revolutionise. Organizations would see significant benefits, from enhanced efficiencies to more cost-effective and customer-centric onboarding processes.

This is what the award-winning FICO Platform - a modern, API-first decision intelligence platform - is doing. It enables specialist solutions to be brought together. Data is centralized and formatted to facilitate seamless data sharing across functions. Running from a single platform, it orchestrates their use - and this has been the game changer for forward-thinking financial institutions.

Orchestration is how banks can move from procedural processes that aim to treat each fraud type differently to a strategy that includes coordinated capabilities and responses, informed by AI and machine learning. For example, individual behaviors that form part of a wider fraud scheme may not trigger anything on their own, but taken together with a centralized, orchestrated viewpoint, the patterns are detectable. This is the unified, authoritative version of the truth, and it's driving better experiences and outcomes for customers while helping stop fraud.

Conclusion

Most new customers are genuine and want to feel secure, understood and in control when pursuing a financial application online. Amongst them will be stolen or fabricated identities or poor credit risks. With the cost of acquiring a new customer exceeding $644, losses can be high.

For large, complex organizations where customer journeys span many channels with disconnected systems and processes, the game changer will be a centralised, platform-based orchestration approach.

It's only when the right data and decisions are being applied at the right time and in the right place that positive customer experiences and effective fraud management will finally align and balance.

How FICO Platform Helps Improve Your Originations Strategies