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tIasa spain arquitecturatic-2-tendencias-y_futuro

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tIasa spain arquitecturatic-2-tendencias-y_futuro

  1. 1. Tendencias y Futuro de la Banca Pablo Junco Presidente de Iasa Spain pjunco@iasaglobal.org
  2. 2. Industry Trends Retail Banking Challenges Customer Centric • Empowered consumers - more information, less loyalty • Digital Customers require, simple, relevant and enjoyable experience Multichannel • Omni channel - full channel choice, seamless journey and consistency across channels • Mobile first - Smartphones and tablets Innovation • Ecosystems: Google, Apple, Amazon,… • New players that disintermediate banks: PayPal, BitCoins, … European Central Bank’s Regulations
  3. 3. Retail Banking Focus Areas Transforming commercial model to recover profitability Getting the right channel mix: online, mobile & branch banking Engaging employees to increase efficiency Making the most of data analytics to provide a personalized service for customers Ensuring banks stay ahead of the M-payments game Cultivating client relationships Alignment with European Central Bank’s Regulatory
  4. 4. Transforming commercial model to recover profitability Industry profitability under pressure, specially in Europe Need to focus on a business model transformation that allows future profitable growth Return on tangible equity (ROTE) Evolution
  5. 5. Commercial transformation with a customer centric approach •Client’s level of satisfaction •Transitionally engaged customer is more profitable than a non engaged customer •Customers with specialized management are more satisfied and profitable: •Levels of Satisfaction: 51% vs 82%: +31pp (*) •Gross Margin by Client: x2.6 (*) •Offer customers specialized value propositions according their segmentation •Affluent Select: Specialized value proposition tailored for the segment with greater savings/investments focus. Dedicated servicing model •Middle Market: Value proposition with less specialization, focused on simplicity, transparency and multichannel drivers. Selective multichannel servicing model based on customer profitability and/or relationship •Mass Market: Basic offer with limited credit access or closed preapproved packaged. Distribution and servicing model based on self-service at any channel (*) Source: Internal Santander Group study Improve the processes that our customers “live” •Quality and client satisfaction •Effective and efficient business processes •High added value products and services •Client lifecycle management model •Focus of management by segment Attention models Focus on the Customer Specialization Customer Experience Multichannel •Multichannel: Adapt to Customer habits changes •Omnichannelexperience with a high usability and consistency across all the channels •Banks need to adjust their way of doing Business. New products and campaign launches should be designed for all channels and the channels must be connected
  6. 6. Multichannel in the Retail Banking Model Customer Centric Understanding customer behaviors and intentions based in their iterations Real time leads generation and optimization Segment Specialization Management Multichannel Product Development and Campaign Marketing by Channel Pricing Strategy based on Customer and/or Channel Multichannel Customer Experience Services, UX and Brand Image Communication strategy using customer preferences and content features Multichannel Relationship Matrix by Segments Identifying Customer cluster based on their iterations with the bank channels PersonalizedCustomer Relationship Management based in 360 customer view Multichannel: •Sales Funnel •Objectives and incentives (Customers & Employees) Customer Faced Process Improvement with multichannel view and omnichannelsupport From Branch Network Management Model to a Multichannel Management Model Derivationof customersto mostprofitbankchannelbasedontheirprofile
  7. 7. Multichannel Campaign Management
  8. 8. Data Analytics (Big Data) Why is important Big Data for Banks? •To understand our customers •To look for clusters and find new opportunities •To predict a next steps •Who we are competing with? •What are substitutes for our services? •Is there any complementary service? •How sustainable our business model is? Do banks currently have the right expertise to make effective use of Big Data? The working assumption is: “In order to effectively use of any Big Data advantages the organization itself should be mature enough on internal data management” “There is a huge opportunity for banks that Big Data can bring. The benefits will came only if the banks have a strategic plan for collecting and organizing their data in a way they are aligned with the business strategy“
  9. 9. Distribution Strategy Model Using Big Data to optimize their ATM and branches
  10. 10. Marketers, The potentialBIG DATA user Marketers plan to implement a big data solution 71% Marketers have a single customer view 18% Deployment for Marketing 45 % Successful brands use Data to Drive Marketing Decisions 100% Marketers plan to use data to drive real-time decisioningin the next two years 57% By 2017 the CMO will spend more on IT than the CIO
  11. 11. Marketers want to be data-driven Data Driven Marketing Turns Data Into Action: Whatdata use marketersmost? Collecting and using data requires user touchpoints Big challenge to gain high value from data
  12. 12. AnalyticsisCORE Digital Leaders Digital Mainstream •DWH is based on Analytics Data •Targeted integration of 3rd parties •Data for Digital Marketing •Mostly 3rd Party Digital Marketing Services •Marketing Intelligence comes from CRM •Majority does not have DWH for Digital Data Digital Marketing Platform
  13. 13. Digital Marketing Platform(DMP)
  14. 14. mCommerce: Winning Formula for Banks
  15. 15. Mobile Money Platform
  16. 16. Mobile Payment Security Solution New Belgian standard for secure Mobile payment Merchant websites and mobile apps
  17. 17. Mobile Payment Security Solution New Belgian standard for secure Mobile payment End Users Merchants App Developers Mobile Network Operator (MNO) Bank M-Coupon Issuer Available for any consumers through One secure Mobile App with just your ID Integrable by any merchants Open API for any App Developer Accessible to any couponing issuers Open to any Mobile Network Operator Open to any Bank
  18. 18. MyOrder Cashless Payments The Dutch order and pay app • MyOrder is an order and pay app for all daily purchases • Every Dutch merchant can join and enabling them to easily sell via smartphones • Bank independent • Order anytime, any place • Receive orders via: • E-mail • Receipt printer • Cash register • Coupons • Geofencing push notifications • Check in to the store (NFC or GPS) • Customer recognition • See activated coupons • See purchase history • Relevant approach • NFC payments • Coupons • Over the air • Retrieve at CheckPoint • Age check • Always without pincode • Up to € 150.00 • Any Dutch bank March 10, 2013 February 20, 2014 MyOrder is an example of Rabobank future as retail bank Customer recognition at the start of the customer journey. The goal is to be relevant in the full shopping experience not just the at payment phase
  19. 19. Enabling Commerce through Payments
  20. 20. Taking a mobile first approach Increasing customer Engagement •Better Online Product Experiences •Lead in Mobile Payments •Extending Credit to Customers New, Simple products for merchants and partners Enabling Commerce through Payments
  21. 21. Reinventing PayPal 1. PayPal Classic Web-centric PayPal-centric 2. PayPal App Mobile-first PayPal-centric 3. Mobile SDK Mobile-centric Ecosystem-centric
  22. 22. Success Factors of Banks Real time marketing based on CRM data Digital products as sales-service process Separate profit and loss (P&L) management Strong collaboration with marketing and UX agencies (differentiation will came from UX) Investment in research and Technologies Have an agile IT

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