Survey reveals that the mobile channel addresses consumers' needs for frequent financial transactions while reducing bank costs. In addition, the study suggests that 60 percent of consumers not currently using online banking would be interested in using at least one mobile banking service if it was offered during a typical month.
A survey of more than 500 U.S. mobile
phone users released today suggests that financial institutions should mine
the untapped market of offline-banking consumers as a potential target
audience for mobile banking and payment services.
The survey, commissioned by VeriSign's Messaging and Mobile Media Division
and conducted by Palmer Research, in collaboration with financial services
technology provider Fiserv (NASDAQ: FISV) and mobile banking provider
M-Com, illustrates that 60 percent of consumers not currently using online
banking would be interested in using at least one mobile banking service if
it was offered during a typical month. The survey also shows that
non-online-banking consumers are heavy users of traditional bank channels:
nearly two-thirds reported contacting their financial institution once a
week or more through one or more bank channels such as contact centers and
interactive voice response systems. These are among the most costly
customer service channels.
"Consumer feedback shows that the potential user base for mobile financial
services includes not only online banking users, but also consumers that
currently rely on the branch or contact center to conduct financial
transactions," said Erich Litch, SVP and general manager of Consumer
Services, Fiserv. "With this in mind, financial institutions should
evaluate mobile banking services based on their ability to meet the needs
of both online and offline users. This is particularly important if
financial institutions intend to achieve cost savings by encouraging
consumers to migrate routine transactions from traditional channels to the
lowest-cost-to-serve mobile channel."
Until now, financial institutions have been focused on moving customers
from the online channel to the mobile channel. Institutions that continue
on this course will likely fail to substantially lower their cost to serve
their customers and achieve a substantial return on their mobile banking
investments. In effect, they are simply migrating some transactions from
one low-cost self-service platform to another.
"Mobile banking is by far the lowest-cost non online banking channel
available today, at an estimated eight cents a transaction," said Adam
Clark, CEO and founder of M-Com. "If you compare that to other banking
channels such as call center at $3.75 and IVR at $1.25 or even ATM at 85
cents, you can see how moving consumers to mobile banking will yield
significant cost savings."
The survey also demonstrated that financial institutions should target the
growing audience of smart phone users for mobile phone banking, many of
whom do not bank online. Eighty percent of smart phone users surveyed said
they would likely adopt mobile banking services in the future versus just
54 percent of basic cell phone users. And, while 29 percent of respondents
stated they would be likely to use their mobile phone for making and
receiving payments if that was made available, that number increased to 52
percent for users of smart phone/high-end devices.
"With the economic downturn, consumers are increasingly micro-managing
their money and looking for ways to access their financial information,"
said Charles Landry, vice president and general manager, Products and
Innovation, for VeriSign Messaging and Mobile Media. "SMS messaging
remains the most preferred platform for mobile banking as it provides
consumers with the anywhere, anytime experience via real time information
such as text alerts on bank balances, transfers and deposits."
The survey also indicated that financial institutions still need to do more
to educate consumers about the security practices that are in place to
protect financial activities on cell phones and other mobile devices, and
about good habits to protect themselves. While the majority of respondents
perceived the positive benefits of mobile banking, 53 percent cited
concerns about transaction security as a key barrier that would prevent
them from using mobile banking.
"Even though we have yet to see significant security threats when it comes
to mobile banking, financial institutions need to address concerns over
security to help consumers overcome their fears," added VeriSign's Landry.
"As mobile has inherent safety advantages that make it one of the most
protected channels for remote banking, once these perceptions of security
risks are addressed, consumer confidence can grow and adoption will
increase."
VeriSign commissioned Palmer Research, Los Altos, California,
www.palmerresearchgroup.com, to conduct the study. A sample of 501 U.S.
consumers were surveyed, 50 percent by land-line telephone and 50 percent
online. This dual methodology provided a more realistic cross-section of
American consumers who use a cell phone or other mobile device than typical
online surveys. Each respondent was screened to ensure they were a mobile
phone user and not an active, regular user of online banking.
Financial institutions can learn more about the survey results by
downloading a whitepaper, visit www.checkfree.fiserv.com/mobileresearch.
For additional commentary on the survey results, a webinar will take place
on October 27 at 1 p.m. EDT. To register, visit
www.checkfree.fiserv.com/mobilewebinar.
About Fiserv
Fiserv, Inc. (NASDAQ: FISV) is the leading global provider of information
management and electronic commerce systems for the financial services
industry, driving innovation that transforms experiences for financial
institutions and their customers. Ranked No. 1 on the FinTech 100 survey of
top technology partners to the financial services industry, Fiserv
celebrates its 25th year in 2009. For more information, visit
www.fiserv.com.
About M-Com
Headquartered in Atlanta, GA, M-Com is an international mobile banking and
payments solution provider with live Fortune 500 banking customers across
Asia Pacific, the Middle East and North America. M-Com's core proposition
is centered on delivering a positive return on investment through
world-class adoption metrics for the mobile channel, while providing the
lowest total cost of ownership. M-Com's proposition to the US market is
delivered with Fiserv under the label Mobile Money. For more information,
visit
www.m-com.us.
About VeriSign Messaging and Mobile Media
VeriSign Messaging and Mobile Media is a division of VeriSign, Inc., the
trusted provider of Internet infrastructure services for the networked
world. Through this business unit, VeriSign provides global application
services that reliably delivers short-messages (SMS), multimedia messages
(MMS), and mobile content across wireless operators and mobile devices
throughout the world. As a leader in mobile messaging, mobile banking and
mobile content delivery, VeriSign offers a broad portfolio of mobile
infrastructure and delivery services. Offering reliable delivery, a
worldwide presence, and rapid and effective deployment, VeriSign has built
a trusted and respected brand with global mobile operators, media content
providers and enterprises. The reach, reliability and value add of VeriSign
services enable these companies to capitalize on the rapidly growing
messaging and media content markets.
About VeriSign
VeriSign, Inc. (NASDAQ: VRSN) is the trusted provider of Internet
infrastructure services for the networked world. Billions of times each
day, VeriSign helps companies and consumers all over the world engage in
communications and commerce with confidence. Additional news and
information about the company is available at www.verisign.com.