BLOGS
 
 

 Article

  Comment(0)

 

Kent McNeil's Blog  >>

Share:    Email  

ROI for Mobile Banking Continued
Kent McNeil, kent.mcneil@donriver.com  
Date Posted: Wednesday, November 25, 2009

In my last blog I asked what the ROI or value proposition for mobile banking is, and what specific areas the ROI or value proposition depended upon.   A few of the obvious questions are: Will mobile banking reduce costs by converting a certain percentage of activities from higher cost channels? Will it help retain customers?   Will it attract a new demographic?

 

The list of questions goes on and on, but the ultimate factor I was after is how mobile banking will impact a bank’s bottom line.   Currently I cannot find a bank that can prove an ROI or cost justification for mobile banking.  There are studies out there of course, but they are flawed due to their assumptions, sometimes broad and ambitious, which are not backed by real world results, as of yet anyway. 

 

With a lack of tangible evidence to gain insight from I decided to review the ROI for Internet or online banking to try and find some possible correlations.  

 

The questions, skepticism and arguments with online banking (in the early stages of Internet banking at least) are remarkably identical to the ones currently facing mobile banking.  Although this does not provide an ROI or cost justification, this should be somewhat encouraging for mobile banking.

 

Reduced costs were the main argument in favor of online banking, which was meant to move customers from high support cost channels, such as IVR, over to the much lower cost channel of the Internet.  However, online banking ultimately increased costs to banks.  While this was not the initial expectation, due to the additional benefits provided by Internet banking cost reduction was no longer the primary aim.  As the service matured and introduced additional services such as bill payments, it can be argued, Internet banking did achieve a reduction in costs, but that is debatable depending on which bank you speak with.

 

The naysayers of online banking sound identical in rhetoric as the ones questioning whether mobile banking has value.   See this quote from the good old days:

 

“Yes, interesting stuff, but how connected is too connected? Do our members really need this level of access to their credit union accounts? And, don’t forget about security. This seems like a really expensive member acquisition or retention strategy.” -- Credit Union Executive, 1996.

 

This statement seems to imply online banking will only serve to retain and acquire new customers at an increased expense, which may or may not become a zero sum game. Even today it is debatable how online banking impacts the bank’s bottom line.

 

So is the value proposition for mobile banking the same?  Can financial institutions only hope to implement the mobile channel to prevent losing customers and acquire presumably younger customers at an increased cost?

 

If mobile banking increases costs, but is the only way to keep customers then it may be a legitimate value proposition, assuming it does not result in a zero sum game which could very well occur if the strategy is too aggressive.  It is hard to argue that giving your customers what they want is a bad thing, especially if not giving it to them could cause them to defect to a competing financial institution.   

 

The mobile banking ROI or value proposition may simply come down to that: listening to your customers and giving them what they want.   I understand that has little to do with ROI and the “bottom line”, but you understand my point.

 

In retrospect, the real value proposition for online banking came from the evolution of related services such as bill pay, personal financial data and paperless statements, and not simply migrating traditional banking services to the Internet. 

 

This of course, at first, did not compute in a predefined ROI model, nor did the experts accurately predict the complementary services that would ultimately evolve.  The important thing to remember is that the implementation of online banking was the crucial first step leading to these evolutionary services. 

 

So what does this tell us about the value proposition for mobile banking?  Well, the impact on the bank’s bottom line will not be easily or quickly identified.  It will most likely take years to recoup the costs involved in implementing mobile banking, and it may be impossible to directly identify and associate where these cost savings are achieved.   If cost savings is a main goal, banks will inevitably need to plan ahead and reduce resources in other areas.

 

In the end, looking to the bank’s bottom line may not be the best way to evaluate the success of mobile banking.   It may be more beneficial to view the longer-term value proposition which, like online banking, is to provide customers what they want.  It is anyone’s guess as to what evolutionary or complementary services may be produced as a by-product of mobile banking, but the possibilities are very exciting, in my opinion.

 

With services such as P2P, micropayments and contactless payments already well on their way, financial institutions can feel confident that mobile banking will ultimately pay off in one way or another; it just may take awhile to empirically justify the costs.

 

I personally cannot imagine banking with an institution that does not provide online account balances, bill pay or even easy integration into Quicken or Microsoft money.  Of course, I don’t care if it saves the bank money; it makes my life easier thus I require it.  Perhaps mobile banking will revolutionize banking in the same way.


Name: Kent McNeil
Title: Principal
Company: DonRiver
View Kent McNeil's Blog

Sponsored Links
 

 

  Article

   Comments(0)

 
Login or register to post comments
[Show comment]
 
Sign Up for the Latest in:
 
 
Mobile Money Transfer
Mobile Commerce
Micro Finance
Mobile Technology
EMEA
APAC
Mobile Payments
Mobile Banking
Mobile Marketing
Global
Americas
Company
(*)
 

MOST POPULAR

HEADLINES

1.Safaricom partners with insurance company to deliver mobile insur
2.International air time transfer market heats up
3.An App for Donating Money While You Shop - CauseWorld
4.Mobey Forum publishes white paper which examines the role of the
5.Mobile to Web Commerce Integration: AsiaPay Launches PesoPay Onl
6. Citibank Says RFID Pilot Proves Strong Consumer Interest in Mobi
7.What will it take to make mobile payments mainstream in the US?
8.Media owners cash in on the goldrush for Mobile Marketing apps
9.With Mobile Model Playing Well in India, Citi Turns to U.S.
10.Globe widens remittance corridors to Belgium, UK, US

FEATURED COMPANIES

MOST POPULAR

BLOGS

1.Google’s CEO & the 3 waves of Mobile – Recap from GSMA World
2.Working from home can be fun...I received my Zoompass Mobile Paym
3.Use of USSD technology in Mobile Banking
4.Ebay expects over 500 million in mobile-based revenue in 2009
5.Pivotal Year for Mobile Banking: 2009
6.CGAP Report: Banking the Poor via G2P Payments
7.Mobile Shopping Best Practices in 2010
8.Proximity Marketing - GSMA World Congress Recap Continued
9.Tabbed Out - A New Concept for Mobile Payments
10.Mobile Banking - Testing Mobile Applications

 
 

Mobile Financial News from around the web

The M-PESA surprise, and what we can learn from Brazil about consumer needs
The unbanked consumer and mobile banking: a conversation with Daryl Collins
The G-20 eyes financial inclusion using mobile phones, other ICTs
 
Mobile Coupons Gaining Momentum
New CGAP area on the Mobile Money Exchange
The M-PESA surprise, and what we can learn from Brazil about consumer needs
 
Siteminis rolls out m-commerce web platform
Accenture reveals mobile financial transaction software
Telcel, MoreMagic Solutions to offer mobile phone recharge services in Mexico
 
WorldNet Acceptance for iPhone in Europe
With Mobile Model Playing Well in India, Citi Turns to U.S.
Citi Expanding CauseWorld

Inside the DonRiver Network