Banking with the enemy."... Deposits are flooding in the door ...[these deposits are] the result of a favorable macro environment, not the strength of their brands or their own marketing pizzazz." --Tom Brown, bankstocks.com The word most associated with the word "predatory"--in a Google search--is "lenders." For bank marketers, a funny thing happened on the way to building our brand. While we were working to positively position and frame our industry and our individual organizations--the financial services The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page. industry "got framed" as predatory lenders, fee hounds, collection Nazis and greedy recipients of bailout funds. The change represents a new opportunity and a new risk in the marketplace. It involves a segment called "enemies." Let me explain. The origin of installment credit Noun 1. installment credit - a loan repaid with interest in equal periodic payments installment loan consumer credit - a line of credit extended for personal or household use loan - the temporary provision of money (usually at interest) in this country was born out of doing business with people we know--a segment we might call "friends." Customers would buy from the local grocer on credit and then pay them back as they could, which for farmers it was often after harvest. It was somewhat like microlending mi·cro·lend·ing n. See microcredit. that got its start in India and has garnered so much positive press recently. These transactions were between friends--people who knew each other in communities where reputations were built slowly and lasted a lifetime. The commitment of the borrower was to pay the debt back as soon as possible and the lender to be as lenient as possible in collecting repayment. Personal commitment was the glue that held the relationship together and the lubricant to get past the rough spots. Things changed. Our population moved from small towns and farms where everyone knew each other to cities filled with strangers. Banks grew larger and expanded into new markets. As institutions scaled up, a new model evolved. New products such as credit cards, adjustable rate Adjustable rate Applies mainly to convertible securities. Refers to interest rate or dividend that is adjusted periodically, usually according to a standard market rate outside the control of the bank or savings institution, such as that prevailing on Treasury bonds or notes. mortgages, tax advantaged savings like IRAs and overdraft protection were developed. Math-based approaches utilizing tools such as credit scoring Credit scoring A statistical technique that combines several financial characteristics to form a single score to represent a customer's creditworthiness. and profitability analysis replaced personal relationships to assign credit limits, rates, payment terms and fees to these "strangers." Quantitative scores became the surrogate for knowing customers' character, personal history and family reputation. Likewise for customers, the math of rates, convenience measured in time and effort, and credit limits determined where they banked. These new mathematical relationships connected strangers--customers and their bank without making them friends. Those who are hostile toward banks Recently, in the larger financial arena, we see the emergence of a third kind of relationship--neither friend nor stranger. Duking it out with banks over mortgage defaults and foreclosures, credit card debt Credit card debt is an example of unsecured consumer debt, accessed through ISO 7810 plastic credit cards. Debt results when a client of a credit card company purchases an item or service through the card system. and collections, overdraft fees, called loans, tight credit, collapse of esoteric products like swaps, and government bailouts creates animus Animus - ["Constraint-Based Animation: The Implementation of Temporal Constraints in the Animus System", R. Duisberg, PhD Thesis U Washington 1986]. and enemies. Politicians who blame the banks for our economic challenges and a media in the business of selling drama have added to the mayhem. As a result, the industry now serves a growing oppositional segment that with only slight hyperbole we might call "enemies." All of this presents an interesting paradox. Deposits are pouring in from a mix of risk-averse friends, strangers and even "enemies"--some of whom had previously writ Robert Hall
There is no easy primer for how to market to enemies or those who may have strong negative feelings. The marketing task is compounded by recent research that shows that the word most associated with "advertising" is the word "false." Empty words will not fly with this group. Nonetheless, this hostile segment of existing and prospective bank customers may represent a sizeable and growing market that warrants a strategy. It starts with understanding who they are, their feelings are and the key obstacles to building a longer-term relationship. Acknowledging their concerns and developing specific tactics to close the relational gap will be a part of the answer. Yes, we are 'just a bank' Research indicates that many in this crowd throw investment banks, stock brokers, financial planners and traditional banks all into one large bucket. Yet, perversely, retail banks continue to score among the highest on the dimension of trust and security. Now is the time to reposition and reframe Re`frame´ v. t. 1. To frame again or anew. by differentiating based on what you are not--not an investment bank, not a brokerage, not big, not distant, not a mortgage bank, not financial planners. After years of trying to convince the marketplace that we were "more than just a bank," it may be a good time to remind them that we are first and foremost a safe, local retail bank. Just a retail bank looking for some enemies to convert into connected strangers or even committed friends. Now that is a segment strategy. Robert Hall is author of "The Street Corner Strategy for Winning Local Markets." E=mail: rhall55@sbcglobal.net |
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