Wincor bankers' symposium: Building customer loyalty in a tough economy

Published: 9 March 2009 y., Monday

 

Executives from Wincor Nixdorf Inc. (USA) hosted a bankers' forum last month, highlighting emerging trends in a challenging U.S. economic environment.
 
Among the day's presenters was former Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Donald Powell, who said the banking industry is facing its second-worst crisis in U.S. banking history.
Powell predicts 100 U.S. banks will fail this year, and more government control and regulation are inevitable.
 
"Our economy is on its head, and the banking industry is on its head," he said. "That's never happened before in our economy."
 
What makes this crisis different? Powell asks. The entire world has been affected, he says.
 
"More regulation is coming," he said. "And every business that touches banking is going to be pooled together and regulated. You've got to treat the regulator as a partner, by telling them everything."
 
Consumer protection will likely top the regulatory list, Powell says, and that ties in with customer loyalty and experience.
 
For Wells Fargo, improving loyalty and experience via the ATM has been a priority for the last several years. Shelly Chandler, now part of the Wells team, since Wells' acquisition of Wachovia, says Wells focuses on ATM service and security excellence to enhance the customer experience.
 
"Wells is renowned for connecting with customers to find out what they want," Chandler said. "This is how we moved toward deposit automation to begin with. Customers said they wanted it. We have to think about the user and the experience that user has in the branch or at the self-service channel. Think about what retailers have done to improve customer satisfaction, such as improved wait-times in the checkout line."
 
The top three customer requests:

  • Envelope-free deposits
  • More advanced functionality
  • More "convenient" ATM locations


Those requests bode well for the future of cash, says Nicole Sturgill, an ATM industry consultant for Boston-based TowerGroup. As the circulation of cash increases, because of the bailouts and the need to print more U.S. currency to support them, cash use is on the rise.
 
Sturgill says cash circulation in the United States has had an 8 percent compound annual growth rate since 1970. From September 2008 to December 2008, the amount of U.S. currency in circulation went from $782 billion to $812 billion. 
 
"These factors are important for the ATM industry," Sturgill said. "In addition to increased cash use, customers are getting used to self-service."

Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Annual evaluation of "Top 100 Sites"

LITHUANIAN WEBSITE – BEST IN THE WORLD more »

The increasing sophistication of the attacks

Hacker Attacks Continue To Rise In Korea - Study more »

The latest version of database program

Behold Oracle's Sexy, 'Cheap' DB more »

Be careful...

Virus lures with hint of bootleg McVeigh video more »

‘AOL virus': Joke's on you

Created as a spoof of the recent sulfnbk.exe hoax, a joke warning people of a virus named AOL.exe has some deleting the Internet program from their computers. more »

429 Million Online Worldwide

The First Quarter 2001 Global Internet Trends report from Nielsen//NetRatings measured Internet use in 27 countries around the world and found 429 million people have Internet access. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Viruses may soon be on a handheld near you

Though there have only been 12 viruses that specifically target handheld devices like mobile phones and PDAs, the next year or two is likely to see an explosion of viruses for these platforms more »

Philippines reopens 'I Love You' virus case

The case against Onel de Guzman -- the alleged author of the "I Love You" virus -- has been reopened after the Philippine National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) filed a motion for reconsideration at the Prosecutor's Office of the Department of Justice more »

Site puts private cell calls on Web

Your next cellphone call in Ottawa could be a source of voyeuristic entertainment for Web surfers around the world. more »