Haberfeld Exec Says Customer Service Wins The Day
This entry was posted on 4/24/2007 10:43 AM and is filed under Deposits,Customer Satisfaction.
In a recent interview with Alan Friesen, president and chief executive of Lincoln, Neb.-based consulting firm Haberfeld Associates Inc., Damien Weaver asked about the challenges of attracting low-cost deposits.
"It is a bloodbath at the present to time to get
customers and their deposit dollars," he said, noting that deposit
totals have finally bottomed out in their steady decline since 1948.
Internet marketing poses a particular challenge,
because shoppers are making more informed decisions than ever about
which bank they choose, Friesen added.
Maintaining a leading position on the free-checking front has become a priority for National City Bank, a 1,300-branch bank with a footprint in eight states. Even its most
basic checking account excludes fees and minimum-balance or
direct-deposit requirements, and offers free checks and online
bill-pay. Last month this Cleveland-based bank rolled out its
Plus and Elite checking accounts, which offer additional benefits such
as surcharge reimbursement when customers use non-National City ATMs.
Also, National City is just over a year deep in its
savings rewards program that lets customers accrue points via savings
account transactions, which can be redeemed at participating vendors
and for cataloged merchandise.
Marketing programs like National City's can be
a tough act to follow for community banks, Friesen said, but there is
something National City's $136 billion in assets cannot guarantee: the
comfort of banking with a familiar face.
In the end, it will be customer service that wins the
day, Friesen said. "The game will be execution: Who can provide the
best service," he said. "Almost all banks still fall short in that
department."