Insights to Build Your Brand and Understand Your Customers
Insights to Build Your Brand and Understand Your Customers
Thriving financial institutions have several strengths in common. First and foremost, they develop deep relationships with accountholder households. Those relationships are deep because the institutions actively cross-sell their products and services to ensure an increased share of wallet and fewer single-product households, resulting in stronger household profitability.
How do these robust institutions accomplish that? By viewing performance through multiple lenses. They understand the work they need to do internally to build core competencies that help establish their brand, but also how their brand identity interacts with the needs of the marketplace. If your institution jumps at new opportunities too quickly, without evaluating these factors, you may miss some insights you should be relying on to create better performance.
At Raddon, a Fiserv company, we work closely with financial institutions to ensure they are using insights and data to refine their brand and take effective action for growth. So, let’s take a step back and look at how your brand is perceived in the market, and the impact of that perception on profitability. Two imperatives come into view.
Marketing must have a strategic focus; brand development is critical
Raddon research reveals that 63% of consumers surveyed consider a major bank to be their primary financial institution (PFI). And over 80% of millennials and Gen Z respondents indicate that a big bank is their PFI. Your financial institution – whether a community bank or credit union – competes with those big national brands whether they are in your market or not.
Your institution needs to understand how your brand resonates within your market area. Raddon recommends a Raddon Brand Benchmark Study to help institutions more fully understand market perceptions.
The results of the study help identify a clear path to managing your brand by analyzing traditional, purchase-stage behaviors.
Your financial institution won’t be able to implement needed changes until you understand your brand, and how consumers view your brand and value proposition in the market. A brand study will help, especially if your new household growth has declined or is not where you want it to be.
Sign up for our monthly email to get the latest insights on banking, commerce and fintech.
Your financial institution can’t be all things to all people, but you can grow by focusing on your strengths and how they align with the needs of your accountholders. What opportunities do you have to enhance their financial well-being using your core competencies? Accountholder surveys are a valuable way to see these opportunities and gauge whether you have a strong control of payments and balances. How are accountholders using your various channels? And more important, how satisfied are they with your products, services and delivery?
To get the most accurate picture, at Raddon we recommend that you consider not just transaction-level surveys, but an annual member-level survey. Look for key metrics that help define accountholder loyalty, satisfaction and usage. Of course, you aspire to be the PFI for your accountholders. But you need to understand plainly why they may not consider your institution primary in their financial lives.
You’ll be tempted to claim success when customers or members tell you they are “very satisfied” or “satisfied” (the top two box scores in an accountholder survey). But at Raddon we believe that, for competitive advantage, you need to be focused on the top box score. “Satisfied” is only table stakes; if you want your financial institution to be a high performer, focus on ensuring that you see “very satisfied” in your survey metrics. If you don’t receive the top score, you’ll want to find out why.
Raddon recommends soliciting accountholder perspectives to obtain information about the following:
Regular accountholder surveys will help your institution understand not only existing usage of products and services, but also directional trends that will indicate whether any changes you’ve implemented have made a difference or not.
Connecting the dots
Strong overall performance is dependent on using tools to understand how your brand resonates and what your accountholders think of your institution and what you have to offer. Viewing your performance through these two lenses – and collecting and interpreting the relevant data – makes it possible to “connect the dots” as you refine your market strategy for growth.
Explore related resources