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wealth management innovation

Reimagining Bank Product Design in the Experience Economy

February 21, 2013 by JP Nicols

Experience_Economy

When B. Joseph Pine II and James Gilmore wrote a book called “The Experience Economy,” they built on the work of Alvin Toffler (“Future Shock”) and others on the value of creating experiences. They cited Disney, Starbucks, Nordstrom and other leading brands as examples. Pine and Gilmore argue– and I agree– that our economy has been evolving, and continues to evolve.

We started as an agrarian society, and we extracted raw materials from the earth. Then we eventually began to make products from the materials we extracted, and we further evolved into delivering services. We still do all of those things, but they are all becoming increasingly commoditized. Think about banking products and services. How do you differentiate your brand from your many competitors? Interest rates? Fees? Product features?

Being able to stage memorable experiences, large or small, elevates your brand to a level far beyond the commodity discussions of features and price. Staging experiences allow you to connect with people emotionally, and surprising numbers of people decide with emotion and justify with fact—including the affluent. (How many of us can say we truly need to spend $6 for a cup of coffee, let alone a $2,700 espresso machine for our kitchen?)

Ultimately, being able to guide customers through a transformation is the highest evolution, and financial services companies are uniquely positioned to be able to do that. (Figure 1)

Winning with Affluent Clients

A KPMG study in June 2012 revealed that 9 out of 10 banks were considering a major overhaul of their strategy, and 40% said that wealth management would be an important part of that strategy. And for good reason— affluent clients hold higher balances, are better credit risks and use more fee-based services. But competition is fierce, and it is difficult to grab the attention of this busy demographic.

(See: 9 out of 10 Banks are Mulling an Overhaul of their Operating Models)

How do you become the bank your affluent clients can’t live without? There is no shortage of financial providers willing to help clients borrow, save, manage and move money. How can you add value beyond these utilities?

This may seem like a bit of a stretch for product managers typically steeped in competitive rate shops and price elasticity curves, but winning affluent clients in this new era requires some broader thinking about ‘products’ and about value propositions.

What business are banks in?

As I wrote in a recent American Banker article: Anyone who has taken even the most basic business course in the past fifty years is undoubtedly familiar with Theodore Levitt’s 1960 treatise “Marketing Myopia”:

“The railroads did not stop growing because the need for passenger and freight transportation declined. That grew. The railroads are in trouble today not because that need was filled by others (cars, trucks, airplanes, and even telephones) but because it was filled by the railroads themselves. They let others take customers away from them because they assumed themselves to be in the railroad business rather than in the transportation business. The reason they defined their industry incorrectly was that they were railroad oriented instead of transportation oriented; they were product oriented instead of customer oriented.”

So what business are banks in if they are not in the banking business? They are in the business of helping people achieve their financial and life goals, and the best brands differentiate themselves by reimagining the definition of ‘product’ beyond a typical set of tangible attributes.

For bankers, it is about moving beyond the rate and fee discussion and de-commoditizing the service offering. It is also about thinking more broadly about how to deliver value to clients, on their terms. Affluent clients have the financial assets to achieve their goals, but they are very often time-poor, and the wealthier they are, the more willing they are to trade dollars for time (and experiences).

I recently collaborated with Ten Group USA, the U.S. arm of London-based Ten Group, one of the world’s leading lifestyle management and concierge services companies to explore some ways financial institutions can deliver compelling clients experiences that might be outside of financial firms’ core capabilities.

In future posts I will discuss other ways savvy firms are innovating well beyond the typical rate/fee/feature conversation.

 

Filed Under: Bank Innovation, FinTech, Practice Management, Strategy, Wealth Management Advice Tagged With: bank innovation, future of wealth management, innovation, product innovation, wealth management innovation

Wealth Management Innovation: Finovate Europe Preview

January 30, 2013 by JP Nicols

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My friends from Finovate are taking the show back to London February 12 & 13, this time extended to two days to fit in 64 innovative companies. Here are a few sneak previews of companies I will be watching relevant in the wealth management, PFM and investing space. (via post show videos, though I will again be there live for Finovate Spring May 14 & 15 in San Francisco)

FinancialSimplicityLogo-thumb-150x101-8031

Financial Simplicity

Learn how Financial Simplicity’s portfolio business management infrastructure enables wealth firms to operate thousands of individually tailored investment portfolios efficiently and compliantly.

It will reveal how portfolio management can blend new world social relevance with operational excellence. Specifically, Financial Simplicity will demonstrate:

  1. Whole of firm portfolio mandate and compliance monitoring in a single screen
  2. On-demand portfolio analysis within a socially relevant context
  3. Investor-tailored portfolio modelling at the click of a button
  4. Implement pre-compliant portfolio decision-making across a Centralised Investment Proposition in a matter of seconds

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IND Group

Story of My Finances is an entirely new approach in digital financial customer service. It takes online banking and PFM to the next level of mass retail financial planning and advice.

Stories are customer-driven financial life processes, such as How to spend less, Prepare for a rainy day, Buy a home or Retirement planning. Stories help end-customers to get financially fit and to have a peace of mind. Stories are the missing link between everyday people and financial products.

We believe that we can improve people’s financial life by licensing our white-label technology to financial institutions.

rplan

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Investing can be time-consuming. rplan has created a simple, easy-to-use tool to create your own personal investment portfolio from over 2,4000 available investments to find the ones best suited to you.

rplan is for customers who want choice, but who don’t want to become finance specialists just to manage their investments – because there are better things to do in life than researching mutual funds.Innovation type: Investing & asset management, online, PFM

 

More information

For more information and previews on all of the presenters, visit the Finovate blog.

 

 

Filed Under: Bank Innovation Tagged With: bank innovation, Finovate, wealth management innovation

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