Mobile Banking’s Impact on Revenues and Attrition Is Astounding

By increasing mobile banking adoption rates, the average institution can generate millions in additional revenues and reduce attrition by up to 15%.

Though increasing adoption rates seem to have settled the question of demand for mobile banking services, the ROI of mobile banking has proved more elusive. Mobile banking, which may not be perceived to produce direct revenue, must be evaluated by indirect results. Accordingly, Fiserv in conjunction with Raddon Financial Group studied mobile banking users, online users, and branch-only users, and compared their product usage, transaction frequency, attrition rates, and revenue generation.

The study found that mobile banking currently offers financial institutions significant ROI with the unrealized potential being in the millions for the average bank or credit union. The value was determined by comparing key attributes in the three months before and after consumers enrolled in mobile banking. The year-long aggregated analysis was conducted at select banks and credit unions using the Mobiliti™ banking and payments solution from Fiserv.

Eight credit unions and nine banks across a range of asset sizes up to $3 billion participated. The exhaustive, one-year study anonomously tracked the activity of 240,000 credit union members and 283,721 bank customers. Respectively, these included about 27,000 and 39,000 mobile users.

The objective of the study was to assess specific return on the mobile investment. Non-users of mobile services served as a control.

The study found that an engaged mobile banking consumer:

  • Uses more services
  • Conducts more debit, credit, ATM and other types of transactions
  • Stays with their financial institution longer
  • Decreases costs

The study also found that by increasing the mobile banking adoption rate, the average institution can generate close to $2 million in incremental revenues and reduce attrition by an average of more than 15%.

Mobile Banking Users Hold More Products

Compared with 1.3 products for branch-only consumers, mobile banking users average about 2.3 products each from their primary financial institution. For new adopters of mobile services, however, the average number of products per customer increased by 12%. The difference between credit union and bank customers was negligible.

Product_holdings_are_higher_for_mobile_banking

The so-last-century term for average number of different products was “share of wallet.” Perhaps the term has fallen out of fashion as wallets themselves seem to be doing, but the importance of products per customer remains. Consumers who use mobile banking are more engaged with their financial institution, and as a result, this allows for deeper penetration when consumers need mortgages, business services, and other higher-end products.

This potential is greatest when financial institutions use online and mobile channels to provide personalized, contextual offers. Unfortunately, as mentioned in the article, Justifying Investments to Become a ‘Digital Bank’, not all institutions have the same digital channel cross-sell maturity.

Mobile Banking Users Transact More Frequently

There is a positive correlation between mobile banking use and debit/credit card POS transactions as well as ATM use. As a result, there is an increase in interchange fee revenue that follows from this increase in debit/credit card use.

Although mobile users account for only 14.4% of the studied banks’ entire customer base, they drove more than 39% of total POS spend. (note: the mobile penetration noted in most industry studies is against the online banking customer base which is closer to 44%).

As for the new adopters of mobile banking during the course of the study, they significantly increased their volume and value of POS transactions. Within three months, new mobile users in credit unions increased monthly POS transactions by 19%. Bank clients came in at an increase of 46%, and, coincidentally, with a 46% increase in average transaction value – from $550 to $801 per month.

Moreover, their ACH transactions increased more than 30% after adoption.

Webinar
REGISTER FOR THIS FREE WEBINAR
Turbocharging Landing Page Success: Leveraging Advanced Analytics and AI Tools
How can you optimize your landing pages for success? The answer lies in harnessing AI-led solutions to deliver seamless, personalized user experiences. Learn more in this webinar from iQuanti.
WEDNESDAY, April 3rd AT 2:00 PM (ET)
Enter your email address

Debit_and_credit_card_(POS)_transactions

For established and new mobile users alike, the higher transaction volumes may be due to the ready availability of account balance information. Being able to check balances on the fly, at the point-of-sale, might allow more users to purchase with confidence.

Given the revenue-producing nature of debit/credit card transactions, the above increases alone are a strong indicator of the worth of mobile adoption. But mobile adoption appears to enhance cost savings as well.

Within three months of mobile adoption, credit union members decreased monthly in-branch transactions from an average of 4.4 to 3.0.

Mobile Banking Users Stay Longer

One learns in Marketing 101 that it’s less costly to retain than to replace a client. In the Fiserv study, it was found that attrition rates were lowest for mobile banking users when compared with online and branch-only users. In larger credit unions, members not enrolled in mobile banking tended to attrite at nearly three times the rate of enrolled members (13.4% vs. 4.9%). Bank branch-only customers were more than twice as likely to attrite than mobile banking users.

Attrition_rates _for_consumers_who_use_mobile_banking

Mobile Banking Users Generate More Revenue

Compared with branch-only consumers, mobile banking users generated higher average revenue in terms of fee, interest, and other income. This makes sense since mobile banking users own more products and conduct more transactions.

Revenues from credit union mobile users were 36% higher than from branch-only users. Mobile users from the banking organizations in the study generated 72% higher revenues compared to branch-only customers.

Why Promoting Mobile Banking Adoption is So Important

Simply offering mobile banking to customers and members is not enough. It is not like in the movie Field of Dreams where the ongoing theme was, “If you build it, they will come.” Ongoing marketing around the consumer benefits of mobile banking is required if financial institutions want to grow adoption and engagement.

The potential benefits to banks and credit unions? Based on a 30% adoption rate and incremental gains found in the study, Fiserv projected one-year returns for the credit unions and banks that participated in the study.

On average, a credit union could pick up an extra $1.6 million a year in incremental revenue, along with the interchange fees from up to $8 million more a year in incremental point-of-sale purchases. At the same time, it could cut member attrition by up to 20%.

On average, a bank could gain up to $2 million a year in incremental revenue, along with the interchange fees from up to $38 million more a year in incremental point-of-sale purchases. And banks could reduce customer attrition by up to 12%.

These revenue benefits don’t even take into account that credit unions and banks alike could achieve significant cost savings from decreased branch traffic.

Coke Bottles and Mobile Devices

Much like the Coke bottle in the movie The Gods Must Be Crazy, mobile banking came into our lives relatively recently and almost overnight became indispensible. Fortunately, while there was only one Coke bottle in the movie, there is no limit to the number of customers a financial institution can enroll in mobile banking.

The potential for increased revenue, decreased attrition, and lower overhead costs is real, and the dollar value speaks for itself. Financial institutions should be glad that customers demand mobile services, as mobile users are among the most valuable customers and members.

This article was originally published on . All content © 2024 by The Financial Brand and may not be reproduced by any means without permission.