BarCampBank Season: Four Alt-Banking Conferences Scheduled

imageWillingly attending an agenda-less (note 1) meeting of credit union enthusiasts, consultants, bloggers, fintech startups, and even the occasional banker, can be difficult to explain to your boss, let alone your spouse.

But if you want to improve your bank-geek cred
 and really who doesn’t
 the 2009 BarCampBank season begins in 10 days with two events in Europe. Then it’s back to the western United States with the second annual San Francisco BCB the last weekend of April (not coincidentally scheduled two days before our FinovateStartup so you can make both), and finally a new Vegas version the following weekend.

  • Feb. 14  BarCampBankLondon2 (12 registered, no bankers yet)
  • Feb. 16  BarCampBankMadrid (75 registered, with dozens of bankers, see note 2)
  • April 25/26 BarCampBankSF2 (the weekend before FinovateStartup on Tues., April 28)
  • May 2 BarCampBankVegas (organized by Robbie Wright and timed around the NACUSO convention) image
  • Notes:
    1. It’s not truly agenda-less; rather, there is no agenda ahead of time, it’s created on the fly by attendees (see inset, photo credit Thomas Barker).

    2. Re: BCB Madrid: Congratulations to our friend Jesus Perez Sanchez at Financial Red. It looks like he’s helped pull off the biggest BCB yet, and with great participation from bankers. It’s a trend I hope continues in the states.

    Mobile Banking Stats: 40% of Bank of America’s 2 million Mobile Bankers Use iPhone or iPod Touch

    image Bank of America has been making the rounds with the press touting the runaway success of its mobile banking solutions. Major stories ran in American Banker and The Wall Street Journal this week.

    The bank, with 29 million online banking users, reports numbers just shy of the 2-million mark in mobile. That’s up from one million early this summer (post here). While it’s still less than 10% of online banking customers, it’s an impressive number considering fewer than 4 million mobile banking households exist in the entire country (see note 1).

    Several other interesting stats from BofA:

    • More than 40% of active mobile bankers
       
      someone who’s logged in within the past 90 days
       
      use an iPhone or iPod touch. That’s about double the usage you’d expect given Apple’s 23% share of the U.S. installed smart phone base (note 2, 3).
    • The bank believes the mobile channel is driving some new business to the bank with 8% to 10% of mobile bankers, almost 200,000, having signed up for the service within 90 days of opening a BofA account (note 4).

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    Source: ChangeWave Research, survey of 3,800 cell phone users fielded Dec. 9 – 15, 2008 (link)

    Notes:
    1. See our latest Online Banking Report: Online & Mobile Forecast for more details.
    2. The 23% figure does not include iPod Touch.
    3. One other bank provided its usage numbers to the WSJ: Mississippi’s BankPlus reported 4,000 users with 60% of the usage (2,400) coming from iPhone users.
    4. That number doesn’t seem all that surprising. You’d expect new customers would be somewhat more likely to sign up for new delivery channels than the existing base. And given typical banking churn, 10% to 20% of a bank’s customer base are new every year.

    E*Trade Casts a Wide Social Net to Support the "Baby" Campaign

    image In my pre-Super Bowl post about E*Trade’s “baby” franchise, I wasn’t aware of several other ways the company is using social media to increase awareness:

    • Baby’s Twitter page (screenshot #1 below and note 1;): This is a new effort launched Jan. 22, the same day the 2009 outtakes clip was released into the wild via YouTube and press release. The baby Tweeted a few times on the days leading up to the game, and a few since, but the funniest part was the 26 game-day Tweets that actually incorporated real-time events into the script. There are only 650 followers today, but that’s up 150 since Monday morning  not a bad start for a low-cost marketing tool. 
    • Baby’s Facebook page (screenshot #2 below): Also launched around Jan. 22, the E*Trade baby Facebook page already has 3,825 fans. The commercials are posted along with a photo album. 

    The E*Trade homepage has also been used before and after the game to take advantage of interest in the baby ads. The baby dominated E*Trade’s homepage the day after the big game (see screenshot #3 below of the Monday morning homepage). 

    Lessons for financial institutions
    You don’t have to be a Super Bowl advertiser to use social media to support your advertising campaigns. Banks and credit unions of any size can use these relatively low-cost tactics.

    Here are the eight key support elements to consider for your next campaign:

       1. Press release
       2. Blog entries
       3. Facebook page
       4. Twitter stream
       5. YouTube page
       6. Homepage placement
       7. Landing page
       8. Google keyword buys (see screenshot #4 below)

    1. E*Trade baby Twitter page (link, 3 Feb. 2009)

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    2. E*Trade Facebook page
    (link, 3 Feb. 2009)

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    3. E*Trade homepage the morning after Super Bowl XVIII
    (2 Feb. 2009)

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    4. E*Trade is running Google ads on searches for “etrade baby”
    (3 Feb. 2009, 6PM Pacific)

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    Note:
    1. Thanks Jeffry Pilcher for the Twitter tip.

    2. See our Online Banking Report: Bank 2.0 for more ideas.

    FinovateStartup 2009 Conference Participants Announced

    imageFinovateStartup09, our annual springtime technology event in the San Francisco Bay area, is just three months away. Today, we announced the first wave of young companies committed to participate on April 28.

    More companies are in the pipeline, and when all is said and done we expect more than 50 startups to be on hand to demonstrate the latest in online and mobile financial services and technology.

    The Finovate format combines fast-paced demos (no PowerPoint!) with extensive networking where you can meet the start-up founders along with influential industry executives, press corps, and analysts. To get a taste for the event, take a look at videos of past demos.

    Because we hadn’t named any companies until today, we’ve extended the Super Early Bird registration deadline until this Friday, Feb. 6 (register here). See you in San Francisco.

    Finovate Startup 2009 lineup (as of 2 Feb. 2009):

    E*Trade Rides the Popularity of its “Baby” Super Bowl Ad

    image16 Even before the next installment of its popular talking baby runs later today during the Super Bowl, E*Trade has already scored.

    Through advance publicity and select print ads highlighting the “baby URL” <etrade.com/baby> (note 1), the online broker/banker has already landed more than 2 million views of the outtakes for today’s Super Bowl ad. And the clip was posted to YouTube just nine days ago (22 Jan. 2009). 

    The E*Trade outtake clip (below) currently ranks 13th on the most-viewed videos of the month at YouTube, an extremely high level of popularity for a corporate-sponsored clip unrelated to music or film.

    Demonstrating the power of making YouTube’s most-viewed list, the E*Trade outtake clip is only 100,000 views shy of surpassing the Trading Baby clip from the 2008 Super Bowl, a video that’s been online for a full year.

    Here’s the view count as of 9:30 AM Pacific today (Feb. 1):

    2.2 million   Trading baby from the 2008 Super Bowl (posted 1 Feb. 2008)

    2.1 million   2009 outtakes (posted 22 Jan. 2009)

    1.6 million   Banking baby from the 2008 Super Bowl (posted 1 Feb. 2008)

    270,000      Mobile  baby (posted 30 June 2008)

    All clips are posted on the company’s official YouTube page (see below).

    E*Trade’s YouTube channel (link, 1 Feb. 2009)

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    E*Trade “baby” landing page six hours before the 2009 Super Bowl
    (link, 1 Feb. 2009)

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    Note:
    1. The E*Trade baby teaser ad ran in the 31 Jan. 2009 Weekend Wall Street Journal. The quarter-page ad, one of only six ads in the entire paper, ran on page W6 (West Coast edition).

    Compete Reports an 8% Monthly Increase in Online Credit Card Applications, But 23% Decline from 2008

    imageFor card issuers, the latest online application activity is is either good news, bad news, or neither since Compete tracks only applications submitted, not approvals. This following chart was presented in its webinar today. You can request the entire deck at the bottom of its blog post.

    According to Compete, there were more than 12 million credit card shoppers in the U.S. in December, up 6% from November and down 11% since a year ago. Of the shoppers, about 20%, or 2.4 million submitted an application. That was an 8% increase from Nov., but a 23% decline from a year ago. 

    But Compete has no way to measure whether the card applications it tracks are approved. Recent data from Lending Club shows that less than 10% of its online consumer loan applications were approved in Q4. The big credit card issuers probably do a bit better by driving creditworthy borrowers to their sites via direct mail and online advertising.

    Assuming approval rates of 20%, the 2.4 million credit apps in December resulted in about a half-million new accounts.  

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    Source: Compete, 29 Jan. 2009

    New Online Banking Report Available: Ten-Year Online & Mobile Banking Forecast and 2008 Recap

    image The latest Online Banking Report: 2009 to 2018 Online & Mobile Banking Forecast is now available. It was mailed yesterday to subscribers. It’s also available online here. There’s no charge for current subscribers; others may access it immediately for US$495.

    The report includes our latest 10-year online banking and bill pay forecast. This year we again bumped our long-term usage forecast to 6%, up from 3%, to reflect a more robust outlook for adoption, primarily from mobile-only users. For example, we are now projecting 71 million U.S. households banking and/or paying bills online by 2013 compared to last year’s forecast predicting 66 million for the same period.

    Mobile banking (see note 1) access is included in the overall online banking numbers, but it’s also shown as a separate line item. Based on the new open-platform standards ushered in by the iPhone and App Store, we increased both our short- and long-term adoption forecast by 10% to 20%. For example, by year-end 2011 we now predict there will be 18 million U.S. mobile banking households. A year ago we forecasted 16 million.

    We also included a revised forecast for U.S. peer-to-peer lending. We cut back our short-term estimates by more than 50% due to regulatory and economic constraints on the business. A full 10-year forecast is included in the report.

    Top ten innovations & trends of 2008
    The report also includes a summary of the top ten innovations of the past year including the surge in mobile banking demand and the marked increase in traffic to personal finance speciality sites such as Mint and SmartyPig.  

    Note:
    1. A mobile banking household is one where someone has used a mobile device to access bank or credit card account info within the past six months. Includes text-based queries, but not simple broadcast alerts.

    neoSaej’s MoneyAisle Generates $100 Million in Deposits in Q4 2008

    image It’s so refreshing to have some real numbers to go on, even if they are self reported. Aside from Prosper, Lending Club (here), and most recently SmartyPig (here), few of the startups we track provide meaningful metrics on their operations. That’s why we use Compete website traffic estimates as a proxy for success.

    Yesterday, MoneyAisle, the reverse-deposit-auction marketplace from neoSaej, released the following results for fourth quarter 2008 (press release): 

    • $1.65 billion in auctions run by consumers, up three-fold from Q3 2008 (note 1)
    • $100 million in deposits generated

    That’s not a lot, but we can make a few estimates from that info (note 2):

    • Assuming 80 active bank partners, the average take per bank in Q4 was $1.25 million
    • But applying the 80/20 rule to those results means that 16 banks generated about $80 million in deposits, or $5 million each
    • And conversely, the remaining 64 banks brought in just $300,000 each
    • Assuming the average deposit balance auctioned was $20,000, five thousand separate auction winners funded a deposit
    • Assuming a commission of $37 per funded auction (note 2), neoSaej would have generated $185,000 in commission income in Q4, this is in addition to license fees and monthly maintenance fees

    And for those of you who still want traffic numbers, MoneyAisle’s website usage (monthly unique visitors) has been trending upwards after suffering a post-launch dip in November. In December, visitors totaled just under 20,000. 

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    Bottom line: It’s a promising start for the company which earned an OBR Best of the Web this summer, was picked by the audience as Best of Show in October’s Finovate (video here), and was recently chosen as a top-10 innovation of the year in our most recent Online Banking Report (here).

    When MoneyAisle adds integrated online account opening (powered by Andera), results should be even stronger. 

    Notes:
    1. Deposit-generated total is 6% of total auctions run, because consumers are not obligated to make the deposit after they run the auction.

    2. My speculative estimates, not provided from the company.

    3. We outlined the company in a June blog post and in the pages of our Online Banking Report on New Models for Lead Generation and Online Banking Report on Growing Deposits in the Digital Age

    Out of the Inbox: U.S. Bank Pushes E-statements with "Go Green with Online Statements"

    imageOn Friday, I received a marketing message from U.S. Bank attempting to convince me to turn off my paper statements and adopt online statements. In 2007 (here), I wrote about its similar effort at login. 

    The graphic design and layout are wonderful with splashes of green throughout and a peaceful, sunny forest scene. It’s a nice bit of branding for the bank. So far, so good.

    However, in terms of direct-marketing effectiveness, where the goal is to get the reader to take action, the message leaves a lot to be desired.

    Turning off your paper statement is a relatively major change in behavior (previous post), so readers need clear information and/or incentives to move to less-costly paperless delivery. This message is lacking in both.

    Benefit statements
    Here are the supposed user benefits touted in the email:

    Online statements help you:

    – Deter fraud
    – Reduce clutter
    – Manage accounts
    – Get real-time updates

    Let’s look at the benefits from the standpoint of the end-user:

    • Deter fraud: Can the average reader make the leap to how online statements will cut down on fraud? I doubt it. This bullet point needs more detail.
    • Reduce clutter: This is pretty self explanatory. But do people really think of their monthly bank statement as “clutter.” Some do, but it’s not a particularly compelling argument.
    • Manage accounts: This wording leaves a lot to be desired. How does turning off your paper statements help you manage your accounts better? Presumably, those who sign up for online statements have more info available online. If that’s the case, the bank needs to say so.
    • Get real-time updates: What do online statements have to do with real-time updates?  This is probably meant as a generic benefit for banking online, but it’s out of place here.

    On the other hand the environmental benefits are much more tangible. However, for the cynical reader (and there are a LOT of cynical bank customers these days), there should be footnotes explaining the derivation or source of the green benefits. For example, at the bottom of the message there’s prominent claim:

    Save nearly 7 pounds of paper yearly by Going Green.

    That sounds impressive, but if you think about, it doesn’t jive with experience. Unless you get your checks back, most statements come in at under an ounce. And that includes a significant amount of bank advertising flyers. So how do we get from 12 ounces saved annually to the 7 lbs cited in the email? Readers will never know because there is no additional info available to substantiate the claim. You would think the bank would explain the claims on the landing page, but it has even less info (see below).

    Call to action/incentives
    The message includes tangible, albeit unsubstantiated, environmental benefits which are compelling. However, customers know that all these benefits spell significant cost savings for the financial institution. For some customers, especially of  member-owned credit unions, that may be enough to get them to take action.

    However, many customers are going to feel this is a pretty one-sided deal. If they are going to give up the comfort of their paper statements, there should be something in it for them.

    That’s why we recommend an incentive of some sort. It could be a periodic giveaway, a one-time thank-you gift ($5 at Amazon), or an extra online benefit they wouldn’t otherwise get, such as long-term archives, premium customer service or a free-overdraft card. For example, Key Bank offered a low-cost and effective incentive in the fall (post here). Chase had an even better promotion in 2007 (post here).

    Landing page
    Granted, there isn’t much room in a one-page HTML message. So it’s understandable that the benefits are abbreviated. Usually, a marketer will use the landing page to expand on the key features and benefits. However, U.S. Bank’s landing page offers little additional help (see screenshot below).

    The page doesn’t connect back to the email in any meaningful way. Benefits are neither reiterated, nor explained. Within the page, a brief explanation tells how to enroll, but surprisingly the Enroll Today link on the right has nothing to do with estatements and leads to a page explaining online access options.

    Grades

    • Design: A
    • Copywriting: B+
    • Content: C+ (could be A- if benefits were explained on the landing page or FAQ)
    • Landing page: D
    • Overall effectiveness: A- for brand building; C- for driving estatement enrollment

    U.S. Bank email marketing message, “Go Green with Online Statements” (23 Jan. 2009)

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    U.S. Bank landing page for online statements (link, 27 Jan. 2009)

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    Note: See our Online Banking Report on Email Marketing and Online Banking Report on Emessaging & Statements for more information.

    There’s Another Mint in NYC

    imageIf you live in NYC, you may have seen one of the “other Mint’s” Smart Cars zipping through the streets. If you are familiar with online personal finance, you’re forgiven if you thought the car was an advertising vehicle for Mint.com. 

    But no, this Mint is a car-sharing startup similar to Zipcar. It uses a Smart Car for its signature vehicle (inset), and also offers other options including a Mercedes and SUV. So far, the company operates only in Manhattan. Since Mint.com is obviously taken, the car-sharing company is using <drivemint.com>.

    imageMint.com, the online personal finance manager, should consider teaming up with car-sharing Mint. It would be great advertising for both if they can find a way to deal with the brand confusion. 

    Better yet, a bank or credit union should team up with Mint or other car-sharing companies to use branches for car distribution/parking. Chicago’s Bridgeview Bank (press release) offers a parking spot for the popular I-GO car-sharing service.

    Bank customers could receive discounts and/or free memberships to the sharing services with costs billed automatically to the bank’s credit or debit card. Another option: free car rental time could be used as a reward in lieu of frequent flyer miles.

    Promoting fuel-efficient cars with shared ownership is an interesting marketing vehicle and a good way to position your brand as socially aware and green.

    Car-sharing Mint homepage (27 Jan. 2009)

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    35 Financial Tech Companies Already on Board to Participate in FinovateStartup 2009

    imageOne month ago we announced the 2009 version of our Finovate Startup Conference. Since then, we’ve been busy talking to FinTech startups from around the world. We are glad (and a bit relieved) to announce that we already have 35 committed to demo at the event. There is still an enormous amount of activity and energy in the banking and financial technology sector (note 1).

    We are several months out from the deadline, so we expect in excess of 50 startups, along with several hundred bankers, investors and other industry execs to convene April 28 at the UCSF Mission Bay Conference Center (note 2).

    While last year’s FinovateStartup was dominated by social-media plays (see logos below), this year we have more diversity, with companies from the following categories:

    • Alt payments
    • Financial shopping/comparison tools
    • Investment management/tools
    • Mobile banking & payments
    • iPhone/Android applications, personal financial management/tools
    • Peer-to-peer lending
    • Personal credit management tools
    • Other technologies

    Participating companies will be named beginning Feb. 1, but you can save by reserving a ticket now.

    Super-early-bird prices that are easy on the budget
    We’ve tried to make the conference as affordable as possible recognizing that travel and conference budgets are under constraints. You still have nine days left to snag super-early-bird tickets for $695. Current Online Banking Report subscribers, including anyone in the same company as an existing subscriber, can grab tickets for even less, just $445 each until Jan. 31 (note 3).

    Attendees may register here. More information on the event is here.

    FinTech companies interested in participating/demoing should email Eric Mattson .


    FinovateStartup 2008 presenters
    (videos of all 2008 demos are here)

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    Notes:
    1. See our post, “Why financial technology still matters,” here.
    2. The venue is about two miles south of the San Francisco financial district.
    3. If you don’t know if your company subscribes to Online Banking Report, email [email protected] to find out. If qualified, we’ll email your subscriber discount code to you.

    Bank of America’s Second Blog Supports Mobile Banking

    image When researching yesterday’s post on BofA’s iPhone app, I searched Google for “Bank of America mobile banking” and ended up at the bank’s mobile banking news blog (see screenshot below).

    This is the second blog the bank has launched in recent months. The first supports its MIT Center for Future Banking (post here).   

    While purists may claim this latest effort is not really a blog because there are no community features such as comments, it’s updated infrequently (5 posts in 3 months, see note 1) and appears purely promotional in nature. The bank doesn’t even refer to it as a blog. The official title is: Mobile Banking Media Center for Bank of America.

    But it’s laid out like a blog. The content is arranged in reverse chronological postings, with categories/tagging/permalinks. The variety of content includes YouTube videos, and you can subscribe via RSS feeds.

    That’s a blog to me, and a very good one at that. While the core audience consists of press and analysts, it’s a great resource for anyone interested in the bank’s mobile offerings. And as my search yesterday proved, Google has rewarded it with a high organic result, the first position on my search. That can potentially save the bank hundreds of thousands of dollars in search-engine advertising.

    Bottom line: Call it what you will, but BofA demonstrates one of the most effective uses of the blog-like format: supporting PR and educational efforts for a new strategic effort (mobile banking) in an easy-to-follow and easy-to-administer format (see note 2).

     Bank of America mobile banking blog (21 Jan 2009)

    Notes:
    1. There are five posts on the homepage, but if you drill into the top categories, you’ll find some older press releases.

    2. For more ideas, see our Online Banking Report on Bank 2.0 Techniques

    3. BofA’s new Blackberry app is shown at the top of this post.