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The Digital-First Future

The Digital-First Future
BFSI companies are aiming for better customer engagement and retention.
 
However, despite all the progress being made, the industry still faces challenges.

How innovative technologies, digital transformations, global customers, and changing expectations are rapidly changing the BFSI industry.

The past years have seen the banking, financial services, and insurance (BFSI) industry make impressive strides in its digital transformations. By focusing on improving and expanding digital services, with the customer experience at the forefront, BFSI companies are aiming for better customer engagement and retention.

This is being driven by technologies that enable fast scalability and maximum flexibility, such as the cloud and APIs, and that deliver a high amount of self-service, where artificial intelligence-driven solutions are leading the way. But, for all the progress being made, the industry still faces constant challenges. Especially when it comes to delivering an excellent customer experience that helps build trust.

As noted in ResearchandMarket.com’s Global BFSI Industry Trends Report: “Consumer trust is non-negotiable in this industry. The ability to deliver excellent customer experiences through mobile devices is crucial for survival; this means delivering seamless and effortless interactions and transactions regardless of the method or channel the customer has used to communicate each time they connect with a business.”

The need for such ‘seamless and effortless interactions’ has grown immensely during the past two years as the coronavirus pandemic’s lockdowns and social distancing have limited physical interactions, and as people increasingly adopt a digital lifestyle and ‘work from home’ becomes more widespread. Any organization not investing in a digital solution will quickly alienate their customers, whether individuals or other businesses.

The Bottom Line

Becoming a digital-driven organization has clear benefits. Customer acquisition can be cheaper and easier, you can quickly react to technological and market trends, and operations can be streamlined via software integration (for example, a sale via a POS system is made, it then automatically updates your inventory management system as your account system records the sale, then your customer management system updates your customer’s sale history). No manual intervention is necessary.

Most importantly, it helps BFSI organizations optimize the customer experience and directly engage with customers who expect to connect with businesses online 24/7. An essential requirement when fostering trust and building a positive customer experience.

A Changing of the Guard

Digital experiences are particularly expected by younger, digitally-native, generations who are now entering the workforce and making their own financial decisions.

Millennials, according to the World Data Lab, are expected to have ‘an aggregate annual income of over USD 4 trillion by 2030’. Gen-Z is right behind and by 2031 is expected to surpass millennials’ earning power.

Then add in the expected USD 68 trillion that millennials and Gen-Z will inherit from their Baby Boomer (and early Gen-X) parents. They have the potential to be the most wealthy generation in history.

These new consumers will expect nothing less than a seamless digital experience for their BFSI needs.

This, of course, isn’t to say that Gen-X and Baby Boomers are all living in the dark ages. Currently, Gen Xers have the ‘highest post-tax incomes and spend the most’. They also grew up during a time when technology began to embrace the online world. They’re tech-savvy, just not fully immersed like their children or younger brothers and sisters, and when online, their ‘activities are more driven by purpose and intent than casual browsing’.

It’s clear that digital is here to stay and will, over time, become the predominant means for customers to interact with BFSI organizations. For example, a FICO Consumer Digital Banking Survey found that ‘almost half (41 percent) of North American consumers are more likely to use digital means to open a financial account than a year ago, while almost a third (32 percent) are less likely to visit a branch to open a new account’.

The digital floodgates have opened, and they won’t close again.

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