| By Jim Bruene on October 7, 2009 2:06 PM | Comments (4) |
Most major financial institutions have been pushing estatements for several years (see previous coverage). The appeal of shaving $10 to $20 off the annual servicing cost for every account is an attractive payoff.
Yet, you rarely see estatement appeals elevated to the homepage. BB&T bucks convention with this attractive graphic with the big-three benefits: security, convenience, accessibility (see first screenshot). The green button leads to a landing page reiterating these three benefits plus adding the environmental message.
Bottom line: It's a good, educational effort. But with most consumers already aware of online statements, there's little motivation to change something that's worked fine for the past 10, 20, 30 or more years.
If you are serious about reducing paper and postage expense, give your customers a reason to change their behavior:
- Low-cost gifts, such as a pair of movie tickets, 2-for-1 meal, $10 Starbucks card, etc.
- Sweepstakes (one-time or ongoing; see Wells Fargo example below)
- Extra online services such as increased archives or an electronic vault
- Enhanced security guarantee
- Discounts on other services
But whatever you do, don't introduce a fee for paper statements unless you want to get T-Mobiled.
BB&T homepage promotes online statements (7 Oct 2009)
Access via Seattle IP address; we do not have any accounts at the bank
Landing page (link)
Wells Fargo $60,000 estatement sweepstakes landing page (link)
Note:
For more information, see our Online Banking Report: Lifetime Statement Archives (June 2005)
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I think it is time to eliminate statements as the default. For those who wish statements, maybe they can be sent with a fee, or attach a personal service for seniors who are not online. All others there is enough internet access now.
Statements are now the passbooks of 15 years ago. The arguments about seniors and customer disaffection drew that debate out too long.
Nothing beats cash: CU*Answers, a cooperative data processor in Grand Rapids owned by credit unions (and my employer), deposits 25 cents into each eStatement member's account automatically each month. The message is simple: we (the credit union) save money, and we are willing to share the savings with you. It is a monthly reminder, borrowed from Kroger and Safeway: "Today you saved $x.xx. Thank you for shopping with us."
I just need a BB&T iPhone app now.
Why this sudden emphasis on going paperless for statements? I am sure the environmental impact is negligible when compared to other places where paper is used. It only saves these banks some effort and cost. Otherwise are there any other more convincing justification?