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Boeing Employees Credit Union (BECU) Pitches 7.50% APR Savings/Checking Account

By Jim Bruene on April 1, 2007 5:22 PM | 5 Comments

One of my favorite Sunday pastimes is seeing which bank dropped $25,000+ on a front-section full-page Seattle Times print ad. Over the years, there have been fewer and fewer sightings. And usually, it's BofA, Key Bank, or US Bank making the bold print buys in our market.

But today, Boeing Employees Credit Union, or BECU as they refer to themselves now that they allow anyone in the state to join, bought the entire page A10 and used most of it to say:

Shouldn't you profit from your bank rather than the other way around?

Bottom 1/3 of BECU print ad in Sunday Seattle Times 1 April 2007That's an attention-grabbing headline, especially in Seattle with plenty of anti-big-business sentiment. But it won't drive sales unless the CU can back it up with tangible benefits. And it does, with a large reverse-type rate offer for Member Advantage Savings & Checking (bottom section of print ad at right):

7.50% APY on your first $500  

Analysis
This is a great approach for going after mainstream consumers. Why?

  • They bash the banks to gain attention, always a popular strategy...even the banks do it (see here).
  • They don't waste space, or risk customer confusion, by going into detail about their credit union status; in fact they don't even use the words credit union, other than the CU in their name, instead using the generic "bank" in the headline. 
  • They pay 2%+ more on savings than even the highest-rate online bank...but it's only on the first $500. Now that won't bring in the $25,000 deposits, but it will bring in new checking accounts and relationships.
  • The extra 6% BECU pays out on the $500 balance, only costs them $30 per year...a small price to pay for a new relationship, which requires an electronic connection, either direct deposit, online bill pay, or electronic statements (of course, the Seattle Times ad drives the acquisition price up considerably).
  • The same headshot of "Cyrena S." runs in the lower-left of the print ad and in the middle of BECU's homepage (see screenshot below), nicely tying the website to the print-ad strategy.

BECU homepage with 7.50% Member Advantage pitch

A few areas could be improved, mostly within the Web portion of the call to action: 

  • The online signup option is buried at the bottom of the Member Advantage landing page (here), and uses a generic link and understated small maroon button, rather than the large red/orange "Apply Now" graphic used by most retail financial institutions. 
  • The online app appears in a small popup window and is an old school all-text version powered by uMonitor. If you want to drive online sales, the application should be more user friendly and graphic-rich. Despite the shortcomings of CashEdge's online application design (see here), its layout is easier to follow. 
  • The go-to rate after the first $500 is just 1.75%; that's a bit less than one would expect from someone spending so much money pitching "earn more" in 48-point type.
  • Although BECU appears as the top organic result in Google searches involving the credit union's actual name, it doesn't show up on the first page for generic searches for "seattle savings accounts" or even "seattle credit unions." BECU should consider supporting its print buy with search engine advertising.  
  • The 7.50% advertised APY is identical to the 7.50% APR used by US Bank to promote its home equity product a few pages earlier in the same Sunday Seattle Times section. It might help to show a competitive comparison against other savings rates to emphasize that this is a fantastic DEPOSIT rate, not merely a competitive lending rate.
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Financial Mashups like Billmonk

By Jim Bruene on April 30, 2006 5:06 PM | 0 Comments

GreyalbumIn the musical world, a mashup combines music from one song with lyrics from another, often mixing two very different genres. One of the more famous examples is the Grey Album by DJ Danger Mouse that put words from Jay-Z's Black Album on top of chords from The Beatles White Album.

Programmers have their own definition: combining content seamlessly from two different sources. Kayak_mashupFor example, Kayak <kayak.com> is a powerful travel site that pulls price quotes out of hundreds of websites and displays them in tabular format and locates them visually on a Google Map (click on the inset to see a Las Vegas hotel search). 

In online finance, we have seen mashups from Yodlee, uMonitor, and others that marry account information from a number of sources to create an aggregated view. But the most successful financial mashup yet is PayPal, which put an email/Web interface in front of two established electronic payment mechanisms, ACH and MasterCard/Visa.

Who will launch the next successful mashup? There is quite a bit of activity in the payments space, many trying to mimic PayPal's success using a cell phone interface. For example Obopay and TextPayMe (NetBanker, April 26), and BillMyCell from Black Lab Mobile <blacklabmobile.com>.

Billmonk_logo_1Another company, BillMonk <billmonk.com> has created a Web-based system of sharing expenses designed for the work-hard, play-hard urban singles set. Users can send expenses to be shared to their account at BillMonk using text messages, and then log in later to finalize the payment split and let everyone know who owes what (see example right). The company doesn't yet facilitate the actual payment, but they are looking for a partner to power the financial transactions.

Billmonk_sharedbillWe're still not convinced the market for "splitting expenses among friends" is big enough to sustain one, let alone four service providers (see NetBanker, April 26). But we ARE sure the enterprising founders of BillMonk will find a niche somewhere in the payments space.

BillMonk has added more new features to its bill-sharing platform in the past four months than most companies implement in four years. It reminds us of the pace at another small payments company that we were watching closely six years ago as they morphed from a closed PDA-to-PDA payment system to the primary platform for eBay buyers (see Online Banking Report #54 for a view of PayPal in the early days).

To get an idea of the pace at BillMonk, read a few entries from their blog <billmonk.wordpress.com>. Then realize that this is not the work of a vast team of programmers, PR agents, and marketers. It's just two guys in a Seattle apartment who are also answering customer queries, paying the bills, building the website, taking out the trash, and talking to reporters (see the profile in the Seattle Times, April 24).

Action Items
My advice for financial institutions:

  1. Hire these guys
  2. If that's not practical, then behave like them; constantly improving your website and to the extent you control it, your online banking and bill pay system

I will bring you an update on the company as soon as I can corner one or both of the founders in a coffee shop.

--JB

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