Showing posts with label debit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debit. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

The Power of 5


The Good News:Most everyone who walks in your front door needs more of your products!

Nearly all adults have a need for AT LEAST 5 different product categories … 

We call this the Power of 5:
  1. Checking:The “spend” account.
  2. Access: Ways to get to their money.  All electronic, plastic, and co-op tools.
  3. Savings:The short-term emergency account.
  4. Loans:Home, auto, credit card…
  5. Investments:CD, IRA, Trust, Insurance, etc.

The Bad News:Only 43% of consumers who purchased an additional banking product did so with their PFI.*

As you look at your 2012 budget, priorities and objectives, ask yourself one question:

Do you have at least 5 products in every household?

A focus on your existing customer/member base will be more cost effective, will yield better results and will decrease attrition.


* J.D. Power & Associates report


MarketMatch is a full-service marketing consulting firm, dedicated to the credit union and community banking community.  We utilize knowledge-based strategies to help you FOCUS on the efforts that will generate MOMENTUM and yield the greatest RESULTS for your bottom line.


Monday, March 29, 2010

Sell to the Benefit - Debit Card & Online Banking

When your customers use cash, the ability to track it seems to go up in smoke!

But, when they use a debit card for everyday purchases, they can track every penny right from their home computer using online banking.

Your customers can better track how much they spend on coffee, restaurants, gas, or anything at all ... and get a better handle on their budget.

And you will enjoy more loyal customers with 2 additional key products ... thanks to basic product bundling and selling to the benefit, rather than the feature.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Smells Like Teen Spending

I was painting my deck and fence yesterday with some high school students that my wife recruited (one benefit of having a high school teacher as a spouse is that you are never at a loss for good baby sitters and cheap physical labor). As we were painting, one the girls whipped out her cell phone and started to hold a very public conversation with her friend about borrowing $10 so that she can put a Homecoming dress on layaway (“Borrow” $10?!?! I’m about to pay you much more than that in cash!)

That’s my point. Here is a teenage girl, an hour away from cash income, and she’s already working a “loan” to cover her spending. This is worse than a payday loan – it’s a post-payday loan.

In reality, aren’t these teens a fantastic market for us to target?
- Many have ATM/Debit cards
- Too many have credit cards
- They have nothing but DISPOSABLE income

But while targeting teens for checking and credit cards, I feel we have a responsibility to help them become more fiscally sound banking customers too! A few ideas came to mind as I lay in bed last night pondering this subject:
- Why not offer a special low balance, low interest credit card for teens. Too many companies take advantage of teens with 20%+ interest rates. If a card only has a $500-$1,000 limit, where’s the risk vs. the gain of building great relationships at a young age?
- Why not make students pass a written test about saving and credit before credit or debit cards are approved? If nothing else, it would help them to think about money in a new way and would differentiate our efforts in the minds of the student’s parents (and don’t we want to be hero’s in their eyes?)
- Many of us sponsor school activities, but how many of us really leverage them? Why not negotiate to hold a student focus group at the school. Use it to learn:
. - What percentage of students has a checking account?
. - Did they simply choose their parents bank or credit union?
. - Do they understand how interest works on credit cards
. - What features are they looking for (text updates, online banking, etc.)

I’ll have these students back tonight to finish the painting; maybe I’ll hold my own teen focus group and get back a little more for my investment than a beautiful back yard.

Cheers.