Wednesday, June 09, 2021
New research conducted by EY and commissioned by CO-OP Financial Services finds that 88 percent of credit union members are now digitally engaged with their financial services providers. However, those providers are not necessarily credit unions and banks.
The CU Payments Outlook shows instead that the pandemic dramatically accelerated a years-long trend towards the fragmenting of consumers’ primary financial relationships (PFR). The study of 3,000 credit union members and prospects found fintechs to be the greatest cause of consumers’ willingness to bank with multiple providers.
The study outlining opportunities for credit union growth is now available to all credit union leaders at no charge via CU Payments Outlook, a CO-OP white paper accessible at https://insights.co-opfs.org/content/cu-paymentsoutlook.
“There is a great opportunity for credit unions to build on their trust and gain more member engagement and growth through a strategic focus on payments,” said Todd Clark, President/CEO for CO-OP. “That is why CO-OP is investing heavily in an advanced digital ecosystem that helps credit unions bring elegant, personalized payments solutions to market quickly in alignment with post-pandemic expectations.”
The fast-advancing service model from fintech competitors means credit unions have to revisit their experience and loyalty strategies to ensure they are on-par with modern consumer demands. The research indicates payments, reimagined and reenergized for today, are the mechanism to achieve this necessary evolution. That’s because payments products like contactless, P2P and mobile wallets are at the heart of transactional relationships, driving multiple engagements every day. In fact, payments represent 80 percent of a consumer’s interaction with their financial provider.
“Nearly 9 in 10 credit union members are now completely comfortable meeting their financial needs via digital channels, and notably, with non-traditional providers,” said Nikhil Lele, Financial Services Digital & Customer Growth Leader, EY Americas. “A lot of this is due to COVID-era insistence on remote, contactless and friction-free financial services. Consumers saw how quickly businesses can pivot to digital when they’re motivated. The resulting expectation for rapid, on-demand innovation is here to stay.”
The survey data supports the strategic concept that payments is the path to primacy. These insights and many more are explored further in the CU Payments Outlook:
“Being intentional about payments strategy calls for credit unions to consider the lifestyle of a member or prospective member, and that is a significant mindset shift,” said Samantha Paxson, Chief Experience Officer for CO-OP. “For decades, financial institutions – from major banks to small cooperatives – have been focused on the key milestones along a person’s life. While being there for life stage moments like buying a house is still important, it is no longer enough to cement PFR. Credit unions can gain significant market share of both members and prospects by investing in and offering lifestyle banking products, payments chief among them.”
Data-backed action steps recommended in the white paper are collated into three overarching strategies:
Access the CU Payments Outlook at no charge at https://insights.co-opfs.org/content/cu-paymentsoutlook.