New Fiserv Study Quantifies the ROI of Mobile Banking
- Study of 17 banks and credit unions analyzed product usage, transaction frequency and revenue generated prior to and after mobile banking adoption
- Analysis shows mobile banking adoption is associated with lower attrition, use of more products, and an increase in transactions, resulting in increased revenue
- Promoting adoption and use of mobile banking is essential for financial institutions to maximize return on investment
The white paper is available for download at fiserv.com/mobile-roi-study.
The study included eight credit unions and nine banks and evaluated data from more than 67,000 mobile banking users. Researchers looked specifically at the actions of mobile banking users three months before and three months after they started using the service.
In addition to affirming that mobile banking use is associated with lower attrition, the study revealed three key insights:
Increased Transaction Frequency — In the three months after adopting mobile banking, users increased the number of debit and credit card transactions, ATM transactions and ACH transactions they made. This is significant because many transactions generate revenue, such as interchange revenue from card transactions.
Higher Average Revenue — Mobile banking users generate more revenue than nonusers due in part to the fact that they own more products and conduct more transactions. For credit unions, members that use mobile banking generate 36 percent more revenue compared to branch-only members. Banks saw 72 percent higher revenue from mobile users compared to branch-only customers.
"The financial institutions in this study are seeing tangible revenue
from mobile banking," said
The white paper shares guidance for financial institutions on how to drive mobile banking adoption and usage, such as showing how the service is relevant to peoples' lifestyles and engaging staff as advocates.
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Research Methodology
The mobile ROI study spanned 12 months and involved eight credit unions
and nine banks of varying asset sizes. It compared product usage,
transaction frequency, attrition rates and revenue generated among three
groups: mobile banking users, online users and branch-only users. For
mobile banking users, data was from those consumers who had active
engagement, including bill pay, person-to-person payments, transfers or
deposits, through the mobile channel.
The study was conducted by
About
FISV-G
View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20160119005842/en/
Media Relations:
Director, Public Relations
678-375-4039
ann.cave@fiserv.com
Additional
Contact:
Director, Public Relations
678-231-3443
elizabeth.mcmillan@fiserv.com
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