The number of people using mobile banking services has jumped from under 10,000 to 120,000 in two years. While the trend is growing, lack of awareness of services, apart from perceived security issues, are inhibiting faster takeoff
It was clear at the start itself—that this would be a
battle focussed not on technology, but on the mindset of the target audience.
Over
two
years after the launch of mobile banking services in the country, that bridge
has been reached… and many are beginning to walk those cautious steps across
it. Yes, the usage of mobile banking services is increasing, and fast—against
Dataquest’s estimated user base of under 10,000 for mobile banking services in
2000, there are over 120,000 today who SMS from their mobiles to do their
banking.
But before you assume that things are hot and moving on this
front, check out the catch—even this number of 120,000 represents only 1% of
the overall mobile user base. Also, a majority of those who do use mobile
banking services only do it to check account balance, with very few actually
conducting transactions. Reasons for this—lack of awareness of services
offered by banks, and equally important, a perceived issue of security and
confidentiality. Clearly, banks have not done enough to push their bouquet of
mobile banking services. Even our survey—despite targeting a respondent
profile that would bring in more positive answers than negative (see
Methodology), threw up very low usage numbers.
Which
option would you prefer—Mobile
or online Banking?
Base:
360
Source:
DATAQUEST
Also, e-commerce as a medium of purchasing and transacting
has not really caught on, and the basket of mobile banking offerings is, in
itself, very limited. The good news—the technology backbone is in place, and
getting better. There’s CDMA, there’s GSM. Forget their battles on the
mobile telephony front—from the consumer’s point of view, he never had it so
good.
"The recent price cuts are also likely to help,"
say banking experts, adding that this will lead to "increasing willingness
to move on to mobiles, and therefore, to the value-added services that most
operators offer today". If you have a head that likes numbers, then get a
load of this—Cellular Operators’ Association of India figures show a growth
in subscriber base from 700,000 in December 1997 to over 1 crore in December 2002…
that’s growth of over 1300%!
Base: 95 respondents
aware of m-banking services
CLEAR
MISMATCH BETWEEN awareness and usage:
On this base of 95 respondents who were aware of m-banking services,
only 24% (or 23 respond-ents), were actual users of these services.
And given the overall sample size of 360, this usage number amounted
to around 6%. Among these users, "checking of account
balance" scored high, followed by requests for chequebooks and
mini-statements. While the 6% user rate may seem high, the sample
selected for the survey was ‘A’ class—people with a higher
awareness of (and access to) services available. If the spread of
the survey were to be expanded to smaller towns, the rate would
possibly drop to 1-2%. However, banks offering these services say
numbers are growing, with the biggest draw being balance enquiries.
And bankers are punching away at their calculators and
beginning to develop futuristic grins while driving daily to their banks—even
if 1% of today’s mobile phone base were to use their services, that’s a
total number of around 120,000. Factor in a similar number within the year for
CDMA users (assuming policy changes allow service providers in this space to
offer SMS, as Reliance Infocomm is already promising), and you have a total
mobile banking user base of a very healthy 240,000 (our survey points to
an awareness rate of 26%, a usage rate of 7% on the total respondent base of
360.
As mentioned, the sample was skewed toward upmarket,
well-to-do people in the metros, and a move toward smaller towns and cities
would bring that percentage down radically.
Given such increasing penetration in India and across the
globe, it’s not hard to understand why m-commerce is a hot subject today.
According to research firm Ovum, mobile commerce is currently pegged at a little
over $5 billion worldwide and is expected to grow to over $35 billion by 2007.
Others like Forrester Research estimate the same at $22 billion by 2005, while
Frost & Sullivan expect this market to touch $24 billion in the same period.
And banking is going to be a major benefactor of the same. According to studies
by some global firms, one of the most used services for mobile commerce would be
mobile banking—with services like transfers, balance and trading bringing in
the revenues for mobile bankers.
M-Banking:
The Services Bouquet
ICICI
Bank
HDFC
Bank
IDBI
Bank
HSBC
Bank
of America
Citibank
ABN
Amro
Balance
enquiry
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
Last few
transactions
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
Cheque
payment status
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
Stop
payment of cheques
ü
Statement
request
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
ü
Cheque book
request
ü
ü
ü
So what is the scenario like in India? Barring a few private
banks—ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, IDBI Bank—and a few MNC entities—Citibank,
ABN Amro, Stanchart and Hongkong Bank—few others offer a wide portfolio of
mobile services. Public sector banks do not figure prominently in this picture
yet. But the number of users is growing. Says CN Ram, HDFC Bank’s head of IT—"We
have 1.75 lakh registered users for mobile banking services today. And we are
hitting about 4,000 transactions per day."
"We
have 1.75 lakh registered users for mobile banking services today.
And we are already hitting 4,000 transactions per day"
CN
Ram, IT chief, HDFC Bank
IDBI’s CTO Neeraj Bhai echoes
the sentiment, "Over 12% of our Internet banking users use our mobile
banking services as well."
So much for the experts… how does the average man on the
street react to the specter of mobile banking? A few netizens and a segment of
the general public were posed this question in a recent report by Webscribes.
Their answers were, to say the least, a mixed bag. "I have heard about
mobile banking, but it sounds a little too far fetched for me at the
moment," said one. An IT pro, a self-confessed Net banker, replied,
"Waiting for it, I’m sure it will take the world by storm." There
were others like this mechanical engineer, who had only this to say—"What
do you mean you can transact on the mobile? I didn’t know something like that
was even possible!" But there was a cool IT journalist who was a class unto
himself—"Balance enquiries on my mobile? I progressed behind those
primitive times over a year-and-a-half ago. I pay all my bills over my mobile
today. And no, there are no security issues, it’s all watertight and safe. And
those that are ignorant enough to think that their money will go away somewhere,
well, you can’t transfer money yet across accounts—only pay bills. So where
can your money go? At worst, you will end up pre-paying on your bills!"
Since every single one of our readers has to fit in one of these categories,
this article is for you.
Are you
aware of mobile banking and do you use it?
All
Delhi
Bangalore
Kolkata
Mumbai
Chennai
Ahmedabad
Trivandrum
Hyderabad
Pune
Chandigarh
Aware?
48
73
45
58
36
65
3
58
11
19
63
Use?
7
12
15
8
3
13
0
4
0
5
1
All figures in
percentage
Source: Voice &
Data
Sample
Size: 754 mobile phone subscribers across 10 cities
While
47.7% of Indian
cellphone users are aware of mobile banking services, only 7.4% of them
actually use the facilities. The level of awareness was highest in Delhi
(72.8%), followed by 65% in Chennai and 63.4% in Chandigarh. Cellphone
users in Ahmedabad, Hyderabad and Pune were the least aware, with
awareness levels of 3.4%, 11% and 18.5%, respectively. Also, while none of
the respondents reported using the facility in Ahmedabad and Hyderabad,
Pune showed a much higher usage trend—5.3%. Interestingly, despite a #3
position in terms of awareness, Chandigarh was much below in the usage
table, with a hit ratio of only 0.6%.
Mobile devices and the cost of technology are also coming
down fast, and this has been making will ownership and access both viable and
affordable. Many banks now have a built-in delivery mechanism that offers
services and 24x7 access. Unlike Internet banking that is PC-restricted, mobile
banking provides banks with an unparalleled opportunity to reach customers in an
unrestricted environment. Better-integrated customer relationship channel for
better service is what these banks believe in. Says Neeraj Bhai, CTO of IDBI
Bank: "We believe in "customer-managed relationships" rather than
customer relationship management (CRM). The bottomline is to make all services
available through all channels, so that the customer does not face any problems
and manages his relationship with the Bank through the channel of this
choice."
Have you heard about mobile banking?
Base:
360 IT industry and corporate users of mobile phones and banks
offering M-banking
Source:
DATAQUEST
Given
the profile of the
people surveyed, it’s no surprise that over 26% of the
sample had heard about mobile banking services. Dataquest did
a mix of 60:40 (non-IT: IT people) in the NCR region. As many
private/MNC bankers cater to the IT industry, awareness about
mobile banking services was higher among ‘IT people’. HDFC
Bank’s CN Ram agreed—"We have 1.75 lakh registered
users for mobile banking services. And we are hitting 4,000
transactions per day."
Would
you like to use mobile banking services?
Base:
265 respondents not aware of m-banking services Source:
DATAQUEST
While
awareness remains at
26%, people are keen to try out mobile banking. 63% of the
respondents evinced interest in the services. Given the
convenience factor—the fact that mobile banking can be used
from anywhere in the world as long as one can send and receive
SMS’—most were interested. Since m-commerce is still about
the core virtues of mobile communication, issues like
mobility, any-time access and ease of usage emerged as the
driving factors in the ongoing year.
No wonder then, banks are making their infrastructure
"mobile-enabled". While, some like HDFC Bank are riding on their
existing infrastructure of Netbanking, others like the IDBI Bank are making
considerable investments to provide wirefree banking experience. According to
Bhai, IDBI Bank’s mobile banking infrastructure is based on the GSM Data Suite
of products that makes its services accessible through any GSM operator across
the world. The systems at IDBI Bank are also interfaced online with its banking,
demat and payment systems. HDFC Bank, on the other hand, does not have any
separate infrastructure for mobile banking service. Rather, the bank uses
the same server/database as used for Netbanking. "We have a Web Server
and Application Server which runs on WebSphere 4.04 on Win2000 using SQL 2000 as
the database for storing the profile information. Our transaction database is
Sybase on Sun Entreprise 10K," explains HDFC’s Ram.
But there are bottlenecks that need to be circumnavigated.
Says Ram, "Usage will increase once technology is available for
proper authentication on mobile devices." Globally too, this is a major
concern. Today, the services are more information-based rather than
transaction-based. According to Neeraj Bhai, "The big inhibitor in the
adoption of mobile banking services is the absence of online transaction-based
services." But to be remembered, of course, is that when transaction-based
services are introduced, security concerns will jump.
The most frequent transactions performed by a customer
includes personal financial management services, messaging, portfolio
management, etc. Since many of these "on-demand" services are driven
by customer mobility, this kind of information is considered crucial and
will accelerate a customer’s decision-making process, according to the
Webscribes report.
Hence, we have seen the advantages and the potential mobile
commerce has in paving the way for time-effective transactions and a whole new
tilt towards better decision-making process. As a personal extension of the
user, mobile phones will ultimately play a defining role in bringing the most
affordable channel—for both consumers/businesses and financial institutions
into mainstream usage. Riding the wave of convergence, banks will be ideally
positioned to capture customer data and hence, provide the best of services.
Some of the trends that the future holds will be mobile
delivery channel into an integrated multi-channel strategy, which will equip
banks with ‘channel readiness’ that enables quick response to emerging
consumer trends. If banks partner with the right tech players, it’ll give
mobile banking channels more security—mobile banking will be a convenient,
secure, portable, application-rich and flexible banking option in the days to
come.
Rajeev Narayan and Yograj Varma in New Delhi With inputs from
Shubhendu Parth and Easwardas Satyen