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'Voice of the Customer' research shows that email bill and email
statement delivery is the top consumer choice for electronic delivery.
During February 2011, Striata conducted a direct consumer survey in
order to answer one critical question: "How would you most prefer to
electronically receive your house bills and bank statements?"
Striata Chief Operating Officer, Garin Toren says, "This survey was
targeted at a very specific group of consumers: economically active
business people from the age of 35 to 54 with broadband internet access -
exactly the consumers who should be paperless today.
Currently, the vast majority (in excess of 75%) are still getting all of their bills and statements in the physical mail. However, 55% to 75% of these same consumers are paying their bills electronically. Our goal was to find out why they are still relying on paper mail.
The answer we received was very specific - billers and banks are simply not offering them what they want."
Responses were limited to 5 options, which were randomized in order:
* Within my internet banking * At a consolidator website * As a simple attachment to an email * At each biller / bank's website * None of these, I want paper
The survey received 650 uniquely identifiable responses and respondents were required to register or be registered in order to vote. As can be seen in the demographic breakdown below, the majority of respondents fall into the targeted age group.
Survey outcomes:
At the close of the survey, the majority of respondents chose email delivery of bills and statements. Similarly, in a late 2010 report published by InfoTrends; 'The future of electronic presentment & payment in North America', email delivery topped the consumer's vote for electronic channel preference, at 46%.
The results of this latest consumer survey were then compared to a similar Striata survey carried out in 2008. As can be seen by the graph below, the trend toward email delivery remains unchanged. 
In all three surveys the message from the consumer is consistent: email delivery for bills and statements is their first choice, with a further interest to receive a copy in their Internet Banking. The options for registering at a biller website or consolidator website to fetch these documents remain the most unpopular choices.
Toren says, "Respondents to the 2011 survey were also encouraged to comment on their vote and we found the most common reason cited for reluctance to sign up for customer self service options, is the associated registration and login requirements. The popular choice for email delivery provides convenience and familiarity."
With these consistent messages coming from the consumer in favor of email delivery, how do billers and financial institutions satisfy their drive for website based self-service?
Toren explains that the answer is not to tie paper suppression to self service portals or internet banking registration, but to focus on migrating customers from paper to electronic delivery by offering the delivery choices they want.
"Biller's have a significant challenge both currently and escalating, in that the trend is moving away from electronic payment at their own websites, to payments originating through the consumer's internet banking. As bill payment was the primary reason they registered and visited a biller's site in the first place, this consistent trend is going to have an adverse effect on website usage. In addition, it is far less convenient viewing your bill at the biller's website, compared to the two seconds it takes to open the paper envelope, so there is just no meaningful incentive to do so," says Toren
If payments are going through internet banking and paper is the preferred bill viewing option, how do banks and biller's achieve both paper suppression and self service portal usage?
Toren explains that by providing a comprehensive solution utilizing email delivery, traffic to self serve portals can be maximized. Because no registration is required for email delivery, paperless adoption numbers are much higher than industry averages of 8% to 15%. The attached bill or statement can then include multiple personalized, intelligent links, banners, buttons and inserts that drive the customer to banks or billers websites for self service, up and cross-sell.
"The benefits of customer self service at a reduced cost is undeniable, yet statistics show that in the past ten years, North American consumers agreeing to turn off the paper bills and statements have stagnated at less than 25%. Nacha recently published a report that indicated this figure is not expected to increase in 2011.
The overall industry average is closer to 18%. Only when billers begin to give customers what they actually want - the true convenience of electronic delivery - will the majority of them go paperless", concludes Toren.
Your customer has spoken. Are you listening?
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Website: www.striata.com |