|
Online banking--is
it for you?
By Philip
Bulman and Marian Miller King Bankrate.com
Growing
numbers of consumers are experimenting with online banking, searching
for convenience and value.
Will they find what they are looking for?
That is by no means certain, but banks are finally
"spending major dollars and doing major smart things with online
banking," said Matt Cone, business development manager for Microsoft
Money. "Increasingly, more are offering online banking
through the Internet on their Web sites."
Online systems allow customers to plug into
a host of banking services from a personal computer by connecting
with the bank's computers over telephone wires. The convenience
can be compelling. Not only is travel time reduced, but ATM machines,
telephone banking or banking by mail are often unnecessary.
Technology
makes online banking easier
And, technology continues to make online banking, once attempted
only by computer enthusiasts, easier for the average consumer.
Even that may not be easy enough, though. Many
systems that offer greater financial control also require more work.
Online bill payment is an example of an effort that requires setting
up which leads to ultimate convenience.
James M. Shelton, executive director of the
Online
Banking Association, thinks consumers will persevere.
"By far the hottest development in the online
banking industry is one-click bill payment," said Shelton, director
of the organization comprised of 70 banks and based in Corte Madera,
Calif. "This is the ultimate in convenience for everyone. There
are no more paper checks to deal with, and the bank gains the float.
"Providing online bill payment service has the
potential to grow to billions of monthly payments," Shelton said.
"It will take a few years to develop because getting that on the
Internet is not an overnight event."
Banks
form alliances to offer online banking
Alliances are forming to facilitate electronic payments and other
aspects of online banking, said Shelton, including Integrion (with
18 large banks as partners); Microsoft MFSDC's new program and a
third partnership called First Global Commerce, which is an alliance
between Hewlett Packard, Electronic Data Services and Verifone.
Home-banking offers
convenience
Banks use a variety of names for online banking services, such as
PC banking, home banking, electronic banking or Internet banking.
Regardless of the name, these systems offer certain advantages over
traditional banking methods.
- Consumers can use their computers and a telephone
modem to dial in from home or any site where they have access
to a computer.
- The services are available seven days a week,
24 hours a day.
- Transactions are executed and confirmed quickly,
although not instantaneously. Processing time is comparable to
that of an ATM transaction.
- And the range of transactions available is
fairly broad. Customers can do everything from simply checking
on an account balance to applying for a mortgage.
Services vary
from bank to bank
What services are available varies from bank to bank. Virtually
all of the banks that offer electronic services allow consumers
to check the balances in their accounts, transfer funds among accounts,
and order electronic bill payments.
More sophisticated systems allow customers to
apply for loans, download information about accounts into their
own computers, trade stocks or mutual funds, and look at images
of their checks and deposit slips.
Internet banking
may be the best long-term choice
Banks take two approaches to online services. Most require consumers
to have specialized software in their computers, while newer Internet-based
systems allow customers to simply dial in and use the bank's software
or software provided by an Internet service provider, such as America
Online (AOL).
The two approaches have distinct advantages
and disadvantages for consumers. Yet bank customers who do not yet
use electronic banking would probably do well to choose Internet
banking because the older systems are likely to be phased out during
the next few years.
"Online banking will become Internet banking.
Banks will just have this Internet branch," said James Verbrugge,
a banking expert and chairman of the Department of Finance at the
University of Georgia.
Client-based:
Uses personal finance software
The "client-based" systems, in which customers use their own software,
generally use personal financial managers -- specialized computer
programs that help customers carry out a variety of personal finance
activities. The most popular programs are: Intuit's
Quicken, MECA's Managing Your Money, and Microsoft's Money.
These programs typically allow consumers to
do much of their work off-line, and then dial in to complete their
bank transactions. These client-based systems have the advantage
of allowing consumers to integrate all their banking information
with other personal finance data using a single program.
Although these software products can be purchased
at computer stores, the versions offered by the institutions are
enhanced to adapt to their systems. Some banks will allow customers
to download the program for free, or will mail a copy to customers
free or for a small fee. Shopping elsewhere is likely to reduce
the efficiency of the system.
Client-based and
Internet banking should co-exist
"The Internet is a powerful, inexpensive way to deliver mass-market
online financial services," said Bill Harris, Intuit CEO. "Client-based
solutions such as Quicken98 that take advantage of the Internet
will help customers and financial institutions benefit from the
best of both worlds."
Paul Harrison, president of MECA Software agrees:
"Today's Internet banking solutions provide basic electronic banking
functions," he said. "Working with many of North America's largest
banks we are developing personal finance management capabilities,
similar to those found in Managing Your Money."
Harrison said those can be offered to consumers
directly from a bank's Internet site, thus merging the benefits
of client-based software with the simplicity and convenience of
the Internet.
"Quicken 98 offers a hybrid approach," said
Joyce Thom, group product manager, PC Banking-Intuit. "New banks
are signing up for the client-based system--over 50 institutions
in two years."
Customer loyalty for personal finance programs
is strong, she said. "We see very strong growth."
Switching banks
can be difficult
For those who already own a personal finance program or enjoy learning
how to use new software, the client-based approach works well. However,
switching accounts from one bank to another may also require switching
to new personal finance software, and customers will have to invest
some time (and possibly the purchase price of the new program) in
order to make the switch. It could also entail transfer of a lot
of information from one program to another.
A few banks have developed proprietary software
for online banking, which is usually free. Again, changing banks
would present the drawbacks associated with learning a new program.
A handful of banks currently allow customers
to choose between the older online banking systems or the Internet.
However, this is expected to be a transitional approach that will
stay in place only until all the online banking customers switch
to the Internet. David Smith, director of access management at Citibank,
one of the first banks to offer both approaches, said the older
system might well be eliminated within a year as customers switch
to Internet banking.
Internet banking is
more portable, less versatile
The newer Internet-based systems allow users to dial in and then
use the bank's own software (or that of an Internet service provider,
such as AOL). Many consumers will find them easier to use than the
older systems, especially customers who want electronic banking
services but are not interested in doing a lot of other personal
finance calculations. This interaction can be initiated from any
computer, anywhere.
But an Internet system is less versatile as
well. It cannot consolidate extensive personal finance information
within a single program.
"There are lots of different flavorslots
of institutions offer different things," said Cone of Microsoft
Money.
Internet systems may
lower bank, consumer costs
Using an Internet-based system may also be less expensive in many
cases. In general, a bank's costs will be lower when it provides
a single electronic banking service via the World Wide Web section
of the Internet. The bank then supports a single computer system
instead of a multitude of personal finance programs that its customers
may use. Cost savings allow the banks to charge lower fees for online
banking, or to simply eliminate them completely. A few large banks
that have set up Internet-based systems charge no monthly fee for
online banking services and electronic bill payment.
Microsoft's Cone said that banks originally
viewed PC banking as "a pilot program" or a process to be tested.
But the Internet is finally taking online banking mainstream, .
"What is going to happen," said Cone, "is that
there is a broad pricing issue at work here. Just as banks charge
for checking accounts, there are different variations on that theme.
Some charge for entering a branch. My sense is that online banking
will be the lowest cost channel for banks, simply because they don't
have to maintain a physical branch or presence to provide the service."
The most expensive aspect of online banking
is bill payment, Cone said. "Banks that offer that service for nothing
are eating the cost. It costs the banks $6 to $10 per month to provide
bill payment."
Fees
are often lower with Internet banking
"The bank should save money," said Tripp Rackley, president
of nFront Inc., an Internet banking software company in Athens,
Georgia. "On Internet banking, they're really not charging anything
right now."
Still, consumers can run into fees regardless
of which type of online banking system they use. Fees typically
range from $3.95 to $6.50 a month for basic electronic banking services.
Some banks charge an additional fee for electronic bill payment,
ranging from $4.50 to $6.
Rackley recommends shopping around for those
banks that have no monthly charges but provide a wide array of services
at their Internet branches. "I would make sure I could do everything.
You wouldn't put your money in a brick and mortar bank where the
window was broken."
-- Posted: January 9, 1998
|