(continued
from previous page)Getting comfortable with online
banking -- Page 2By Laura
Bruce Bankrate.com
"If they're getting frustrated, they shouldn't
blame themselves -- blame the bank. A lot of people think, 'I'm
stupid, there must be something wrong with me.' The lesson is this
is your bank's responsibility."
The easiest online banking site to use, Ellis says,
is National City's.
According to Ellis, the bank's navigation system is
well-designed, it's easy to get to various products from the home
page, it provides a good balance of information about products and
the instructions for opening an account are easy to follow.
National City's Hartman says ease of use is what differentiates
one bank from another when it comes to online banking.
"We listened to what our customers had to say
and spent a lot of our energy not on the next hot thing but more
on what will make it easier for customers to do business with us
online.
"Bill payment is a great example. Last year,
before we revised the site, it used to take six screens to pay a
bill. If you wanted to pay multiple bills before, we didn't have
a single screen that would pull up all of your payees."
Most of us who do online banking still haven't taken
advantage of the full range of services. We check balances, see
if a check has been paid and maybe transfer money from checking
to savings; but only about one-third of the folks who do online
banking pay bills online.
Banks know that people who pay bills online stick
with their bank longer and carry larger balances, so they're trying
to sweeten the pot and get more people to sign up for bill payment.
A significant number of banks are doing that by dropping the usual
$4 to $6 monthly fee that's charged for the service.
It's a strategy that works, says Michelle Barquero,
online banking channel manager at Hibernia National Bank in New
Orleans.
"Within two months of offering bill payment for
free, we doubled our bill payment customers. It's amazing that $4.95
was such a road block. Customers said, 'This other bank offers bill
payment for free -- why should I pay for it?' That's what started
it off."
Christopher Musto says the trend toward free bill
payment will be a major force in getting people to try the service.
"It's not a come-on gimmick from some upstart
Internet bank. Bank of America, Bank One, Citibank, National City
-- a long list of banks are offering it for free. It's getting difficult
to hold onto that $5 or $6 charge the banks are levying. (Free bill
payment) really does cost (banks) money, but it has that wonderful
effect on the balance the customer holds, the number of accounts
they have and how long they stay with the bank."
In an age of computer viruses, spyware, site-spoofing
and phishing (phony e-mail that claims to be from your bank and
asks for confidential information such as your Social Security number),
it's understandable if consumers are concerned about online banking
security. Some banks, such as National City and Bank of America,
make it clear on their sites that customers have zero liability
if fraud has been used to take money from their account.
"One of the things we track," says Musto,
"is whether the bank makes explicit online guarantees about
protecting your account against fraud. Some banks do these amazing
verbal somersaults to make it sound like they're serious about combating
fraud but they never mention that you're protected.
"If there's fraud and you're not responsible,
the bank has to make you whole. Some banks tell you and that's a
good thing. It gives you confidence to use the online channel. We
tell banks to get out there and tell your customers you're going
to protect them. You have to do it anyway so you may as well make
a virtue out of it."
So, what's ahead for online banking? Two things
that Musto says will become commonplace in online banking are inter-FI
transfers, the ability to transfer money from your account at one
bank to your account at another bank or brokerage, and e-mail alerts,
which will enable customers to get relevant information about their
accounts. That way you don't have to log-on time after time to see
if a bill was paid.
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