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Undressing in public: Harnessing the power of Web 2.0 to rebuild trust in banking

More customers are online that ever before, and banks should learn to use the new tools of Web 2.0 -- blogging, social networking and more -- to cost-effectively and efficiently reach an increasingly fragmented and dispersed customer base.
IBM Institute for Business Value study
Industry: Banking services
Last updated: 20 Nov 2008
Summary
Abstract
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Summary

Banks have historically been trusted, valued members of the community, but globalization and new-age communications have combined to put distance between institution and customer. Rebuilding trust requires listening to customers and complete transparency. In a time of global financial turmoil, banks intent upon reconnecting with an increasingly diverse, fragmented and suspicious customer base should "bare all" and use the varied and powerful tools of Web 2.0 at their disposal.

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Abstract

In years past, the bank was a central focus in the community. Bank managers held positions of privilege and authority based on trust, and the strength of banks was founded upon the relationships they built with customers.

Today, however, globalization, and the speed of information are rapidly transforming traditional banking. The world is becoming smaller. But, in a period where margins have been steadily decreasing – or vanishing – strong customer relationships and trust have become more important than ever.1 The transparent, open dialogue available through Web 2.0, visible to all customers, is a method we believe banks can use to help rebuild these relationships and engender trust.

Many people today are beginning to use Web 2.0 tools – social networking, blogging, wikis, mashups and the like – to build rela-tionships and help them with decisions about virtually every facet of their daily lives, from whom to date, to what to buy, to, even, where to bank.

To read the full study, download the PDF files at the top of this page.

References

1 Banerjea,Sunny, Kim Hedley, Cormac Petit and John White. "The Paradox of Banking 2015, Achieving more by doing less." IBM Institute for Business Value. November 22, 2005.

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About the authors
iCormac Petit
Cormac Petit is a Chartered Accountant (South Africa) and Managing Consultant in the IBM Global Business Services Strategy and Change practice.

iWendy Feller
Wendy Feller leads the Financial Services Sector practice across the Financial Markets, Banking and Insurance industries for the IBM Institute for Business Value.

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