The pandemic is driving a digital-first mindset around financial services
HANOI, Vietnam, Sept. 8, 2021 /PRNewswire/ --
The pandemic is driving a digital-first mindset in Vietnam when it comes to opening banking accounts.
Highlights
- 2 in 5 Vietnamese expect to answer 10 questions or less or they will abandon an application
- 63 percent of consumers more likely to open an account digitally than a year ago
- 25 percent of Vietnamese say financial institutions ask too many questions
FICO's 2021 digital banking survey shows that people in Vietnam expect a seamless banking experience when it comes to opening an account via a mobile app or website, with two in five expecting to answer 10 questions or less or they will abandon the process. One in six Vietnamese will drop out if asked more than five questions.
"The pandemic is driving a digital-first mindset in Vietnam with 63 percent of consumers more likely to open an account digitally than a year ago," said Aashish Sharma, senior director of decision management solutions for FICO in Asia Pacific. "The number of consumers who prefer to open bank accounts digitally has grown to 44 percent and continues to rise, which is significant in a country with a strong branch culture."
More information: https://www.fico.com/en/solutions/account-opening
Turning friction into momentum
The survey revealed that consumer patience with account applications varied according to product. Vietnamese had the highest expectations for completing applications in 10 questions or less, for savings accounts (53 percent), transaction accounts (51 percent) and Buy Now Pay Later products (47 percent).
Interestingly this expectation was significantly higher than other countries in the survey. For instance, just 41 percent of UK consumers and 51 percent of Australian consumers expected to answer 10 questions or less when opening a transaction account.
Overall Vietnamese consumers want digital experiences that reduce friction and inconvenience. They expect their main bank to know them, 70 percent want to prove their identity online and 25 percent of Vietnamese say that financial institutions ask too many questions.
"Where there is friction there is opportunity, as the quote goes," said Sharma. "Either you solve it for your customers today, or a competitor will do it tomorrow. Consumers want banks to find answers to application questions through technology approaches such as improved identity checks, transaction history analysis, open banking and government databases."
Mortgages deserve more scrutiny
The survey showed that increased friction and security is deemed appropriate by consumers when it comes to applying and onboarding for specific high-value financial products.
Despite relatively high levels of ease and confidence in applying for day-to-day online financial products such as current accounts, savings, loans and credit cards, more than half (61 percent) of customers polled expect greater rigor when it comes to mortgage applications.
Research showed that just 31 percent of Vietnamese would apply for a mortgage digitally, compared to the survey average of around one in three (34 percent). In all countries bar the USA and UK, in-branch openings are preferred to online methods. South Africa was a modest outlier with 43 percent of customers favoring online mortgage applications.
Over one in two Vietnamese polled (56 percent) said they were willing to answer 11 to 20 or more questions when it came to applying online for a mortgage.
Don't change the channel
Vietnamese who open an account digitally prefer to carry out the process entirely in their chosen channel, whether it be smartphone or website. If customers are asked to move out of channel to prove their identities, many of them will abandon the application, either giving up on opening an account completely or by going to a competitor. Of those who don't immediately abandon, up to an additional 20 percent will delay the process.
The survey found that any disruption matters. Asking people to scan and email documents or use a separate identity portal causes almost as much application abandonment as asking them to visit branches or mail in documents.
This survey was conducted in January 2021 by an independent research company adhering to research industry standards. 1,000 Vietnamese adults were surveyed, along with 13,000 consumers in the USA, UK, Canada, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia, Malaysia, The Philippines, Thailand, Brazil, Colombia and Mexico.
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