New Era

Trust at the core of new world of banking

- ■ Martha Murorua *Martha Murorua is the managing director of Nedbank Namibia

While the increasing pace of digitisati­on has been coming for decades, the Covid- 19 pandemic unleashed changes that seemed unthinkabl­e just a few months ago and compelled us to make rapid change – faster any organisati­on could imagine. Various travel and lockdown restrictio­ns on non-essential services, coupled with social distancing rules, obliged many of us to stay indoors – and the volume of online interactio­ns rose while in person engagement­s plummeted – as expected.

For an industry that has, for hundreds of years, relied on handshakes and a friendly ‘Hello!’ to do business, build relationsh­ips and keep customers, this small shift in our reality has massive implicatio­ns on how we operate going forward. There are many banking functions that may not even be worth the hassle to recreate for the virtual world.

Many customers have realised that the ‘ new banking normal’ is preferenti­al. Online and mobile banking both offer convenienc­e and the generosity of doing banking at your own leisure. These technologi­cal advancemen­ts are also geography agnostic( we can do anything from anywhere) and will most likely play a bigger role in our lives even as our movement restrictio­ns ease up.

A recent MasterCard survey found that 73% of US customers were transactin­g online, and a fifth of those were first-time users of online banking. In the UK, the closure of bank branches has accelerate­d by as much as 70%, and Accenture, a leading global consulting firm, believes there could be as few as 800 brick-and-mortar branches by 2025.

Social distancing has moved us slightly apart from each other, as individual­s. But, with fewer of us doing things ‘ the old way’, the Covid-19 19 pandemic has created a rather obvious, us, physical gap between banks and their eir customers too.

This means we have to make ke a number of big changes, very ry quickly, if we want to maintain our ur relevance in their lives. This realisatio­n on also underpins the technologi­cal cal innovation­s that Nedbank Namibia bia has brought to market, including ng the introducti­on of IdentityTo­day, ay, a technology platform that allows ws you the convenienc­e of opening a Nedbank account with a selfie. This is a notion that was previously quite ite unfathomab­le!

Why is this so important right ght now? Because, when we live in an online, always-on, borderless world, ld, price, ease, geographic locations ns and product will be even more re commoditis­ed – and then what hat will be left? When handshakes are replaced by UX interfaces, and cash sh is passed over in favour of the more ore convenient, evolved digital finances, es, the traditiona­l face of the bank runs ns the risk of fading into the background nd and, if we’re not careful, so will those ose relationsh­ips.

Trust, faith, confidence, belief – call ll it what you will. The fact remains that this is the most important asset banks have at their disposal if they want to stay in business. It’s incredibly fragile - built over years, and destroyed in seconds - which makes it even more valuable. Ever since the first clamshells were handed over in exchange for a decent return, or a new starter-cave at generous interest rates, people have been looking to us to help them, and their families, be more, do more and have more than they could without us – which is a huge responsibi­lity. They entrust us with so much of their lives.

As they say, ‘The more things change…’.

This is more important right now than it ever has been before. And not just because the relationsh­ip is changing. As things get tougher, the IMF earlier this year released that –

Africa’s growth is expected to drop to -1.6%, her real per capita fall to 3.9% and according to the Namibian central bank’s last quarterly bulletin, our immediate economic impact will come primarily from reduce reduced commodity exports and impairmen impairment of the tourism and transpor transport industries - people will be b looking to us and relying o on us all the more. And as pe per an updated Accenture Accentur ‘ Purpose Drive Driven Banking Sur Survey’ vey report, currently currently, an ever- shrinkin shrinking p peer cr cent a age geo of consumers sma small business owners turn to their bank for advice, which means we have a lot of room for improvemen­t. As money experts, who strive to grow the wellbeing of our staff, clients, businesses and the greater Namibian society, Nedbank Namibia’s leadership are consistent­ly engaged with all our stakeholde­rs to make a real difference to people’s lives.

When reality is as risky as it has become, and customers are as wary as they are, the safe bets – the banks they trust – will have more pull than anyone else.

Banks and, dare I say all large, central businesses and organisati­ons have a lot of work to do over the next few years. Being digital is no longer an option, and we need to transform. Remote working is a realty, and we need to accept this, and take advantage of it. But, more importantl­y, if we are going to rebuild our corporate brands, we need to first start, next door, and help our neighbours rebuild their homes, and rebuild the trust that will drive everything from this point on. Trust above all else. The good guys will win in the end.

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 ??  ?? Martha Murorua
Martha Murorua

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