The Mercury News

ACCESS YOUR CASH —WITHOUT A CARD

The new technology, which uses a mobile app and a PIN code, is now available nationwide at all of the bank’s 13,000 ATMs

- By George Avalos gavalos@bayareanew­sgroup.com

“We are not saying the card is obsolete. We are doing this to provide another convenient option for customers wherever they are.” — Lauren Terreros, Wells Fargo spokeswoma­n

SAN FRANCISCO — Wells Fargo on Monday began to offer card-free ATM access through a coast-to-coast rollout of changes in how people can access the ubiquitous machines.

Instead of a physical card, customers will be able to use their mobile Wells Fargo app to choose card-free ATM access and then obtain a one-time token for that session to conduct transactio­ns at the machine.

“We believe the future is cardless, and the launch of OneTime Access Code provides our 20 million mobile banking customers another convenient way to manage money,” said Brett Pitts, Well Fargo’s head of digital for virtual channels.

The bank wants to create more ways to conduct the same transactio­n over multiple platforms. The new technology is available at all 13,000 Wells Fargo ATM devices.

“We are not saying the card is obsolete,” said Lauren Terreros, a spokeswoma­n for Wells Fargo. “We are doing this to provide another convenient option for customers wherever they are.”

Here’s how it works: First, people can install Wells Fargo’s mobile app on their smartphone and log into the app. Then, they can navigate to account services and choose card-free ATM access. At that point, they can request the eight-digit onetime-use token. After arriving at an ATM machine, people can enter the token and then their ATM personal identifica­tion number.

“If the customer walks out of the house and forgets their wallet, they may have their smartphone with them,” Terreros

said. “We want to offer our customers a mix of interconne­cted channels. That’s how we truly feel we can be our customers’ bank of choice.”

Boston-based Forrester, a market research firm, has urged bank executives to design better pathways and experience­s for customers who use multiple channels — such as branch visits, web-based account access or phone mobile apps — to conduct banking transactio­ns.

“Bank prospects and customers frequently move from one touch point to another to shop for products, receive customer service, make transactio­ns and get financial advice,” according to a Forrester report in April 2016. “Yet many of these cross-touch point experience­s are broken or subpar. Too many banks focus on a given touch point in isolation and fail to help customers transition easily between them.”

Forrester analyst Peter Wannemache­r, in a blog post this month, noted that a few banks in Australia, India, Poland, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom offer mobile-to-ATM cardless cash withdrawal­s.

“Mobile will act as the so-called connective tissue” in many of these kinds of transactio­ns that cross channels offered by the bank, Wannemache­r wrote in the blog. “Wells Fargo is being proactive by rolling out cardless ATM access and other next-generation features.”

San Francisco-based Wells Fargo may also be using these kinds of launches to burnish its image, which was battered last September when a scandal erupted over bogus checking and credit accounts that bank employees opened without customers’ permission. Wells was forced to pay $185 million in fines because it opened up to 2.1 million of the unauthoriz­ed accounts.

“This is part of Wells Fargo’s effort to rebuild their brand, step by step,” said Ken Thomas, a Miamibased independen­t bank analyst. “It’s going to take time. It’s not just months, or a couple of launches like this. The bank’s stagecoach has been wrecked on the freeway, it’s been towed away, and now it’s in the shop being rebuilt little by little.”

 ?? CHUCK BURTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? A customer uses a Wells Fargo automated teller machine. The bank on Monday debuted card-free access to its ATMs. “We believe the future is cardless,” said Brett Pitts, Wells Fargo’s head of digital for virtual channels.
CHUCK BURTON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES A customer uses a Wells Fargo automated teller machine. The bank on Monday debuted card-free access to its ATMs. “We believe the future is cardless,” said Brett Pitts, Wells Fargo’s head of digital for virtual channels.

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