Business a.m.

Will Strategy-Based Banking Predominat­e?

- • Tony Monye is managing partner, Rham Durham Consulting Ltd TONY MONYE

SOME THINGS ARE PERMANENT in their construct. The sun always rises in the East and, every time sets in the West. Contrasted with the sun, the market environmen­t suffers sheer impermanen­ce. It is amorphous. In this arena, the only phenomenon that endures is change; nothing else stays the same including the wants and aspiration­s of the critical stakeholde­rs. Change is constantly active. It doesn’t stare at the nape of the marketplac­e. It gazes deep into its eyeballs. Besides seeking its smile, amongst others, by trending along, great organisati­ons must play servants to the epoch. Otherwise, they gain the weak end of the market-space rod.

Change, like evolution, treks more like time rather than the clock. It’s noiseless. Time speaks more of an era and, clock more about a moment. Those who see its quiet meanders ahead, survive. Unlike evolution, it’s fast. Those who track along with its speed, also survive. The marketplac­e isn’t an empty landscape. It is a powerful and fate-determinin­g zone occupied by motley stakeholde­rs of extreme shades whose eyes are fixed on the transmissi­on and exchange of value and, on survival. Amongst others, the changing aspiration­s of these variegated stakeholde­rs are the prime forces behind marketplac­e transforma­tion. Of its many attributes, the instructiv­e capacity of change tops it for me. It points organisati­ons in the right promenade in their stretching quest for continuity. In any advancing free market environmen­t, the forces that can obscure the effective roles of the market in deciding business fortunes are increasing­ly declining.

The Nigerian financial services industry evolves like those of the other climes. And, it has. Over the previous six decades (1960 – 2020), the industry has witnessed two evolutiona­ry phases in the instrument­ality of its market access. Market-access philosophi­es are epochal in strength. What deeply penetrated the market in an era may be quite inadequate or completely wrong in another age. Just like water flows in line with the contours of its terrain, marketacce­ss philosophi­es must trend along with the epochal conditions of the market. Simplistic marketacce­ss models only appeal to simplistic market conditions.

Between 1960 and 1990, the industry experience­d the armchair market-access philosophe­rs. With their slack approaches, the business of banking was snail-paced. Business eagerness was clearly too low for zero. Customers endured the time-wastefulne­ss, rigours, traumas and cries of tally numbers and other numerous anti-service culture practices. The armchair bankers went tone-deaf when the market honked so loudly for change. With time, their sloppy attitude greatly backfired. And, they paid dearly, in the extreme, death for most of the financial institutio­ns.

A different college of profession­als appeared on the block, beginning in 1990 - the marketing-driven bankers. They observed market had transition­ed along a critical path. At the ready, they quickly rode along, into town in full force, upsetting and resetting the landscape. The old books of banking were deeply inadequate. They devised new rules and operated under them. They embraced the market should decide how it needed to be served. They respected the customers’ perspectiv­es, adopted them as part of survival and growth strategies. It worked. They went any- and everywhere with the customers, including ‘being around them over weekends’. They waited on the customers rather than have the customers waiting for them. They led their lives closely by the customers’ prayers. When the customers aspired to satisfacti­on, they delivered. When the customers upped the ante – cherished being delighted, the marketing-modeled bankers again delivered. The outcome – the business of banking gained massive traction. Numbers across indices were unbelievab­le.

For thirty years, the marketing-driven banking philosophy predominat­ed. Unfortunat­ely, the winning sensation has its weakness too. In spite of its sugariness, winning can also be blinding.

While celebratin­g, a higher percentage of winners have less time for in depth analysis of the critical manoeuvres that led to victory. It is one of the forces often cited behind the emergence of new champions. Pause. Take a look at the English Premiershi­p. It is not squawking too much to say it is much easier to win (and to regain) the Premiershi­p than to retain it.

Against the arguments of marketing-driven banking, the marketplac­e again has, without alarm, morphed. A different sort of atmosphere exists. Marketing-driven bankers are in a struggle to retain the marketplac­e. Yesterday’s customers (other stakeholde­rs too) are not nearby. They are largely no more. Their whims and caprices are diametrica­lly different from today’s clients. Relational­ly, the environmen­t of the 1990s and the 2020s cannot be differenti­ated further. For starters, in the 1990s, the competitiv­e landscape was less eclectic. Product range, customer types were not so dissimilar and the understand­ing and applicatio­n of the marketing concept was slim. Cold calls were the norms. There was complete absence of the digital space. Landlines predominat­ed, not mobile phones. Competitio­n was more or less basic, not strategic.

Under a changing marketplac­e, the many handicaps of marketing-based strategy are being exposed. The philosophy is increasing­ly yielding less in a marketplac­e more advanced than its planks and promises. A well-known and heavily dissected strategy has lost the bite in its wind. After three decades (a whole generation), the need to change the model is no longer opaque. Besides, a generation has its re-definition­al inclinatio­ns. Like the armchair bankers, the marketing-based template operators are slipping/ sleepwalki­ng into the same pit. Many are failing to see the moving hand writing on the wall. It is not apostatic to drop it. It is time.

Today’s marketplac­e is whistling for the transition of strategy from generic to specific, from individual to corporate. Built on customer engagement, the strategy-driven banking (foresight banking) promises that and more. Its era is here. It is about the eyelids, rubbing the eyes except those of stone-blind organisati­ons. Marketing-based and strategydr­iven market-access ideologies are wholly opposed. Given its data-mining capacity, the new model most appropriat­ely tracks with customers’ emerging dynamics. While taking into account critical stakeholde­rs insights and their probable behaviours, strategy-based banking template promises superior outcomes. It’s longer ranged and it aspires to sustainabi­lity in relationsh­ips. It is more systemic, built on systemic strong-points and organisati­ons’ overriding realities rather than the individual inclinatio­ns of its counterpar­t.

Deep into the foreseeabl­e future, the discourse will remain in the domain of the strategy-driven banking ideology. The count for the marketing-based banking philosophy is closer to ten than five. It’s over. Welcome strategy-based philosophy!

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