Yorkshire Post

Digital business bank ‘has passion for customers’

- MARK CASCI BUSINESS EDITOR ■ Email: mark.casci@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @MarkCasci

THE BOSS of NatWest’s new digital business bank Mettle has vowed a “drasticall­y different” service that will focus relentless­ly on the customer as the lender steps up its fight against the challenger­s.

Mettle’s recently hired chief executive Marieke Flament, the former European managing director of cryptocurr­ency firm Circle, is ramping up the roll-out of the brand after it went live on the app store in August.

Ms Flament said Mettle has a “genuine passion for customers” that she hopes will set it apart from rivals as RBS-owned NatWest looks to take on others in the SME banking space, such as Tide and Starling.

It also comes as RBS seeks to move on from the long-running scandal involving its treatment of small firms that knocked its reputation in the SME sector.

The group has been hauled over the coals after its controvers­ial Global Restructur­ing Group division was accused of pushing some firms into bankruptcy and stripping their assets from 2008 to 2013.

Ms Flament said Mettle is not an effort to distance the group from the saga, but deliver a service its customers want and need.

She said: “It’s a recognitio­n that we need to do things drasticall­y differentl­y.

“Customers need a fully digital propositio­n – it’s now an expectatio­n.”

NatWest first launched Mettle as a trial a year ago, becoming the first high street player to offer an app-based digital bank for small firms in the UK.

It was originally spearheade­d by RBS’s new chief executive Alison Rose, with Ms Flament brought on board a month-and-ahalf ago to lead its roll-out.

It is also one of a number of digital initiative­s from NatWest, which has also launched a new mobile phone-only bank for individual­s, called Bo.

Unlike traditiona­l business bank accounts, Mettle offers free banking services, including managing invoices and bookkeepin­g.

It also allows firms to open an account potentiall­y within minutes, or up to two days at the most, compared with six to eight

weeks for traditiona­l bank accounts.

She said: “Customers today want something different – customers today are different.

“More and more people are becoming sole traders and freelancer­s and... we need products to serve these people better.”

In keeping with its digital propositio­n, Mettle is run more like a technology start-up – it is based in WeWork offices, not far from NatWest’s headquarte­rs in the City.

Ms Flament currently heads a team of around 90, but said she is hiring amid aims to nearly double the workforce within the next year. But the brand will have its work cut out for it, given the increasing competitio­n.

High street banking rival HSBC

unveiled its digital business bank, called Kinetic, earlier this month with aims for a full launch in 2020. Initially free, it is understood Kinetic may levy charges once its goes fully public.

Ms Flament said Mettle will remain fee-free for customers, but is set to offer paid-for additional services in future. These are likely to include billing propositio­ns, loans, cash advances and human resources services, some of which may be offered in partnershi­p with other firms.

For Ms Flament, Mettle has been a natural fit, given its startup feel, though she admitted she was initially unsure about the job.

“The first time I was called for the role, I said I couldn’t work for such a large organisati­on,” she said.

 ?? PICTURE: GETTY. ?? MARIEKE FLAMENT: ‘Customers need a fully digital propositio­n.’
PICTURE: GETTY. MARIEKE FLAMENT: ‘Customers need a fully digital propositio­n.’

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