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Authenticity in the Age of Trump

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Nationwide combines tradition and modern technology to raise customer satisfaction

Banks and building societies are often cited as a classic example of technological challenges: their retail customers expect to be able to access their accounts over the web or on their mobile phones, and in practical terms there can be no difference between the online services and going into their local branch. Financial institutions have generally accepted the challenge, with varying degrees of success.

Creating a seamless customer experience

Key findings

  • Consumers look at the whole transaction and want simplicity, speed and accuracy across all channels. Company executives, in contrast, continue to think in terms of individual platforms.
  • Online companies are seen by consumers as examples of excellent customer service. Four of the top five companies listed most frequently as offering excellent customer service are relatively new online companies. Retail is cited as the best sector for customer service, closely followed by consumer goods and banks.

Creating a seamless retail customer experience

Key findings

  • Many big retailers are working towards omnichannel, but progress remains modest. Our survey found that many retailers have yet to carry out basic steps, such as adapting their websites to mobile apps. Few have hired a person to take overall charge of the customer journey or have unified their customer service across platforms.

Leading in real time

This quote, published in a medical journal in 1884, shows that the feeling that business is accelerating is nothing new. But it is undeniable that, at a transactional level, the pace of modern business is faster than it ever has been. The culprit, of course, is digital technology, which allows information to be transferred in an instant - and sets an expectation that it will be acted on just as quickly.

The hyperconnected car

The automotive industry has operated a fairly consistent model for the best part of 100 years. Car makers designed, built and marketed their products; they were sold through a network of dealerships and maintained by local and independent mechanics. 

Hyperconnected retail

The first thing a customer arriving on a retailer’s website for the very first time looks for is some reassurance that the company can be trusted to provide high-quality products or services.

What better way to provide this reassurance than with the testimony of existing customers, says Nick Wheeler, founder and chief executive of Charles Tyrwhitt, the men’s apparel retailer.

The Hyperconnected Economy

How mobile is transforming retail banking

Key findings include:

  • 82% of retail bankers agree or agree strongly that in the next five years mobile will become the number one channel for millennials and younger consumers—banks’ future customers
  • Today only 15% of transactions are conducted via mobile devices—that percentage will to rise to 25% in five years
  • The mobile invasion is forcing banks to navigate a complicated world of new partnerships and rivalries. Emerging partners include mobile-phone companies, retailers and social-media firms

Small businesses may be experiencing “reverse showrooming” effect, says new Economist Intelligence Unit report

Use contextual information to offer greater value not intrusive ads, EIU report warns marketers

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