

The latest report from Mercator Advisory Group' s Retail Banking Practice offers examples of new players in the financial services social networking space and provides commentary on their strategies that are working or that could work with the inclusion of additional functionality.
In the past two years, a wide variety of social media/networking sites have appeared across the Internet and have been enthusiastically embraced by Web denizens representing a wide range of financial interests. Savers, bill payers, first time home buyers, new families, traumatized investors who refer to their "104-(k)s" and even consumers still interested in buying a boat, a car, or a credit card are all flocking to personal finance social networking sites seeking advice, comradery and community.
While there are dozens of Web 2.0 sites financed by deep Silicon Valley pockets, banks have been slow to integrate their multiple mandates for technology investments (security, profitability, new account acquisitions, cross-sales) in an economic environment in which every bank investment is scrutinized as a taxpayer financed initiative.
It is imperative that banks and credit unions make emboldened efforts to involve themselves and their customers (and prospective customers) in emerging social networking communities. By the time these technologies, their features and capabilities are well enough understood for even the most cautious compliance officer' s comfort, the window of opportunity to become a relevant destination for social networkers will be gone.
Elizabeth Rowe, Group Director of Mercator Advisory Group' s Banking Advisory Services and one of the principal analysts of this report, comments, “Many socially networking customers will disintermediate their assets and credit from traditional brick and mortar banks and will follow them to their new communities. As consumer networkers build larger and more dynamic communities, the venture capitalists financing those sites will ramp up their marketing efforts in a bid to monetize the sites by collecting deposits and facilitating ecommerce and P2P money transfers.
Bankers who tarry, risk their place at the fiduciary table. With half of the key Gen-Y demographic cohort keenly interested in conducting personal banking through these sites and a solid quarter of the group willing to change banks to manage their personal finances through these new Internet tools, it is clearly time for banks to explore products, channels and Web 2.0 advances.
Online communities are developing along increasingly segmented lines - by cohorts of Facebook friends, by life stages, by small business start-up phases of development and by professional niches. Those institutions that are standing on the side lines are missing out on the ability to create real dialogue with their customers (cutting both ways - in Web 2.0, if a bank wants to talk to a customer, it has to be willing to listen to what that customer has to say back) and to market specific services and products to customers on a just-in-time basis keyed to real-life experiences and demands. In addition to creating more relevant and differentiated products and services based on new insights, marketers are also discovering that truly listening deepens customer loyalty.”
The report is 27 pages long and contains 12 exhibits.