Canadian attitudes on branches
Though their in-person branch visits are increasingly rare, respondents expressed a high degree of satisfaction with their financial institution, with 87 per cent saying they are happy with the service their branch provides. Respondents also expressed a high degree of loyalty to their financial institutions, with nearly three quarters (73 per cent) saying they would stay with their local bank or credit union even if their branch closed.
“This is the key issue that lies at the heart of the dilemma on what to do with large branch networks with a declining number of customer visits,” Mr. Rush notes. “What might provide some comfort for banks and their customers is the experience of banks overseas. Institutions in Israel, Scandinavia, Australia and the United Kingdom have pared down their branch networks, and what they’ve have found is that customer attrition has been very low.” Rush says.
Nearly six in 10 (59 per cent) respondents said they would be impacted minimally or not at all if their local branch closed, and more than half (54 per cent) say they’d prefer not to visit their branch but are forced to, because certain activities can’t be done online, over the phone or at an ATM. Interestingly, 55 per cent said they are willing to forgo in-person banking altogether for a better online or mobile-only banking experience.
Dan Resnick, a Partner in KPMG’s Customer Practice who specializes in financial services, says many banks and credit unions have tried to get more customers into branches by repositioning them as “advice centres” focused on financial planning, investment advice and wealth management services, but the survey data shows two thirds (65 per cent) of respondents dislike the idea of branches being turned into such centres.
“We heard from Canadians that they don’t want their local branch to be converted into a place that only provides financial advice because it would eliminate the primary reasons they physically head into a branch,” says Mr. Resnick. “But it’s also time for financial institutions to decouple the idea of offering customers better financial advice from the idea that financial advice has to be delivered in the branch.”
“The wants and expectations of Canadians in 2024 clearly shows a need for a new vision, incenting banks and credit unions to do a critical assessment of what their customers want, how they want it and when they want it. Only then can they determine the best mix of customer touchpoints, including digital channels, physical branches and third-party locations (such as grocery stores, coffee shops or airport terminals). The perfect mix will vary depending on the region or city as well, so it’s not a one-size-fits-all formula,” says Mr. Resnick.