I got an
interesting piece of news about a report on mobile apps this week: "Mobile
Apps for Banking 2013" by myprivatebanking, a Zurich-based research
firm.
According
to their analysis, the overall quality of mobile apps for banking is
increasing, but there is still a critical lack of more advanced, user-friendly
features and content.
Apparently,
based upon myprivatebanking’s proprietary ranking mechanism, DBS and Capital
One offer the best mobile apps with Société Générale, Westpac and ABN Amro
making the Top 5.
Most noteworthy
is that, since the last report in 2011, the number of banking apps and app
features have grown explosively, accompanied by an improvement in overall
quality, with the average rating increasing from 35 to 40 out of 60 points in
2013. But myprivatebanking still sees a high divergence between the best
offerings and those from the mass of the banks analyzed.
The winners
of this year’s app ranking is Singapore-based DBS Bank, ranked 4th
in the 2011 report, alongside US bank, Capital One, who both achieve an overall
score of 50 out of 60 points.
Top 5
Banks with the best mobile apps strategy (overall 50 banks ranked)
Rank 2013 (Rank 2011) Bank Total
Points (max. 60)
1
(New) - Capital One 50
1
(4) ↑ DBS
Bank 50
3
(6) ↑ Société Générale 49
4
(18) ↑ ABN Amro 48
4
(New) - Westpac 48
After
these, the average bank’s performance is not even close to that of the top
performers with the main shortcomings being that:
- Banking apps offer only basic functionality, missing out on more
advanced features. Almost one-fifth of the banks still have no ATM and branch
finders and as well no credit card features integrated in their app
offerings. Brokerage/trading features are only available for just under
half of the mobile banks under review. Only 52% of banks offer a contact
option for “lost and stolen cards”.
- Banks are weak when it comes to providing interesting features and
product information for customers. Most banks (72 %) do not provide any
corporate information. Only about half of the banks (56 %) provide
information about their products and services to app users. Interactive
calculators to promote these products and services are only found within
17 mobile banking applications altogether.
- Lack of content and multimedia features. Less than half of the evaluated
banks offer financial news and banks providing research publications or
client magazines number only 12 and 16 of the 50 analyzed, respectively.
Video or audio content is only available for 34 % of the banks in the
evaluation. The remaining 33 banks do not provide multimedia content at
all.
- App coverage for tablet devices is still lacking. Currently only 30 out of 50
banks offer native tablet mobile banking applications.
Chris M Skinner
Chris Skinner is best known as an independent commentator on the financial markets through his blog, TheFinanser.com, as author of the bestselling book Digital Bank, and Chair of the European networking forum the Financial Services Club. He has been voted one of the most influential people in banking by The Financial Brand (as well as one of the best blogs), a FinTech Titan (Next Bank), one of the Fintech Leaders you need to follow (City AM, Deluxe and Jax Finance), as well as one of the Top 40 most influential people in financial technology by the Wall Street Journal's Financial News. To learn more click here...