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Consider your own app store

As apps proliferate, they get hidden in public app stores

 
 
Consider your own app store

The explosive growth of apps is causing significant challenges for the banking industry, according to Gartner, Inc. Banking CIOs, CMOs, and line-of-business heads face two key challenges. The first is that the visibility of customer banking apps in public stores is decreasing due to the total number of apps available; the second is that visibility of apps on bank websites is decreasing as the number of apps a bank deploys increases.

This second issue is exacerbated by the fact that most bank websites do not make it easy for customers to find their apps. Apps are often listed by LOB, making it difficult for a customer to see all the apps offered by the bank, and even if they are listed in one place, the descriptions are often high-level and vague.

"Left unaddressed, these two challenges and others could really have a negative impact on banking revenues and customer experience," says Kristen Moyer, research vice president at Gartner. "Banks can use banking app stores to improve app discovery but only if the added cost and complexity are warranted."

In light of these challenges and opportunities, Gartner advises CIOs, CMOs, and LOB heads to focus on the following three actions:

• Evaluate the potential need for a banking app store—The two most important variables in evaluating the need for a banking app store are the total number of apps and the presence (or lack) of an application programming interface platform. The more apps a bank has deployed, the more challenging it becomes for users to discover the right app for them. Public web APIs deployed to third-party developers, customers, partners, employees, and others will serve as a multiplier to the number of apps deployed by the bank itself.

Three main options emerge from these variables:

(1) A customer-facing app store is deployed for retail, commercial and/or investment banking customers. The app store will include a description of the app, ratings, support, and other information. In some cases, the banking app store will directly enable app downloads (for example, for Android apps); however, in other cases, it will link the user to one of the public stores (for example, iOS apps need to be downloaded through iTunes). Banking app stores will often be most appropriate for banks that have deployed 15 to 20 or more apps, or banks that have deployed an API platform (in which case the total number of apps will usually exceed 20 anyway).

(2) A customer-facing app store is not deployed. Rather, the bank website is reorganized to optimize the ability of customers to discover apps and provide feedback. This will often be most appropriate for banks that have deployed from two to 20 apps, but not an API platform.

(3) Banks continue with their current practices. Apps are listed by LOB or under mobile banking. This will be most appropriate for banks that have deployed one app.

Given the rapid growth of apps, Gartner believes that CIOs, CMOs, and LOB executives should evaluate the need for a bank-specific app store in the 2014-to-2015 time frame. Furthermore, by 2016, Gartner expects to see about 25% of large banks deploy banking app stores to improve app discovery, user experience, and collaboration. As more banks deploy app stores, it will put competitive pressure on those that do not.

• Improve website organization to support app discovery and user experience—Banks need to make it easier for customers to find their apps by providing a "get your mobile app here" type of banner through their online banking application.

"Provide a dedicated section on the bank website to list all customer-facing apps," says Moyer. "This will be most effective when the total number of apps is less than ten to 20. For each app, provide complete descriptions and screen shots, and allow social commentary. Each app could then be linked to the associated public app store."

• Continue to make banking apps available through the public stores—CIOs, CMOs, and LOB heads should continue to make banking apps available through the public stores, regardless of whether or not they deploy their own banking app stores. This is because it's important to be where customers are, and many customers will continue to discover apps through the public stores. In addition, for some mobile operating systems (like iOS apps), a banking app store would still need to link to the app on iTunes to actually download the app.

John Ginovsky

John Ginovsky is a contributing editor of Banking Exchange and editor of the publication’s Tech Exchange e-newsletter. For more than two decades he’s written about the commercial banking industry, specializing in its technological side and how it relates to the actual business of banking. In addition to his weekly blogs—"Making Sense of It All"—he contributes fresh, original stories to each Tech Exchange issue based on personal interviews or exclusive contributed pieces. He previously was senior editor for Community Banker magazine (which merged into ABA Banking Journal) and for ABA Banking Journal and was managing editor and staff reporter for ABA’s Bankers News. Email him at [email protected].

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