View more on these topics

Customer outcomes ‘not being represented at board level’

Almost half (46%) of financial services firms wish they had gained greater board level leadership and representation on customer outcomes, a new study has found.

The research, from customer experience services provider ArvatoConnect, asked 101 UK directors what their business should have done differently in the first year of Consumer Duty compliance.

The ‘Navigating Consumer Duty’ report also found only 44% of financial services businesses had attempted to change their culture to comply with the regulations.

This, it discovered, has been done by increasing board-level focus on customer outcomes.

The FCA said it has seen firms where the Duty is primarily driven by programme teams or risk and compliance colleagues, and isn’t discussed at board level.

The regulator has previously highlighted it as an area for improvement.

The ArvatoConnect study was conducted 12 months after the Consumer Duty was first implemented, on 31 July 2023.

Just 3% of respondents believed there is nothing more they need to do for compliance, reflecting moderate optimism that customer outcomes have improved.

More than a quarter (27%) of businesses said they are confident that outcomes have significantly improved for customers.

The largest group (42%) said customer outcomes have moderately improved.

Just over a fifth (22%) felt things had only marginally improved, with one in 10 (10%) admitting that outcomes have stayed the same.

Despite mixed optimism towards customer outcomes, 85% of respondents agreed that the Consumer Duty had helped to improve their business’ performance.

This is compared to only 3% that said it had worsened performance.

ArvatoConnect chief growth officer, James Towner, said: “The sector has commendably moved mountains to overhaul cultures for the benefit of customer outcomes and Consumer Duty compliance.

“Huge progress has been made. But it’s a well-recognised business paradigm that company culture is set from the top.

“Directors’ biggest regret was not securing board-level representation for customer outcomes earlier.

“This will be key to helping customer service directors to balance competing customer and business performance priorities, to unlocking budget to mitigate cost pressures, and to get the blessing of CIOs and CTOs for implementing CX transformation technologies as they look ahead to the second year of the Duty.”

ArvatoConnect’s study revealed how the sector believes it was well prepared (97%) for the Consumer Duty’s introduction.

Almost three quarters (77%) accepted they needed to move away from a culture focused on driving sales to one that was more focused on customer outcomes to comply with the regulations.

The majority of respondents to the study said they were ‘somewhat successful’ in embedding Consumer Duty into their company culture.

The study also found how businesses felt they need to adopt new technology such as AI and automation (51%), to enhance their data analytics (45%) and to revise compliance policies (37%) for compliance and to enhance customer outcomes further.

Nearly a third (29%) also believe they need to move focus away from AI and to provide more human contact to better support customers.

Managing increased costs was the biggest challenge businesses said they had faced, and will continue to face, in complying with the Duty – according to the findings.

Towner continued: “There are growing opportunities for businesses to improve outcomes with a considered approach to AI.

“Automating quality assurance and using generative AI to summarise customer interactions are helping to boost customer service agents’ productivity while driving upskilling and training.

“There’s also a great opportunity for CX directors to join up their data and to ensure it’s robust enough to underpin the systems that interact with consumers – as any disjoint with the data could ultimately deliver the opposite of a good customer outcome.

“Crucially, a large part of improving customer outcomes is about using technology at the right times, in the right places – what we call ‘digital orchestration’.

“Success relies on businesses defining clear objectives for what processes need to be improved, design a solution that’s fit for purpose, develop a bespoke solution and take a ‘people first’ approach to its deployment.”

ArvatoConnect surveyed 101 UK directors with responsibility for customer services working in financial services businesses.

This was done via independent research agency Censuswide between 6 and 8 August.

Comments

    Leave a comment

    Recommended