Why open banking shouldn't be seen or heard.
Seen not heard. Open banking should simply work in the background to deliver better financial outcomes.

Why open banking shouldn't be seen or heard.

This article originally appeared on IT Brief Australia

Have you ever discussed Customer Relationship Management platforms around the dinner table with your family? Or perhaps Enterprise Resource Planning software with your first date? Hopefully not. But, as witnessed at many a social gathering, the customer service you receive from your mobile phone provider or bank can be a hot topic of conversation. 

The point being, consumers don’t necessarily need to know (or care!) about the behind-the-scenes systems a business uses to provide their service, but they do expect the business to deliver on what they promise, share useful insights, and provide a great customer experience. 

Nearly one year in, this is the challenge faced by open banking.

73.5% of Australian respondents have never heard of open banking. But we don’t need to understand open banking for it to make our lives better.

According to research recently commissioned by Mambu, the global market-leading banking and financial services platform, 73.5% of Australian respondents have never heard of open banking. Conversely the report, which surveyed more than 2,000 global consumers to understand what they think about open banking today, also revealed that while there is an inherent fear around open banking (with 48.2% of respondents being scared to use it), more than 77% of Australians are using one or more mobile finance apps.

This adoption of new financial services platforms indicates that the ideology of what open banking promises to deliver is already being embraced by Australian consumers, but there is still a long, long road ahead to build trust.

To set the scene: Open banking is part of the wider Consumer Data Right (CDR) being rolled out in Australia that empowers consumers to share their transactional data with trusted third parties in order to get better financial outcomes. Other sectors to follow suit as part of the CDR will be Utilities and Telecoms, so consumers can enjoy better energy and phone deals too. Simples.

Of course, we have been able to use our personal data for a long time now. For example, providing mortgage brokers with our bulky printed bank statements and payslips to prove we’re good for a loan. What makes open banking new is that it uses next generation technology such as API connectivity to deliver this data in near to real-time. This instant data has the potential to deliver incredibly powerful insights that can help consumers better-understand their spending habits and discover unique ways to enjoy a financial upside. When exploring further what consumers want from open banking, the survey highlights the following:

  • Instantly transfer money between different accounts (48%)
  • See different account balances together at a glance (38%)
  • Help boost my savings automatically (36%)
  • Receive helpful hints about better money management (34%)
  • Receive one overall monthly bank statement (34%)
  • Allow access to banking data to receive automatic suggestions about money saving on bills and insurance (26%)
The benefits of open banking should be the focus, not open banking per se

With so many apparent benefits, why hasn’t open banking been more successful? 

Despite the increased number of use cases emerging over the past twelve months, there are still only a handful of accredited data recipients in Australia, and many banks have successfully requested extensions on regulatory deadlines to turn on their open banking pipes. This failure to deliver on time and promote the actual benefits of open banking has led to a generally sceptic view of the initiative. The Mambu survey revealed that 57% of responders said they would be more likely to use it if their bank had more successfully implemented and promoted it, so there is hope. 

72% of Australian respondents highlighted data security as their biggest concern

Moving forward, the focus needs to be on the benefits that open banking can deliver, and to ultimately build trust around data security, which 72% of Australian respondents highlighted as their biggest concern. So less talk about open banking, and more focus on the products and services it will drive in the most secure and efficient way.

By way of comparison, consumers don’t pay much attention to concepts like real-time payments schemes that now exist in more than 63 domestic markets across the world – we’ve simply become used to funds clearing instantly when we transfer money via our banking apps. The fact that we are unknowingly using the New Payments Platform (NPP) in Australia to do this doesn’t matter to most people.

Similarly, not many consumers would be aware of the technology platforms like Mambu that help banks manage their mortgage books or term deposits, and why should they? But we certainly expect the bank to be able to calculate our interest correctly, seamlessly offset against our savings and have a deep understanding of our financial positions when it comes to refinancing. 

To truly be customer-centric it’s time to stop talking ‘open banking’ and show consumers that it’s simply ‘smart banking’, using modern technology to deliver better financial – and social – outcomes. 

So no more arguing at the dinner table about how badly your bank treated you on that call.


Kristofer Rogers is General Manager ANZ of Mambu, the world's leading banking and financial services platform. Find out more @ www.mambu..com

Sonia McDonald

1 Million+ Humans Impacted | Global Keynote Speaker & Author | Award-Winning Leadership Programs | LeadershipHQ, The Leadership Association, CPO Circle, Women Leaders & Affirm by Sonia | Top 100 Global Women Leaders

4y

Great article

Lynton Pipkorn

Identifying the right problems and getting them solved.

4y

May the best value proposition win. Mike drop

Paul M.

lets look to the future, learn from the past.

4y

I think apples over apples in this point of view. Smarter people you say... Well to connect into the Australian payments system you would have had to, 5 years ago, connect and pay big money to each connectivity provider. I think there were 8. Then big changes. And more changes. Open payments + open banking is in my view will take off, but you need to dig deeper into the structure of how it is being used. You only need to look at the UK or China white papers. https://www.ey.com/en_nz/banking-capital-markets/how-chinas-open-banking-experiment-is-unfolding In fact one entity could take the market if they planned it right, which they would not be seen or heard doing it, it just would happen and then before we all know it, we are all using one solution.. crazy.. but totally possible.

Damir Ćuća

Founder • CEO | 2x Successful Exits • Father of 6 • Retired

4y

Great article Kristofer Rogers - I agree 100%. The issue with talking about Open Banking is that on its own, it doesn't provide any value to the consumer. Instead, we should be focusing on the value such as "smarter banking" or helping individuals identify savings opportunities, enabling them to participate in services such as investments through round-ups, and helping them achieve their goals through the usage of data.  I would also argue that Open Banking as a concept / paradigm is not new - and is not something the market needs to (nor is) waiting for. To suggest we are waiting for it would discredit the innovation that Austrlian fintechs (that have already been relying on banking data through services like Basiq - shameless plug) have delivered to the Australian market - which is true innovation. These fintechs have demonstrated the ability to scale to +500k users without having to rely on the CDR version of Open Banking. Ideally we should be talking about how we can better support the Australian Fintech community - the true innovators that know how to wrangle this data to deliver value to consumers!

Ben Ford

Fintech sales & strategy. Reformed product manager. Fintech's premier t-shirt collection.

4y

Interesting (but not at all surprising) findings, Kris. Thanks for sharing this.

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