In particular, card-based offers to small business made by banks (particularly Bank of America) and non-banks alike have shown significant deterioration in quality. These credit score-dependent products were offered with a mass-market approach; many card portfolios suffer from loans to what turned out to be sub-prime business segments. Advanta provides the most notable example of a failed approach to small business; in effect, totally dependent upon making loans, that company has stopped lending and is in liquidation.
Fundamentally, banks that lead with lending to small business without demanding a fuller relationship are making a mistake. Yet, even though banks proclaim their “relationship focus” and their “solutions-orientation”, the reality is that many small business bankers are loan jockeys, period.
Given the downturn in the economy, now is the right time to rethink your bank’s approach to this segment, eliminate bad practices and strategies, and implement a disciplined approach for the future. Nice words, which most banks will agree to in concept but not follow-up on. However, some banks are already building a more coherent and, frankly, smarter approach to business banking; those will be the winners.
Don’t Lead with Credit
For 20 years, we have been pointing out the value of the small business deposit relationship. Amazingly, many banks still do not build their sales/marketing focus on attracting the 60% of small businesses that never or seldom borrow. To be clear, lending still has to occur, but only when you capture the deposit relationship. American Express remains successful with a loans-only approach, but they have spent years and millions developing models to underwrite and monitor portfolios. Also, during this crisis, they have acted quickly to mitigate losses.
By this we mean that the main focus of sales and service should be on the principals of the business not the business itself. That is a major difference between small business and larger middle market or large corporate banking. A small business represents the owner’s income, net worth and, yes, ego. One of the right things that Merrill Lynch did in its foray into business banking was to build off the relationships that already existed between the broker and an investor/business owner. They often started with knowledge of the owner and moved to the business. Bankers usually start with the business…and end there.
Bankers love to construct and defend silos. Banks in which a true cross-sell culture exists are the rare exception; we have also found that banks from the smallest to the largest share this problem. Think “Small Business Household” (SBH) not small business. The SBH consists of the company (loans, deposits, retirement planning, etc), the owner, the owner’s family, and the owner’s employees. We have met with many banks that say they approach the segment with this type of focus, but in almost all cases they are deluding themselves. They may have the right intentions, but execution is missing.
Given the extent to which the industry has turned the screws on small business, many banks have given up on achieving trusted advisor status and fallen back to humbler goals such as surviving. In fact, as a whole, the banking industry has served its customers badly during the present downturn, reducing lines of credit, tightening lending requirements, charging higher rates, and hiking fees. Every survey we have seen points to the substantial estrangement between banks and their customers.
Many, if not most, banks continue to underexploit a great financial opportunity for their companies and a way to differentiate themselves from their peers. The Small Business Household can serve as a strong profit and growth engine as the economy stabilizes and improves; however, only a handful of banks will possess the leadership and vision to harvest this opportunity.
I’d love to hear your take on all of this. Feel free to send comments to the blog.
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