comscore Study Reveals growth Trends in Online Bill Payment

This far into the internet cycle, these are rapid growth statistics reported by comscore. (Courtesy of PaymentsNews). This despite a slower growth in the last quarter of the year.

comScore Study

comScore found that the number of online banking customers grew to nearly 40 million during Q4 2005, a 27-percent increase over the previous year.  Usage of online bill payment services has grown 36 percent during the same period.

Bill payment in particular shows rapid growth. Stats I have seen elsewhere, suggest Bank of America account for nearly 2/3 of the US Bill Payment market, so this growth will have a lot of BofA in there.

Bank bill payment, which consists of a payment through a retail bank at which a bank account is held, continues to grow at a rapid pace, and currently accounts for nearly one-quarter of all online bill payments. Bank of America led the industry in bank bill payment with 5.1 million active bill pay customers, attracting more than half of total bank bill pay customers in Q4 2005. Further, 34 percent of all online banking customers at Bank of America opt to use the institution's bill payment service, second only to Citibank (37%).


But digging into the numbers highlights some interesting trends, others should watch. Forrester Research believe online tenure is connected to comfort with security, and therefore willingness to bank online, and these growth patterns, and the reasons cited support that view.

When asked about reasons for enrollment, 33 percent of new online banking consumers referenced the free banking products that were offered as an inducement, and 23 percent responded that they felt more secure about online banking than they did previously.

Additionally, Washington Mutuals campaign is clearly working too.

Washington Mutual's free banking product offerings attracted the most new enrollees (43 percent), confirming the success of its free checking campaign.

The entire press release:

Study Reveals Trends in Online Bill Payment, High-Yield Savings, Customer
                          Loyalty and Satisfaction

RESTON, Va., April 10 /PRNewswire/ -- comScore Networks, the industry
leader in the measurement and analysis of consumer behavior and attitudes,
today released an analysis of the state of online banking in the U.S.
comScore found that the number of online banking customers grew to nearly
40 million during Q4 2005, a 27-percent increase over the previous year.
Usage of online bill payment services has grown 36 percent during the same
period.
    "Consumers continue to migrate to online banking, with the nation's
largest banks attracting more than 8.5 million new online banking customers
in 2005," said Serge Matta, director of comScore Financial Services
Solutions. "At the same time, it is clear that adoption rates are slowing.
In Q4 2005, the total number of online banking customers grew by 3.1
percent over the previous quarter, representing the lowest sequential
quarterly growth in three years."
    Continued Growth in Online Bill Payment
    Bank bill payment, which consists of a payment through a retail bank at
which a bank account is held, continues to grow at a rapid pace, and
currently accounts for nearly one-quarter of all online bill payments. Bank
of America led the industry in bank bill payment with 5.1 million active
bill pay customers, attracting more than half of total bank bill pay
customers in Q4 2005. Further, 34 percent of all online banking customers
at Bank of America opt to use the institution's bill payment service,
second only to Citibank (37 percent).
    Online Banking Drivers
    While ease of use and convenience were previously the major drivers,
incentives and deflating security concerns are the primary motivations
nudging customers to adopt online banking today. When asked about reasons
for enrollment, 33 percent of new online banking consumers referenced the
free banking products that were offered as an inducement, and 23 percent
responded that they felt more secure about online banking than they did
previously. Washington Mutual's free banking product offerings attracted
the most new enrollees (43 percent), confirming the success of its free
checking campaign.
    Differentiation of Services Critical to Growth
    The high-yield savings marketplace is a growing segment within the
banking community. As high-yield savings accounts continue to change the
face of online banking, financial institutions are confronted with the
decision of whether or not to enter this category. High-yield savings
accounts are attracting many satisfied customers, but the comScore study
found that satisfaction is driven in large part by the high rate itself.
Traditional banks are faced with the choice of watching deposits migrate to
other institutions, or confronting the possibility of cannibalizing their
own existing, lower rate deposits if they launch high-yield savings
accounts.
    New entrants to the high-yield savings market increased competition,
spurring promotional offerings and adoption growth. In Q4 2005, 446,000
high- yield applications were submitted, up from 390,000 in Q1 2005.
Emigrant Bank ("The American Dream Savings Account") announced their
high-yield savings offerings during Q4 2004, followed by Capital One
Savings in Q1 2005. HSBC Direct launched a 4.0 percent annual percentage
yield (APY) in Q4 2005, which was the highest offering until March 2006
when Citibank entered the marketplace with a 4.5 percent APY.
    These new entrants drastically changed the savings marketplace
landscape. ING Direct's share of submitted online savings applications
dropped from 63 percent to 33 percent over the course of 2005. Meanwhile
HSBC, Emigrant Direct and Capital One ended 2005 with a combined 29 percent
share of the savings market.
    Web Site Satisfaction Drives Overall Satisfaction with the Banking
Relationship
    comScore explored two measures of satisfaction in this analysis:
overall satisfaction with the banking relationship and satisfaction with
the bank's Web site.
    Overall, Wachovia, Bank of America, and the high-yield savings
providers achieved the highest customer satisfaction ratings, with 68
percent of respondents indicating they are very satisfied/satisfied (top 2
box -- rating a 6 or 7 on a 7-point scale) with their banking relationship.
Wachovia had the highest Web site satisfaction score for two years running,
with 73 percent of visitors rating their satisfaction in a top 2 box in
2005. Wachovia's nearest competitors in this category (Bank of America,
Wells Fargo, and Chase/Bank One) each had 69 percent of customers
responding in this manner. A strong connection between satisfaction with
the banking relationship and satisfaction with the Web site exists. Only 16
percent of customers who are dissatisfied with the Web site rate their
overall satisfaction with the bank relationship in a top 2 box. Meanwhile,
88 percent customers who are satisfied with their bank's Web site state
they are very satisfied/ satisfied with the bank relationship.
    About the 2006 State of Online Banking Report
    The 2006 State of Online Banking analysis leverages comScore Networks'
proprietary panel of more than two million online consumers. Additional
information was gathered through a survey, conducted among 2,124 U.S.
consumers to further understand their banking relationships, attitudes, and
intentions.
    comScore's 2006 Online Banking Report includes:
     -- Quarterly online banking growth statistics
     -- Quarterly online bill pay statistics
     -- Attitudinal insight into why some consumers choose not to use online
        bill pay
     -- High-yield savings marketplace statistics (Share of submitted online
        applications, considerations when selecting, initial source of
        information)
     -- Customer loyalty statistics (products per customer, factors that
        impact switching)
     -- Customer satisfaction statistics
    Banking industry professionals and members of the media may request
comScore's 2006 Online Banking Report by sending an e-mail to
banking@comscore.com .
    About comScore Networks
    comScore Networks provides unparalleled insight into consumer behavior
and attitudes. This capability is based on a massive, global cross-section
of more than 2 million consumers who have given comScore explicit
permission to confidentially capture their browsing and transaction
behavior, including online and offline purchasing. comScore panelists also
participate in survey research that captures and integrates their attitudes
and intentions. Through its proprietary technology, comScore measures what
matters across a broad spectrum of behavior and attitudes. comScore
consultants apply this deep knowledge of customers and competitors to help
clients design powerful marketing strategies and tactics that deliver
superior ROI. comScore services are used by global leaders such as AOL,
Microsoft, Yahoo!, Verizon, Best Buy, The Newspaper Association of America,
Tribune Interactive, ESPN, Fox Sports, Nestle, MBNA, Universal McCann, the
United States Postal Service, Merck and Orbitz. For more information,
please visit http://www.comscore.com .

SOURCE comScore Networks
Web Site: http://www.comscore.com