Unlocking the potential of retail banking through customer segmentation

Reading Time: 5 minutes

Introduction

Retail banking is undergoing a dynamic transformation, propelled by technological advancements and shifting customer expectations. Traditional one-size-fits-all approaches are increasingly losing ground as customers demand more personalized and relevant banking experiences. In this context, banks are exploring innovative ways to effectively differentiate themselves and meet diverse customer needs. One potent emerging strategy is customer segmentation, which enables banks to divide their customer base into distinct groups based on specific criteria. Customer segmentation is not just a marketing technique; it is a comprehensive approach that allows banks to tailor products, services, and marketing strategies to specific customer groups. By doing so, banks can significantly enhance customer satisfaction, boost loyalty, and ultimately drive profitability. The transformative potential of customer segmentation becomes even more apparent when combined with advanced analytics and data-driven insights. This blog will delve into the art and science of customer segmentation in retail banking. We will discuss methodologies, highlight the benefits, navigate the challenges, explore future trends, and provide real-world applications to illustrate their effectiveness and potential.

The art and science of customer segmentation in banking

Customer segmentation in banking involves a blend of art and science, leveraging both qualitative and quantitative methodologies. The primary approaches to segmentation include demographic segmentation, behavioral segmentation, psychographic segmentation, and value-based segmentation. Each method has its unique advantages and can be used independently or in combination to create more granular and actionable customer segments. Demographic segmentation divides customers based on age, gender, income, occupation, and education level. Behavioral segmentation focuses on customer behaviors, including transaction history, product usage, and interaction patterns with the bank. Psychographic segmentation considers lifestyle, values, interests, and attitudes, while value-based segmentation prioritizes customers based on their profitability and lifetime value to the bank. Modern customer segmentation practices are increasingly reliant on data analytics and machine learning. These technologies enable banks to process massive amounts of structured data (e.g., account balances, transaction history) and unstructured data (e.g., social media interactions, customer feedback), identifying patterns and creating more accurate and dynamic customer segments. Examples of common customer segments in retail banking include high-net-worth individuals, young professionals, small business owners, and retirees. Each segment exhibits distinct financial needs, preferences, and behaviors, guiding banks to tailor their offerings accordingly.

Unlocking value: The benefits of effective customer segmentation

An effective customer segmentation strategy provides multiple benefits to retail banks, prominently aiding in personalizing products and services. By understanding specific customer needs, banks can offer tailored solutions, increasing satisfaction and loyalty. Personalization also facilitates higher cross-selling and upselling opportunities, ultimately driving revenue growth. Customer segmentation enhances marketing effectiveness. Targeted campaigns based on segmented customer groups often result in higher response rates, improved ROI on marketing spend, and more efficient customer acquisition. For instance, banks can customize their messaging and select appropriate channels for customer segments, achieving better engagement and conversion rates. Understanding various customer segments’ distinct needs and pain points also guides product development and innovation. Banks can introduce new products or enhance existing ones to meet the specific requirements of different customer groups, gaining a competitive edge in the market. Moreover, customer segmentation fosters operational efficiencies. It helps banks optimize resource allocation, streamline customer service processes, and improve risk management practices. Segmentation can also inform strategic decisions in areas such as branch network optimization and digital transformation initiatives.

Navigating challenges: Overcoming obstacles in customer segmentation

Despite its numerous benefits, implementing customer segmentation in retail banking is not without challenges. Data quality and integration issues often pose significant hurdles. For effective segmentation, banks need clean, consistent, and comprehensive customer data, which requires addressing data silos within organizations and creating a unified customer view across different banking channels and products. Ethical and regulatory considerations surrounding customer data usage and privacy are also critical. Banks must maintain customer trust while leveraging their data for segmentation purposes. Compliance with regulations such as GDPR and other data protection laws is essential, and banks must navigate these requirements carefully to benefit from customer segmentation. Organizational challenges also arise, particularly the need for cross-functional collaboration and cultural shifts toward data-driven decision-making. Executive buy-in is crucial, as resistance to change can impede the successful implementation of customer segmentation strategies. Effective change management strategies are therefore necessary to foster a seamless transition. Technical challenges involve implementing sophisticated segmentation models. Banks need advanced analytics capabilities and skilled data scientists to build and maintain these models. Investing in modern data infrastructure is essential to support effective customer segmentation and overcome the limitations of legacy systems.

The Fosfor Decision Cloud

Traditional segmentation methods often fail to deliver real-time and actionable insights. Enter the Fosfor Decision Cloud (FDC), a cutting-edge solution designed to revolutionize the customer segmentation process.

Data collection and preparation

Data collection and preparation are critical first steps in customer segmentation. The FDC excels in this area by integrating with multiple data sources, ensuring that all relevant customer information is gathered seamlessly. The FDC offers robust capabilities for trustworthy data pipelines. Its advanced data transformation tools eliminate inconsistencies, duplicates, and irrelevant information, ensuring the data foundation is accurate and complete.

Advanced analytics for segmentation

Once the data is prepared, the next step involves applying advanced analytics to identify meaningful customer segments. The FDC is a powerful module focused on AI/ML lifecycle automation. It allows users to leverage machine learning algorithms to uncover patterns and insights that would be impossible to detect through manual analysis. With these capabilities, banks can move beyond basic demographic segmentation to more nuanced and actionable insights, such as purchasing behavior, risk propensity, customer lifetime value, and more.

Personalized marketing and customer engagement

Customer segmentation aims to enable personalized marketing and customer engagement. The FDC empowers business users by providing AI-driven insights for making informed decisions. This translates into highly targeted marketing campaigns and customized customer experiences.By leveraging these insights, financial institutions can significantly improve their customer engagement metrics, which can leadto increased loyalty and revenue.
Implementing customer segmentation through the FDC significantly improves operational efficiency. The platform’s integrated approach reduces the complexity and operational burden of managing multiple tools and data sources. The Fosfor Decision Cloud provides a robust and comprehensive solution for implementing customer segmentation in banks and financial institutions. From data collection and preparation to advanced analytics, personalized marketing, and operational efficiency, the FDC covers the entire spectrum of the segmentation process.

The future of customer segmentation in retail banking

As technology continues to evolve, the future of customer segmentation in retail banking looks increasingly promising. Artificial intelligence and machine learning are set to play a pivotal role in creating more dynamic and predictive customer segments. The concept of a ‘segment of one,’ or hyper-personalization, is likely to redefine customer segmentation practices, offering even more tailored and individualized banking experiences. Open banking and APIs present additional opportunities to enhance customer segmentation capabilities. Access to a broader financial and non-financial data range can lead to more comprehensive customer profiles and more accurate segmentation. Real-time data processing and segmentation can further refine customer interactions and decision-making. Behavioral and contextual segmentation are gaining importance in the digital age. Banks can leverage data from digital interactions, mobile usage patterns, and IoT devices to create more nuanced and actionable customer segments. Alternative data sources like social media activity and geolocation data can also enhance segmentation models. However, the increasing sophistication of customer segmentation practices comes with ethical implications and societal impacts. Responsible AI practices, transparency, and fairness in segmentation models are paramount. Banks must balance personalization with inclusivity to avoid over-segmentation and ensure equitable access to banking services for all customers.

Conclusion: Embracing the FDC and customer segmentation for a competitive advantage

In summary, customer segmentation holds transformative potential for retail banking. Effective segmentation can improve customer experiences, increase operational efficiency, and strengthen financial performance for banks. As the landscape of retail banking continues to evolve, customer segmentation remains a critical tool for staying competitive and meeting changing customer needs. Successful customer segmentation is not a one-time exercise but an ongoing process of understanding and adapting to customer behaviors and preferences. Continuous innovation and adaptation are essential to fully leverage the power of customer segmentation. Banks must invest in technology, skills, and organizational changes to embrace data-driven, customer-centric approaches. Financial institutions that embrace the FDC can look forward to deeper customer insights, improved engagement, and significant operational benefits. In an industry where understanding customer needs is paramount, the FDC is a valuable partner in driving data-driven growth and innovation.

If you would like see the FDC in action, ask for a demo today!

Author

Manish Singh

FDC Industry Principal Lead, BFSI

Manish Singh has 12+ years of progressive experience in executing data-driven solutions. He is adept at handling complex data problems, implementing efficient data processing, and delivering value. He is proficient in machine learning and statistical modeling algorithms/techniques for identifying patterns and extracting valuable insights. He has a remarkable track record of managing complete software development lifecycles and accomplishing mission critical projects. He is highly competent in blending data science techniques with business understanding to transform data seamlessly into business value.

More on the topic

Read more thought leadership from our team of experts

Unlocking financial growth: The power of AI-driven customer insights

In the ever-evolving landscape of banking and financial services, understanding and anticipating customer needs has become paramount.

Read more

Unlocking the potential of retail banking through customer segmentation

Retail banking is undergoing a dynamic transformation, propelled by technological advancements and shifting customer expectations.

Read more

Unlocking the power of data: The Modern Decision Stack for enterprises

The modern data space has evolved by leaps and bounds altering the very fabric of business analytics and data management. The mass adoption of cloud data warehouses and cloud-based tools has changed how we acquire, store, access, transform, and interact with data. However, business leaders often struggle to get the data they need or are limited in their ability to effectively translate insights into outcomes that drive real value.

Read more
We use cookies to personalise content and ads, to provide social media features and to analyse our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners. View more
Cookies settings
Accept
Privacy & Cookie policy
Privacy & Cookies policy
Cookie name Active

What is a cookie?

A cookie is a small piece of data that a website asks your browser to store on your computer or mobile device. The cookie allows the website to “remember” your actions or preferences over time. On future visits, this data is then returned to that website to help identify you and your site preferences. Our websites and mobile sites use cookies to give you the best online experience. Most Internet browsers support cookies; however, users can set their browsers to decline certain types of cookies or specific cookies. Further, users can delete cookies at any time.

Why do we use cookies?

We use cookies to learn how you interact with our content and to improve your experience when visiting our website(s). For example, some cookies remember your language or preferences so that you do not have to repeatedly make these choices when you visit one of our websites.

What kind of cookies do we use?

We use the following categories of cookie:

Category 1: Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly necessary cookies are those that are essential for our sites to work in the way you have requested. Although many of our sites are open, that is, they do not require registration; we may use strictly necessary cookies to control access to some of our community sites, whitepapers or online events such as webinars; as well as to maintain your session during a single visit. These cookies will need to reset on your browser each time you register or log in to a gated area. If you block these cookies entirely, you may not be able to access gated areas. We may also offer you the choice of a persistent cookie to recognize you as you return to one of our gated sites. If you choose not to use this “remember me” function, you will simply need to log in each time you return.
Cookie Name Domain / Associated Domain / Third-Party Service Description Retention period
__cfduid Cloudflare Cookie associated with sites using CloudFlare, used to speed up page load times 1 Year
lidc linkedin.com his is a Microsoft MSN 1st party cookie that ensures the proper functioning of this website. 1 Day
PHPSESSID ltimindtree.com Cookies named PHPSESSID only contain a reference to a session stored on the web server When the browsing session ends
catAccCookies ltimindtree.com Cookie set by the UK cookie consent plugin to record that you accept the fact that the site uses cookies. 29 Days
AWSELB Used to distribute traffic to the website on several servers in order to optimise response times. 2437 Days
JSESSIONID linkedin.com Preserves users states across page requests. 334,416 Days
checkForPermission bidr.io Determines whether the visitor has accepted the cookie consent box. 1 Day
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE Tries to estimate users bandwidth on the pages with integrated YouTube videos. 179 Days
.avia-table-1 td:nth-of-type(1):before { content: 'Cookie Name'; } .avia-table-1 td:nth-of-type(2):before { content: 'Domain / Associated Domain / Third-Party Service'; } .avia-table-1 td:nth-of-type(3):before { content: 'Description'; } .avia-table-1 td:nth-of-type(4):before { content: 'Retention period'; }

Category 2: Performance Cookies

Performance cookies, often called analytics cookies, collect data from visitors to our sites on a unique, but anonymous basis. The results are reported to us as aggregate numbers and trends. LTI allows third-parties to set performance cookies. We rely on reports to understand our audiences, and improve how our websites work. We use Google Analytics, a web analytics service provided by Google, Inc. (“Google”), which in turn uses performance cookies. Information generated by the cookies about your use of our website will be transmitted to and stored by Google on servers Worldwide. The IP-address, which your browser conveys within the scope of Google Analytics, will not be associated with any other data held by Google. You may refuse the use of cookies by selecting the appropriate settings on your browser. However, you have to note that if you do this, you may not be able to use the full functionality of our website. You can also opt-out from being tracked by Google Analytics from any future instances, by downloading and installing Google Analytics Opt-out Browser Add-on for your current web browser: https://tools.google.com/dlpage/gaoptout & cookiechoices.org and privacy.google.com/businesses
Cookie Name Domain / Associated Domain / Third-Party Service Description Retention period
_ga ltimindtree.com Used to identify unique users. Registers a unique ID that is used to generate statistical data on how the visitor uses the web site. 2 years
_gid ltimindtree.com This cookie name is asssociated with Google Universal Analytics. This appears to be a new cookie and as of Spring 2017 no information is available from Google. It appears to store and update a unique value for each page visited. 1 day
_gat ltimindtree.com Used by Google Analytics to throttle request rate 1 Day
.avia-table-2 td:nth-of-type(1):before { content: 'Cookie Name'; } .avia-table-2 td:nth-of-type(2):before { content: 'Domain / Associated Domain / Third-Party Service'; } .avia-table-2 td:nth-of-type(3):before { content: 'Description'; } .avia-table-2 td:nth-of-type(4):before { content: 'Retention period'; }

Category 3: Functionality Cookies

We may use site performance cookies to remember your preferences for operational settings on our websites, so as to save you the trouble to reset the preferences every time you visit. For example, the cookie may recognize optimum video streaming speeds, or volume settings, or the order in which you look at comments to a posting on one of our forums. These cookies do not identify you as an individual and we don’t associate the resulting information with a cookie that does.
Cookie Name Domain / Associated Domain / Third-Party Service Description Retention period
lang ads.linkedin.com Set by LinkedIn when a webpage contains an embedded “Follow us” panel. Preference cookies enable a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in. When the browsing session ends
lang linkedin.com In most cases it will likely be used to store language preferences, potentially to serve up content in the stored language. When the browsing session ends
YSC Registers a unique ID to keep statistics of what videos from Youtube the user has seen. 2,488,902 Days
.avia-table-3 td:nth-of-type(1):before { content: 'Cookie Name'; } .avia-table-3 td:nth-of-type(2):before { content: 'Domain / Associated Domain / Third-Party Service'; } .avia-table-3 td:nth-of-type(3):before { content: 'Description'; } .avia-table-3 td:nth-of-type(4):before { content: 'Retention period'; }

Category 4: Social Media Cookies

If you use social media or other third-party credentials to log in to our sites, then that other organization may set a cookie that allows that company to recognize you. The social media organization may use that cookie for its own purposes. The Social Media Organization may also show you ads and content from us when you visit its websites.

Ref links:

LinkedInhttps://www.linkedin.com/legal/privacy-policy Twitterhttps://gdpr.twitter.com/en.html & https://twitter.com/en/privacy & https://help.twitter.com/en/rules-and-policies/twitter-cookies Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/business/gdpr Also, if you use a social media-sharing button or widget on one of our sites, the social network that created the button will record your action for its own purposes. Please read through each social media organization’s privacy and data protection policy to understand its use of its cookies and the tracking from our sites, and also how to control such cookies and buttons.

Category 5: Targeting/Advertising Cookies

We use tracking and targeting cookies, or ask other companies to do so on our behalf, to send you emails and show you online advertising, which meet your business and professional interests. If you have registered on our websites, we may send you emails, tailored to reflect the interests you have shown during your visits. We ask third-party advertising platforms and technology companies to show you our ads after you leave our sites (retargeting technology). This technology allows us to make our website services more interesting for you. Retargeting cookies are used to record anonymized movement patterns on a website. These patterns are used to tailor banner advertisements to your interests. The data used for retargeting is completely anonymous, and is only used for statistical analysis. No personal data is stored, and the use of the retargeting technology is subject to the applicable statutory data protection regulations. We also work with companies to reach people who have not visited our sites. These companies do not identify you as an individual, instead rely on a variety of other data to show you advertisements, for example, behavior across websites, information about individual devices, and, in some cases, IP addresses. Please refer below table to understand how these third-party websites collect and use information on our behalf and read more about their opt out options.
Cookie Name Domain / Associated Domain / Third-Party Service Description Retention period
BizoID ads.linkedin.com These cookies are used to deliver adverts more relevant to you and your interests 183 days
iuuid demandbase.com Used to measure the performance and optimization of Demandbase data and reporting 2 years
IDE doubleclick.net This cookie carries out information about how the end user uses the website and any advertising that the end user may have seen before visiting the said website. 2,903,481 Days
UserMatchHistory linkedin.com This cookie is used to track visitors so that more relevant ads can be presented based on the visitor’s preferences. 60,345 Days
bcookie linkedin.com This is a Microsoft MSN 1st party cookie for sharing the content of the website via social media. 2 years
__asc ltimindtree.com This cookie is used to collect information on consumer behavior, which is sent to Alexa Analytics. 1 Day
__auc ltimindtree.com This cookie is used to collect information on consumer behavior, which is sent to Alexa Analytics. 1 Year
_gcl_au ltimindtree.com Used by Google AdSense for experimenting with advertisement efficiency across websites using their services. 3 Months
bscookie linkedin.com Used by the social networking service, LinkedIn, for tracking the use of embedded services. 2 years
tempToken app.mirabelsmarketingmanager.com When the browsing session ends
ELOQUA eloqua.com Registers a unique ID that identifies the user’s device upon return visits. Used for auto -populating forms and to validate if a certain contact is registered to an email group . 2 Years
ELQSTATUS eloqua.com Used to auto -populate forms and validate if a given contact has subscribed to an email group. The cookies only set if the user allows tracking . 2 Years
IDE doubleclick.net Used by Google Double Click to register and report the website user’s actions after viewing clicking one of the advertiser’s ads with the purpose of measuring the efficiency of an ad and to present targeted ads to the user. 1 Year
NID google.com Registers a unique ID that identifies a returning user’s device. The ID is used for targeted ads. 6 Months
PREF youtube.com Registers a unique ID that is used by Google to keep statistics of how the visitor uses YouTube videos across different web sites. 8 months
test_cookie doubleclick.net This cookie is set by DoubleClick (which is owned by Google) to determine if the website visitor’s browser supports cookies. 1,073,201 Days
UserMatchHistory linkedin.com Used to track visitors on multiple websites, in order to present relevant advertisement based on the visitor’s preferences. 29 days
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE youtube.com 179 days
.avia-table-4 td:nth-of-type(1):before { content: 'Cookie Name'; } .avia-table-4 td:nth-of-type(2):before { content: 'Domain / Associated Domain / Third-Party Service'; } .avia-table-4 td:nth-of-type(3):before { content: 'Description'; } .avia-table-4 td:nth-of-type(4):before { content: 'Retention period'; }
Third party companies Purpose Applicable Privacy/Cookie Policy Link
Alexa Show targeted, relevant advertisements https://www.oracle.com/legal/privacy/marketing-cloud-data-cloud-privacy-policy.html To opt out: http://www.bluekai.com/consumers.php#optout
Eloqua Personalized email based interactions https://www.oracle.com/legal/privacy/marketing-cloud-data-cloud-privacy-policy.html To opt out: https://www.oracle.com/marketingcloud/opt-status.html
CrazyEgg CrazyEgg provides visualization of visits to website. https://help.crazyegg.com/article/165-crazy-eggs-gdpr-readiness Opt Out: DAA: https://www.crazyegg.com/opt-out
DemandBase Show targeted, relevant advertisements https://www.demandbase.com/privacy-policy/ Opt out: DAA: http://www.aboutads.info/choices/
LinkedIn Show targeted, relevant advertisements and re-targeted advertisements to visitors of LTI websites https://www.linkedin.com/legal/privacy-policy Opt-out: https://www.linkedin.com/help/linkedin/answer/62931/manage-advertising-preferences
Google Show targeted, relevant advertisements and re-targeted advertisements to visitors of LTI websites https://policies.google.com/privacy Opt Out: https://adssettings.google.com/ NAI: http://optout.networkadvertising.org/ DAA: http://optout.aboutads.info/
Facebook Show targeted, relevant advertisements https://www.facebook.com/privacy/explanation Opt Out: https://www.facebook.com/help/568137493302217
Youtube Show targeted, relevant advertisements. Show embedded videos on LTI websites https://policies.google.com/privacy Opt Out: https://adssettings.google.com/ NAI: http://optout.networkadvertising.org/ DAA: http://optout.aboutads.info/
Twitter Show targeted, relevant advertisements and re-targeted advertisements to visitors of LTI websites https://twitter.com/en/privacy Opt out: https://twitter.com/personalization DAA: http://optout.aboutads.info/
. .avia-table tr {} .avia-table th, .flex_column .avia-table td { color: #343434; padding: 5px !important; border: 1px solid #ddd !important; } .avia-table th {background-color: #addeec;} .avia-table tr:nth-child(odd) td {background-color: #f1f1f1;}
Save settings
Cookies settings