Press Release
For immediate release
Consumer sentiment towards digital-only banks falls almost three times the rate of high-street banks’ during lockdown
- Digital-only banks’ customer sentiment decreased by 14 percentage points (pp) during lockdown, compared to 5pp for high-street banks
- Overall, consumer sentiment towards banks fell by 7pp
- Savings rates were customers’ biggest issue with their banks
This leaves overall consumer sentiment for the banking industry at -24% on a possible scale of +100% to -100% for the period between 1 March and 31 July.
However, over 800,000 social media posts from customers revealed that digital banks saw a sentiment decline of almost three times that of high-street banks during the pandemic. On average digital-only banks’ customer sentiment fell by 14pp compared to just 5pp for high-street banks.
While this is a blow for digital-only banks, it should be noted that high-street banks had, and continue to have, a much lower overall sentiment (-13% vs -35% currently).
When asked, over half of high-street banks’ customers (52%) said that they felt negatively towards their bank throughout lockdown, with customers saying that savings rates are what frustrated them the most (29%).
Following this was poor customer service both online (14%) and in-branch (14%). The third most common customer criticism was lack of communication during the pandemic (11%).
The story was very similar for digital-only banks – 53% of customers felt negatively about their provider during lockdown and savings rates were again the main problem (21%).
Customers’ main method of interacting with their digital-only bank is through an app, so this is perhaps why customers’ second biggest issue was around their bank’s app (15%).
Poor customer service appeared to be a running theme with 14% of digital-only banks’ customers complaining about the level of customer service they received over the phone and digitally.
The bank that experienced the biggest decrease in sentiment was Monese, with sentiment falling from -0.1% to -19%. Currently, Atom bank has the highest customer sentiment of 9%; however, this is a drop from 11% pre-lockdown.
Customer sentiment towards HSBC, Lloyds and NatWest actually improved during lockdown, with Lloyds bank experiencing the larger rise in sentiment from -36% to -33%. Despite these increases, the incumbent banks analysed still sit within the bottom five positions for overall sentiment, with Barclays having the lowest score of -42%.
Commenting on the findings, Jon Ostler, CEO of personal finance comparison site, finder.com, said:
“Digital-only banks have enjoyed a golden period where dissatisfied consumers of traditional banks have flocked to them, attracted by market-leading apps, innovative features and a more human way of communicating to customers.
“Now that these digital-only banks are becoming recognised players in the industry, it is natural they will start to be held to a higher standard. This is especially true during a crisis like COVID where people are relying on their bank more than ever – some banks have handled the situation better than others.
“Digital-only banks are still comfortably ahead in the sentiment stakes compared to the incumbents but perhaps it was inevitable that the high-street banks would claw back some ground. The challengers will be hoping this fall in positive sentiment is just temporary and not the start of a bigger trend.”
Nic Ray, CEO of BrandsEye, noted that social media is growing as a platform for customer service and continues to be a rich source of consumer insight:
“As the adoption of digital banking services accelerated during the pandemic, the industry can expect an increase in digital conversation that includes social media customer service requests and customer feedback. Swiftly identifying and responding to service requests, and surfacing valuable feedback from within all of the noise of social media, will be critical to improving customer experiences and building long-term customer loyalty for both digital and high-street banks.”
Methodology:
Finder commissioned Onepoll on 26 to 28 August 2020 to carry out a nationally representative survey of adults aged 18+. A total of 2,000 people were questioned throughout Great Britain, with representative quotas for gender, age and region.
BrandsEye carried out an analysis of 10 UK banks’ public social media conversations on Twitter and press sources. In total, 856,206 mentions were collected. 37,364 individual mentions were assigned sentiment scores of positive, negative or neutral by BrandsEye’s proprietary Crowd of human contributors. In order to expand analysis to other platforms and direct messages (DM), the brands would need to provide authorisations for data collection of other social media profiles. Thematic conversation about COVID-19 was segmented through a keyword filter and sentiment. The date range for analysis was divided into two periods: Pre-COVID-19 from 1 August 2019 – 29 February 2020, and During COVID-19 from 1 March – 31 July 2020.
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For further press information
- Matt Mckenna
- UK PR Manager
- M: +44 747 921 7816
- T: +44 20 3828 1338
- matt.mckenna@finder.com
Disclaimer
The information in this release is accurate as of the date published, but rates, fees and other product features may have changed. Please see updated product information on finder.com's review pages for the current correct values.
About finder.com
finder.com is a personal finance website, which helps consumers compare products online so they can make better informed decisions. Consumers can visit the website to compare utilities, mortgages, credit cards, insurance products, shopping voucher codes, and so much more before choosing the option that best suits their needs.
Best of all, finder.com is completely free to use. We’re not a bank or insurer, nor are we owned by one, and we are not a product issuer or a credit provider. We’re not affiliated with any one institution or outlet, so it’s genuine advice from a team of experts who care about helping you find better.
finder.com launched in the UK in February 2017 and is privately owned and self-funded by two Australian entrepreneurs – Fred Schebesta and Frank Restuccia – who successfully grew finder.com.au to be Australia's most visited personal finance website (Source: Experian Hitwise).