Citizens Access

Launching a new brand using an advanced audience strategy

Challenge

Citizens Access Bank was tasked with building a national, direct bank “from scratch” in a nine-month time frame. The goal was to generate $3 billion in deposits in its first six months, while creating a savings experience that is differentiated and unique. The journey to pursuing this goal included a few challenges:

  • Brand recognition - “Citizens Access” would be a new brand nationally, and its parent company, Citizens Bank, which is well known regionally, had no recognition outside of its eleven-state footprint.
  • A highly competitive direct bank environment all with differing business models competing for the same digitally savvy consumer.
  • Building a brand with consumers who were very rate sensitive and geared to search first for rates through search engines and aggregators (such as Bankrate, Nerdwallet, etc.).

Services
Analytics & CX Technology

Industry
Financial Services

Market
United States

  • $4.6B

    In balances in the first 10 months of operation

  • 71%

    Of deposits from out of footprint states

  • 4.5%

    Of balances coming from existing Citizens Bank accounts

  • 71

    Net Promotor Score

Citizens Access Case Study

Approach

Merkle and Citizens Access tackled this challenge using a three-part strategy:

  1. Building a picture of the desired audience
    Merkle conducted the primary research to identify the direct-to-bank consumer. This helped Citizens understand the characteristics of the consumer.

    Merkle’s proprietary Neuroanalytics was used to better understand motivations. The study uncovered and quantified the digital banking customer (referred to as Optimizers), highlighting their desires through cognitive psychology. From this study, key themes emerged as being important: simplicity, transparency, and trust. In terms of benefits, market leading rates, FDIC, access anytime, anywhere, products, language, and experience were also very important.

    These insights drove many of the the critical decisions around the naming of the bank, product development (features and benefits), fee structure (no fees), and addressed how customers wanted to experience the brand. In short, the understanding of the audience guided many of the critical marketing launch decisions.
  2. Understanding the audience relationship and interactions
    Merkle’s proprietary M1 platform was used to find and size the audience, understand behaviors, psychographics, attitudes, and media consumption patterns. It also helped determine how best to reach the consumer using addressable media.

    Another factor of success was the Bank’s analytics teams. Using multifactor analysis – the interplay of different media tactics were identified and optimizated. We then used that information to understand the media consumption, journey, and LTV performance.
  3. Leveraging customer feedback to shape and evolve the Bank
    Over 15,000 data points and customer feedback were captured and analyzed each month. This information helped identify areas for product and service expansion, defect remediation, customer experience improvement, and brand and communication evolution. A nimble planning process enabled the Bank to reporitize focus quickly to address needs using an agile planning approach.

 

Keys to success

  • Research to understand the customers: demographics, banking behaviors, and motivations
  • Insights to drive all the critical decisions around the launch of the bank such as: naming the bank, product features, benefit positioning, and channels
  • Creating a unique experience for the consumer, focused on three key motivations
  • Mapping the segmentation to actionable data to find the exact individuals in addressable media (display, social, affiliates, and search)