2006-10-02
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A Check On 5 Banking Technologies">
A Check On 5 Banking Technologies
Bank branches were supposed to go the way of the dodo bird, most industry analysts said five years ago. Technology, in the form of online banking, more advanced automated teller machines (ATMs) and sophisticated telephone voice response systems, would make a visit to the branch unnecessary. On the contrary, banks opened thousands of new storefront-type branches nationwide in the hopes of securing more profitable lines of business such as mortgages, credit cards and insurance products.
The resurgence of branch banking wasn't the only surprise. There are five technologies that analysts thought would bring major change to financial services firms, but which, for the most part, have yet to make much of an impact.
technology obstacles, the greatest reason is perhaps turf wars, says Mark Greene, general manager of IBM's global banking unit. Each bank, each credit card company and each store wants to own the customer experience.
But consumers concerned about online security have limited their use of these services. Jim Adamczyk, a senior executive with consulting firm Accenture, says banks have introduced more secure banking features over the last year.
ING Group, for example, lets customers choose pictures, such as a basket of oranges, to personalize their banking home pages, making it much harder for fraud artists to copy.
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