Abstract:
Commercial Banks have undergone a radical change in the recent years. Once operating
in a non-competitive environment similar to utilities, they now face competitors not only
from within their own industry, but from a slew of rivals developing out of other financial
services. In order to keep their customer base, banks will have to continually improve and
strengthen marketing and outreach. As a result, banks are spending more and focusing
more on advertising and branding concepts. A very important factor of branding in
organizations is their unbreakable and long lasting relationship with the various facets of
consumer behaviour. Learning the meaning of brands – how they link to consumer
behavior, consumer culture, and distinguishing one brand from another – is important in
the development of brand loyalty. This is exactly what banks today need to understand
and take advantage of. Branding is a relatively new concept for the financial industry.
Switching costs appear to be prevalent in the use of banking services. The depositors find
it costly to close an account with their current bank to open an account in another bank.
Time is invested in doing so, funds may be tied in the process, and the new service might
require some specific investment in learning to use it. Other switching costs might
include uncertainty over the quality of service, such as branch service quality, product
availability, and even how long it takes to get through the phone system to a customer
representative. Customer inertia is likely to be such that in order for a consumer to switch
banks, at least one of the following should occur: current service deteriorates relative to
expected new service at another bank enough to cover switching costs; large discount by
another bank; some other large expected gain from switching. Thus there is an increased
to develop brand loyalty among customers of a banking organization. Today's power
4
brands have common denominators: They reflect the company's core values and the
employee culture and they consistently meet or exceed customers' expectations at every
touch point. For a company's brand vision to become a reality, all employees must
understand the brand vision and the company's promise and share an active role in
consistently applying the promise to everything they do.