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The UK’s Mobile Banking Tigh...But Nearly 1 in 3 Would Consider Changing Banks After a Bad Mobile Experience
A consumer survey conducted by leading mobile commerce analyst firm Juniper Research has found near universal satisfaction amongst UK mobile banking users, with 98% of those surveyed stating that they were “very happy” or “quite happy” with their service.
However, the survey also found that with mobile access now perceived as a key pillar of a bank’s offering, 31% of mobile banking users would consider changing banks if they had a bad experience with their service.
In the US it was much less of a concern, where users display similar levels of satisfaction with the service, but only 16% of respondents would consider leaving their current bank – suggesting that the mobile platform is less critical to their banking experience.
Trust Remains ‘A Key Barrier’
According to the survey, while 70% of UK respondents now use mobile banking services, a lack of trust in online services remains a key barrier to non-users, together with a preference for alternative engagement channels such as in-branch services. Juniper argued that to increase overall adoption, the trust issue would need to be addressed, particularly amongst older consumers where there was a greater prevalence of non-users.
The survey also explored US and UK consumers’ attitudes towards contactless payments, with key findings including:
The ‘Contactless Payments & Mobile Banking: Consumer Market Surveys’, for the US and UK markets form part of Juniper’s ongoing analysis of the rapidly evolving digital payment and banking sector and is now available to download from the Juniper Research website.
Juniper Research is acknowledged as the leading analyst house in the digital commerce and Fintech sector, delivering pioneering research into payments, banking and financial services for more than a decade.