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RBC mulls bill aggregation with Facebook

RBC mulls bill aggregation with Facebook

By:  Shane Schick  On: 12 Apr 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The financial institution has already won accolades for its e-billing system, but social media offers a brand new kind of opportunity. The VP of e-commerce architecture thinks out loud

Canada’s largest bank is thinking about following up the changes it has made to electronic bill and statement presentation by exploring integration with leading social networking sites.

Two years ago RBC won a 2007 Canadian Information Productivity Award for its client reporting centre of excellence program, which was created to deal with the way bills, statements and other information is offered online. RBC worked with Symcor to create a common composition engine that draws raw data feeds relating to 18 different banking products from is core systems and offering them into a single form of reporting.

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According to Colin McKay, vice-president of e-business architecture at RBC, the system has saved millions on paper statements and generated more revenue from optional fee-based services. The biggest benefit, however, may be a more personalized banking experience through a service called client preference and choice.

“Instead of you getting 18 different statements from the bank then we would be able to combine the information into whatever number of statements you would like to have,” he said. “It also allows us to customize how that data goes together and then link that with our CRM systems and customize statement messages, marketing messages, and eventually over time we’ll allow you to create whatever kind of statement you want.”

When the electronic bill payment and presentment (EBPP) market emerged near the beginning of the decade, the choice for consumers came down to registering with a site like Canada Post’s Epost, or making a specific visit to the bank’s own portal. McKay said Facebook, MySpace and Twitter have changed all that.

“Obviously we would like clients to come to our Web site, but that’s not always the client’s preference would be,” he said. “I think you’re going to see a convergence between how we set up social networking groups within the bank’s container vs. public social networking sites.”

McKay said RBC has begun talking internally about the idea of bill aggregation within Facebook, for example. He likened the situation to people who live outside the city or seniors who made periodic visits downtown and want to accomplish several tasks.

“When I go into a social networking site, I want to do multiple things. One of those things I might want to do is pay my bills,” he said. “What I don’t want to do is go to six different Web sites and eventually sign in six different times. We’re trying to create that kind of environment within the bank’s community, but we also recognize that as people get more involved with social networking sites that there’s a desire to conduct multiple business transactions.”


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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Comments (3)

All your social media eggs in one R&D basket
by Blake 4/20/2009 12:00:00 AMWhile exploring the frontier of social media is admirable, as a company it seems risky to invest so much capital into one specific platform, where the strength of today's social media lies in the ability for us to easily share and access data between platforms. What happens if by the time this project is complete people are already shifting to 'the next' Facebook?
Managing Director
by Rich Pople 4/15/2009 12:00:00 AMRBC is certainly know for technology innovation and this seems like a terrific step in a new direction for them. I do think it's important to think beyond the immediate 'social bill-paying' opportunity when anyone is looking to leverage social media technology. It is critically important to think about any social media activity in the context of a broader attempt to create real collaborative engagement with your customers, suppliers and employees. Using Twitter or Facebook as a 'push strategy' is a good way to create one-way communications without the investment of other channels, but it is only the first step in addressing a much bigger opportunity. Here's a good read on new rules of engagement: http://www.bis-insight.com/Site/Blog/Entries/2009/4/11_Operating_Objectives_for_New_Productivity.html
Ridculous
by Michael 4/16/2009 12:00:00 AMCompanies should be working more towards allowing the user to use a global sign in like OpenID. That makes more sense then integrating software with Facebook.
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