By Steve Slater
Thu Jan 19, 2006 08:31 AM ET
LONDON (Reuters) - Imagine a personalised welcome, few queues and
fingerprint checks. This could be your bank branch in the future,
thanks to cutting-edge technology such as radio frequency identification
and biometric scanning.
In five years' time major banks across the
globe could be using these time-saving and customer-personalised
devices to revolutionise branch banking, consultancy firm Accenture
said on Wednesday in a presentation on the bank branch of the future.
"Banks are trying to differentiate themselves and branches are still
fundamental to this, so they are trialling lots of this new technology,"
said Simon Jenkins, retail banking partner for Accenture in the
UK.
Radio frequency identification (RFID) is a technology being
developed by retailers that should migrate to banks. Customers would
be automatically identified by the RFID-encrypted card in their
wallet as they pass through the door, prompting a personalised welcome
to flash up on a computer screen.
By the time the customer reaches
the counter all his or her details are on the screen of the teller,
who can discuss specific requirements without asking a lot of redundant
questions.
"The bank wants to be able to identify the customer the
minute they walk in and understand why they are there," said Mike
Redding, head of development for Accenture Technology Labs.
"The
most innovative banks will then combine the data they already have
and the new information they get and simplify it and make it usable."
RFID is also likely to feature in bank cards, key rings or mobile
phones as a payment option. The process is already under way in
many countries and oil major Exxon Mobil (XOM.N: Quote, Profile,
Research) has issued 6 million SpeedPasses to allow users to pay
for gasoline easily at the pump, Redding said.
Demand for anti-fraud
measures should see advances in biometrics -- fingerprint or eye,
facial, palm, voice, vein or even ear shape recognition software
operated by bank staff or included in an automated teller machine.
Redding said that, with banks keener than ever to get an edge over
rivals, other technology set to appear in branches includes digital
pen and paper or camera-based tracking to monitor customer traffic
and improve service and efficiency.
Away from the branch, other
financial services applications set to feature includes telematics,
or automotive data collection, which could see more insurers analysing
journeys and offering "pay-as-you-drive" cover for motorists