FICO's survey was conducted in 10 countries and territories in Asia-Pacific, including Australia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam. The topic was about the experience of digital banking services.

The results showed that 77% of Vietnamese people were open to the idea of experimenting with fintech and new financial services to replace traditional banking services. Along with Thailand, Vietnam was among the most open countries in the survey.

 

 

Không phải Indo hay Singapore, người Việt thích ngân hàng số nhất châu Á-TBD
 

Compared to other countries, Vietnamese were also willing to provide more personal financial information to banks (49%) in exchange for differentiated services such as better interest rates or reduced fees. Vietnam ranked 2nd in this category, just behind Thailand (51%).

Because of their openness to digital banking, Vietnamese people have high demands when using these services, such as the requirement to shorten the time for money transfer. Vietnamese also want advanced experiences such as the ability to personalize the website interface, and set up recurring bill payments and security features.

Mr. Aashish Sharma, segment leader for Risk Lifecycle and Decision Management at FICO's Asia Pacific Team, a pioneer in the development of data science used to make analysis and forecasts, that in general, users want their experiences with digital banking services to be increasingly simple, fast and personalized.

To do this, banks will have to undertake a comprehensive digital transformation. In that process, they need to refine the user experience journey towards a broader customer segment.

Currently, the main digital transformation trends in the banking sector are the development of a partnership ecosystem, the application of cloud computing technology and, ultimately, putting the user at the center.

Banks have all agreed to the development of a partnership ecosystem and cloud computing applications.

For the third trend, not all banks understand it. After collecting input from users, it is important to use that data for decision making.

 

 

Không phải Indo hay Singapore, người Việt thích ngân hàng số nhất châu Á-TBD

Mr. Aashish Sharma, segment leader for Risk Lifecycle and Decision Management at FICO's Asia Pacific Team

 

 

The data of banks today is often distributed, with the format of the data different. It is important to clean the data so that it can be used in analysis.

Banks also need to maintain consistency in service quality. If the user is satisfied with the first product and returns to use the second product but has a bad experience, it will be a fatal weakness that will affect consumption decisions.

According to the expert, in the coming time, banks must change from product-based thinking to consumer-based thinking, namely providing services according to the needs of users.

Banks should look for good products and services developed by technology companies to serve the digital transformation of their operations.

This can only be done if the bank has an intelligent decision-making platform capable of gathering data from multiple sources and using analytical models to make decisions. That is the way to find the best approach to improve the customer experience.

Trong Dat

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