Tuesday 9 August 2016

The Need for Digital Islamic Banking


IN OCTOBER 2001, education consultant Marc Prensky coined the terms Digital Native and Digital Immigrant. Digital Native refers to a person born or brought up during the age of digital technology, hence familiar with computers and the Internet from an early age.

Digital Natives spend “their entire lives surrounded by and using computers, video games, digital music players, video cams, cell-phones and all other toys and tools of the digital age”. Growing up with digital gadgets and the sheer volume of their interactions with these gadgets have changed the way they think and process information.

On the other hand, Digital Immigrant refers to a person not born into the digital world but at some point later on in his/her life picks up digital technology. Just like other types of immigrants, while some may blend well with the new environment, most would retain their “accent” or their foot in the past.

In a paper entitled “Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants”, Prensky discussed the conf lict facing education in which Digital Immigrant instructors, who speak an outdated language (that of the pre-digital age), are struggling to teach a population that speaks an entirely new language.

Now this population of Digital Natives have entered the workforce and some have become successful entrepreneurs. In more advanced countries, Digital Natives are slightly older than in some less developed ones. They are commonly Millennials (born 1982-2002) or Generation Z (born 1996-2009). It has been estimated that Millennials will form 75% of the workforce by 2030.

Accenture estimated their spending power in the US alone was US$600 billion (RM2.4 trillion) in 2013 and forecast that it would go up to US$1.4 trillion by 2020.

It is apparent that the population size and the spending power are significant enough not to be ignored by the financial services players. In my view, the conflict of Digital Immigrants and Digital Natives is also happening within the banking and Islamic banking industry today.

Most of the current banking products and services as well as the distribution channels were developed or designed by Digital Immigrants under the constraints of policy and regulatory compliance requirements prepared by yet another group of Digital Immigrants.

As a result, Digital Natives find these products and services less appealing and the distribution channels not sufficiently customer friendly. Digital Natives tend to fancy the alternatives provided by fintech companies.

Indeed, fintech companies offering more convenient and more cost effective alternative digital financial services are mushrooming.

This phenomenon is great for consumer empowerment but a threat to traditional financial services providers. To compete with fintech companies in addressing Digital Native consumers’ needs and behaviours, traditional banks have to embark on a digital banking journey.

Digital banking is not just about having digital distribut ion channels such as online and mobile (app and web) banking. Digital banking is customer oriented and offers the customer the service of his/her choice through the access of his/her choice.

It focuses on being relevant to the customer in his/her daily life through digital outreach but still recognises the importance of customer engagement via human contact.

A digital bank also has an innate knowledge of the customer.

A particular customer may visit a branch, call the contact centre, make a comment through social media such as Twitter or Facebook, and a digital bank would be aware of all these accesses and interactions and would respond promptly and consistently.

It would leverage on the customer’s single view data as a competitive differentiation and will proactively offer services required by the customer. This “personalised” service of digital banking appeals to Digital Natives.

Islamic finance players must have a digital Islamic banking strategy in order to survive.

Digital Islamic banking is a Shariah-compliant version of digital banking. At the very basic, digital Islamic banking capabilities need to match the capabilities offered by conventional counterparts.

This is necessary to cater for the needs of Muslim Digital Natives.

To further compete with conventional providers and the fast-growing fintech companies, digital Islamic banking has to be more innovative. With superior customer experience innovations, digital Islamic banking could also capture the non-Muslim Digital Natives market.

In summary, digital technology has changed customer behaviours.

Digital Natives now represent a sizeable portion of our workforce population and they have significant spending power.

Their demand for digital services drives the needs for digital banking.

For Shariah compliance, Muslim Digital Natives need digital Islamic banking. It is also possible for digital Islamic banking to attract the overall Digital Native market segment with digital services offering superior customer experience.

My column as appeared in THE MALAYSIAN RESERVE 11 July 2016

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