« Blog Home
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
Loading ... Loading ...

We’re really proud to announce the next step in our digital journey at FNB — the launch of the brand spanking new website.

The website relaunch has been a project of mammoth proportions, with amazing collaboration between teams from all over the bank. As I blog this, the guys from the online team are still baby-sitting the launch — big kudos on the effort.

From the very beginning, we started out with a couple of lofty strategic ideals centred around the customer experience.

It had to be:

* An Experience (a bank website just isn’t the must-visit destination other sites can claim to be — our visitors are purpose-driven and we have to work hard to provide an environment that promotes exploration and feels like an experience).

* Friendly (it’s something I’ve been talking about for ages, the big lesson that Web 2.0 has taught us is to talk WITH people, not talk AT them — something I think we’ve really achieved)

* Intuitive (banking products can be complicated — we had to find a way to logically group them according to a flow that customers would relate to — the I Want to BANK approach is that)

* A bit 2.0ey (you can’t be obsessed with the open-everything Web 2.0 approach, remember we’re a financial institution and trust is paramount — but there are some 2.0 lessons that you can see coming through: the personalisation mentioned below, the rounded edges, soft design, AJAX elements on the Wizards and navigation structure)

* Personal (there’s much more to come in this space, but you can see elements of personalisation in the My Menu option — it’s amazing what just pulling your name into search results does for the experience as a whole)

More visual more often
When I was doing research in the beginning stages of the product, it blew me away how few bank websites (even international examples) bothered to show a picture of the product. A platinum credit card is a sexy product, it’s a status symbol and something you use almost daily. Yet no pictures?

A strong focus in the project was to find a way of visualising products and their associated features and benefits. This follows a big international trend towards a more retail style of financial-services sites. Amazon has set a benchmark, and there’s no shame in trying to match it.

If you look at a product page (Platinum Credit Card is my personal favourite) you can see how the simple use of images to illustrate benefits really turns this into a sexy experience …

It’s all about conversions.
And, at the end of the day, what is a website around for? It’s your digital front door, your virtual sales consultant … If people can’t get your products or get in touch with you, you’re failing from the start. The lead form on the page (Click CALL ME BACK on any of the content pages) and the new Product Shop are moves in the right direction.

Make it easy for customers. Full stop.

The new site was a massive team effort — thank you and congratulations to everyone involved. We hope you, the public, see where this dream is going and enjoy the new experience. This is just the first step … Finance on the web. Now with added friendliness.




Related Posts
  • None

4 Responses to “Finance on the web, now with added friendliness”

[…] More here:  Tech Leader » Andy Hadfield » Finance on the web, now with added … […]

(Report abuse)


[…] Go here to read the rest:  Tech Leader » Andy Hadfield » Finance on the web, now with added … […]

(Report abuse)


Now with added complications in the navigation. (click,click,click,click…finally)
Now with no contact link in the main navigation.
Now doesn’t work with Js disabled.
Now showing off our jquery expertise (Now with style over substance??).
Now with product info buried below the fold.
Now with the online banking section still a nightmare to navigate, still not showing enough transactions, still not functioning in Safari, and lots more.

Though I must admit the silly “add your name” functionality is quite a laugh especially when you use an expletive and it appears not far from the FNB logo. Also love the send to friend function….makes it easy to rant about the insane increases in bank charges which I guess have paid for trying to turn FNB into Facebook.

(Report abuse)

steve on July 21st, 2009 at 8:17 pm

Got many more js errors (using IE 7), more annoying pop-ups, worse navigation and information hidden deeper than before, requiring more clicks, as mentioned by Steve.

All in all, a step back from the old website. Me thinks the team need to invest in a usability book. Incorporating the entire gamut of web 2.0 features into your website was a terrible idea.

Please fix it.

(Report abuse)

james on August 5th, 2009 at 3:32 pm

Leave a Reply

All comments must be approved by our editors, click here to read the editorial guidelines for comments. Please allow some time for our editors to approve your comment after posting.

Send me the Thought Leader daily newsletter

profile
Andy Hadfield is a digital guy from South Africa. He runs a bunch of online and mobile stuff for a bank, consults a bit, speaks a tad, drinks wine and proudly represents Johannesburg's greatest 20/20 cricket side - The Fine Legs.
Tell a Friend Technorati RSS
Andy's links
Andy Hadfield presents [Cowboys & Engines]
Cowboys & Engines is a technology commentary blog by Andy Hadfield, a South African web strategist.
Twitter
AndyHadfield's Slices of a Tweet life.
more posts
Disclosure: Tim Britz, the brand manager at Clarins who kindly gave me this interview is a personal friend, and is probably on Foursquare because of m...
I had a very strange experience today. It was a warm winter's day, and we had a fire going outside. Glass of wine in hand, I was fiddling around with ...
"The great thing in the world is not so much where we stand, as in what direction we are moving." -- Oliver Wendell Holmes Writing this post has ...
The Banking 2.0 panel was so good, I thought I'd pull all the thoughts together into a post. This is more a list of trends and themes, but it's well w...
Just attended the Banking 2.0 panel with my colleague from FNB, head of digital strategy in the personal banking segment at FNB. The following is an i...
latest activity
Blog Statistics
Total reads 22356
Total comments 135
Andy's tags
advertisement
All material copyright of the author, or the Mail & Guardian, unless otherwise specified
Author Login
Afrigator