1. Put Customers Before Tech
Nuth says one of the primary goals when creating Brightside was to make banking a digital-first experience, much like Uber or Google. But her team also quickly realized that keeping the customer’s needs ahead of any desire to integrate the latest tech was crucial to designing innovative CX.
“We really tried to stay focused on solving problems for people before worrying about whether the app would work with Alexa,” Nuth says.
Her team would engage groups of 10 to 15 ATB and non-ATB customers weekly to walk through every aspect of the Brightside CX. These customers helped shape the path of Brightside’s development from “blue sky” research—customers’ ideas and thoughts on broad banking topics—to pricing and usability and product testing.
“We didn’t want to sit in a boardroom and be in this ivory tower and assume we knew what customers wanted,” she says. “There were actually a few ideas that our team really loved that we ended up killing or having to sunset because customers absolutely hated them.”
2. Don’t Try to Boil the Ocean
Setting out to reinvent banking CX opened the doors to vast opportunities for improvement, but Nuth says focusing on too many areas at once could have stalled Brightside’s development.
“We’ve tried to be really diligent in minimizing scope and doing a couple things really well so that we nail it and deliver the CX a lot more effectively,” she says.
The need for simplicity is also at the crux of every functional area of the Brightside offering. Nuth says pricing for Brightside, for example, was partially informed by going into “a deep rabbit hole” of a competitor’s pricing structure.
“I was five PDFs in before I figured out that their definition of a transaction is whatever they feel like,” she says. “We’re making our pricing model super simple, like that of a tech company, where there is free and there is paid.”
3. Remember the Emotional Experience
Take the algorithms, apps and complex budgeting out of the digital banking CX and you’re left with a very emotional experience that should never be overlooked, Nuth says.
“We’ve had customers that make $200,000 per year that are getting payday loans,” she says. “That’s not an income problem or a money problem, it’s really about emotions and education.”