Brining Financial Services Online
The variety of financial tools and services available today has
multiplied dramatically from a generation ago. On both the
personal front and in the business sector there has been a
dramatic increase in the number of products available, the
methods by which they are delivered and the services they
require.
The internet is a perfect system for laying out preliminary
information in the financial services industry, where product
options can get complicated fairly quickly. Businesses of all
sizes that are engaged in some portion of this industry are
finding that a website makes good business sense.
An enormous amount of financially related business is still done
at the local level. Mortgages, auto and home loans and insurance
policies are still usually secured from a local agent. The small
businessman engaged in providing such products need only think
about the amount of time he or she spends on the phone
explaining the basics of their services to realize how much time
a website could save them.
When a customer calls about auto insurance, think about the
ability to refer the caller to your website to learn about the
required minimum coverage, about the relationship of the
vehicle's value, about the relationship of personal injury
coverage to health insurance.
Think about having a website that explains the four or five home
mortgage options that are available, about how they are affected
by down payment, credit history and loan amount. Consider the
enormous number of variables available in health insurance for
both individuals and families, and envision a chart on your own
website that explains how those policies work.
That's only a start on the types of benefits a website can
provide to a small businessman or regional company in the
financial services business. Your website can provide
explanations, charts, even video clips explaining:
* Retirement planning * Medicare insurance options * Home loans,
including specialties such as tenants-in kind * Real estate
history and trends in your area * Auto insurance, including the
effects of driving records and assigned risk * Investments -
mutual funds or annuities? Stocks or CDs? * Estate planning *
Health insurance - a new policy, or COBRA?
These are a few examples plucked from a vast array of financial
services that are out there today. Your website can become your
reference library, your consulting tool, and your business
partner when it comes to educating your clients. Websites
provide multidimensional explanations of material in a far more
effective fashion than brochures. No matter how glossy, stacks
of paper that use terms only half understood are intimidating to
people.
Your website can have an entire dictionary section, so that
potential customers can learn terminology at their leisure,
rather than ask embarrassing questions. And of course, the fewer
questions they have when they pay a call on you, the less time
is consumed in moving towards a potential sale.
Use the graphics capability of a website to maximize the
attractive nature of your particular company. Take advantage of
a personalized business website to explain why your services are
better, unique, priced more reasonably, performed more
thoroughly. With any complex financial product, you'll need to
explain how your selection of products can meet an entire range
of consumer needs. Your website can do that for you.
Financial products can be presented online just as attractively
as real estate is today. For every financial product, there is a
personal benefit that can be reinforced with images. For
products with multiple options and complex purchasing decisions,
a website provides a consumer with an invaluable tool that is
available 24/7. Your potential customer won't be sitting across
from you, concerned that there's been a question missed or an
issue not fully understood. A website is like an office staff to
a financial services professional: there's no better business
for harnessing the efficiency of the new technology.