Wednesday, November 13, 2024
The consumer data and analytics firm took the pulse of nearly 23,000 consumers with checking, savings and card accounts at the largest U.S. financial institutions and card issuers between March and September 2024. What it found was that nearly three in 10 (29 percent) of FI customers and 22 percent of credit card customers had experienced some instance of fraudulent activity on their accounts in the preceding 12 months.
The upshot: as financial fraud continues to escalate, the protection FIs and other card issuers provide, and how they respond to incidences of fraud, have become key differentiators in terms of overall customer satisfaction and brand loyalty.
"Financial fraud is a big problem for banks and credit card issuers, but it also presents an opportunity from a customer experience perspective when it is handled well," said Jennifer White, senior director, banking and payments intelligence at J.D. Power.
"In fact," White continued, "customer likelihood to reuse their bank or credit card company and then recommend that entity to friends is actually higher after an institution helps prevent or resolves a fraud incident than when there is no fraud incident at all.
"However, many institutions still have a lot of work to do when it comes to educating customers on how to protect themselves."
Following are specific findings of the study, J.D. Power's inaugural pulse-taking of consumer satisfaction with financial protection.
When it comes to true fraud prevention tactics, such as adding two-factor authentication, setting up account alerts, or using face or fingerprint authentication to log into accounts, these steps are being taken by customers not more than 20 percent of the time.
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