How Banks Can Boost Branch Sales

In his blog post titled The Power of Location-Based Offers in Financial Services, Jim Marous, Co-Publisher of The Financial Brand, highlights how banks can leverage the proliferation of smartphones to make location based offers (LBOs) for cross-selling of banking and other third-party products at their branches.

bank-branch-fi

Let’s say a bank implements LBOs and an existing checking account customer (say, “Jane Doe”) receives a PUSH notification for a special deal on a credit card when she’s walking past its branch. The offer is relevant since she’s in the market for a credit card. Since she’s in the branch’s neighborhood, she walks in to find out more.

I was in a similar situation recently, just that the LBO was for a new loan product. It wasn’t too relevant when I received my bank’s email and I forgot about it.

A couple of weeks later, I needed to visit the branch for something else:

  1. Withdraw cash from my company’s account for petty cash expenses (unlike personal account, there’s a lot of friction in applying for an ATM card for a corporate account, so I hadn’t bothered to do so; besides, who thought cash would still be around, right?:))
  2. Update my passbook (I don’t like e-statements, my bank doesn’t like paper statements, so I use the passbook option)
  3. Collect a booklet for depositing cheques (landlords collect house rents from their tenants via Post Dated Cheques issued in advance for the total duration of the lease period viz. 24 months; since I haven’t yet found an electronic payment option to replace PDCs, I need to fill out a pay in slip to deposit my tenant’s PDC every month).

I thought I’d inquire about the new loan product during this trip.

But, alas, man proposes, banker disposes.


As soon as I entered the branch, a bank staff waylaid me and asked me, “Have you done your tax planning?”

For the uninitiated, many financial investment products qualify for tax rebates.

Since March 31 is the last date for buying these products and filing tax returns for claiming these rebates, CQ1 is the peak period for sale of these products at bank branches. Knowing the full import of this question, I said “Yes”, and tried to move on.

But this lady wouldn’t let me go. She went on and on with “Have you heard of this product, have you thought of that product, blah blah blah”. I finally had to shoo her away by saying, “Let me finish what I’ve come for, and then I’ll listen to whatever you’ve to say”.

Reluctantly, she let me go.

icici-fastforward-cardI spent the next 10 minutes on the teller queue.

When I reached the customer inquiry counter, the guy who updates passbooks was missing. He returned to his post after 20 minutes. It took another 10 minutes to get the pay-in slip booklet.

When I finished my work, there was no sign of the aforementioned pesky lady.

I left the branch without finding out about the new loan product.

The bank lost potential sales from its Location Based Offer.

Which is a shame.


Sales is arguably the sole raison d’être for bank branches in today’s world where customers are increasingly turning to digital channels for carrying out balance inquiry, statement download, and other mundane transactions. More in my previous blog post titled Secret Of Survival Of Bank Branches.

It’s a no-brainer that banks must prevent leakage of sales opportunities at their branches, like the one presented by me during my branch visit.

Question is, how?

Is technology the answer? Or is it something else?

Let me go back to my visit and imagine an alternative scenario in which the branch staff

  1. Offers to help with my purpose for visiting her branch
  2. Gets me to the head of the teller queue (which happens automatically in another bank when I simply flash my so-called “Fast Forward” card)
  3. Brings the AWOL passbook updating person back to his seat
  4. Fetches the pay-in slip booklet from the so-called “collateral cupboard”.

mobile-shelving-systemIf she does this, I won’t shoo her away. Instead

  1. I’ll be grateful to her for saving my time and effort
  2. I’ll be in a more conducive state of mind for listening to her spiel about tax saving products on offer
  3. I’ll inquire about the loan product for which I’d received the LBO from her bank
  4. Who knows, I might even buy the said loan product!

Going by this experience, banks can boost their in-branch sales by training their branch staff to change their selling approach. Some amount of technology – paging system to locate missing staff members and mobile shelving systems to store and retrieve collaterals – can also help.

UPDATE DATED 26 NOVEMBER 2021:

I believe waylaying branch visitors to sell financial, insurance and other products is one of the most common and effective sales tactics employed by the Indian banking industry. I can see how and why: On a recent visit to the branch of a Top 3 private sector bank, the branch operations manager helped me to accomplish the purpose of my visit and, when I was about to leave the branch, pitched me a new health insurance product. His timing for the pitch was exactly as per the playbook I outlined above. If I was in the market for health insurance, I could see myself buying the product forthwith. I’d like to think that bankers have read my above post and have made amends to their “guerrilla marketing” approach! And are reaping a rich harvest by way of greater branch sales.