BID® Daily Newsletter
Feb 11, 2021

BID® Daily Newsletter

Feb 11, 2021

Relationship Value Pricing And Customer Profitability

Summary: Customer profitability is even more important these days as CFIs are squeezed on margins. Knowing what your customers want and providing them with creative offerings to help will cement their relationships with your institution. Taking a holistic view of your customers will then allow you to more effectively value price the relationship for the greatest customer profitability.

Since Valentine’s Day is on Sunday, we thought it interesting to share that it only takes about 4 minutes to decide whether you like someone or not. Supposedly, this has to do with body language and the tone of your voice. That said, it takes a bit longer for bankers to know how the relationship with their customer will work out. One thing that can help — relationship value pricing.
Relationship value pricing can be an effective strategy for improving a community financial institution’s (CFI) fee income and determining the worth of the overall customer relationship. This is especially important in the current interest-rate environment.
However, for relationship value pricing to work, your institution must carefully analyze the costs and profitability of each customer relationship, have systems that monitor the relationship, and think creatively about what it can offer preferred customers.
Defining relationship pricing

In relationship pricing, a CFI adjusts fees and rates for a deal, based on the overall relationship it has with the customer and their related parties. This links the value of the deal to the profits of the institution.
Typically, this means you can structure deals for products and/or services that make sense for the CFI and the customer. For instance, by adding an operating account that generates transactional fee income, the lender can offer a more competitive rate on a loan and still meet the same ROA/ROE or lifetime income to the CFI.
Sometimes bankers are asked to increase the rate they’re paying on a money market account, CD, or a credit product for a client. But a client relationship is more than a single rate — it’s the total value that the relationship brings to the table.
Provide creative customer offerings. Rather than negotiate solely over rates, talk to your customers about what they value. Are they willing to move their operating account or excess deposits? Would they consider trading fees for interest rate? Or are they interested in different structures? Knowing this increases their value to you as a customer and your ability to compete and close deals.
Some helpful and innovative options could include:
  • Ask for the deposit. Some customers are awash in cash these days, while others are cash strapped. By asking for their operating accounts, you can help your institution reduce its overall cost of funds while increasing the stickiness of the relationship.
  • Look for fee income. Some business owners may need a little extra help these days and would even be willing to pay for it. Consider your natural prepayment rate and prepayment penalties for longer-term obligations, or increasing fees for longer fixed-rate terms. 
  • Consider different structures. Term may matter. Is it fixed or floating, and when are rates reset? How are you setting up payments? Could you be creative, meet lifetime income thresholds, and match your borrower’s seasonal cashflows?
Take a holistic view. Once you have solved some of the problems your customers are facing, be sure to look at the entire customer relationship. It is not just about one product vs. three products either. Sometimes, you have customers with three loans that don’t add as much value as the customers with one. By analyzing the whole customer relationship, including grouping customers by their related accounts, you can provide additional services or discounts based on the total relationship profitability, not just the number of products used. In order to assess properly and efficiently, profitability modeling is recommended. You get an objective view and can drill down into the data, making it easy to adjust offerings, as needed. 
If you need assistance with relationship value pricing or customer profitability, we are happy to help. Just give us a call. 
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Related Articles:

Nurturing Loyalty with Small Business Customers
Small business customers have no shortage of financial service options, from traditional banks to fintech offerings. Fostering loyalty among this group not only requires providing them with added value, but with the sense that your CFI understands their individual businesses and their unique needs.
Unlock More Profitable Customer Relationships
When it comes to pricing deposits and loans in a competitive market, CFIs must correctly strike a delicate balance between each customer’s needs and their own profitability. Relationship pricing, based on customer profitability, can play a critical role in determining the best loan structure and deposit rates to maximize a customer’s lifetime value to your CFI. We provide insights on what factors to consider as you price products based on customer relationships, as well as the impact of adopting relationship pricing on your institution.