I recently returned from a boat
tour in Indonesia, and was impressed with the quality of the service
provided by the tour company. The employees go out of their way to
make the experience a pleasurable one for the customers. Other tour
companies we have used in the past were equally good. My impressions
are consistent with those of many other travelers with whom I have
compared notes.
Afterwards, I couldn’t help
asking myself why service quality and customer satisfaction in the
travel tour industry is so much higher than it is in the home
mortgage industry? What accounts for the difference?
Mortgage Lending Has Little Repeat Business
A major part of the answer is
that successful tour companies generate a very high rate of repeat
business. On my recent trip, about 95% of the clients had traveled
with the company before. To generate repeat business, you must
provide a high level of customer satisfaction. Repeat business is
the secret of success because it reduces marketing cost.
In the home mortgage business,
the cost savings from selling to existing clients is as large,
perhaps even larger, than in the travel business. Yet the volume of
repeat mortgage business is very small. There are no figures, but I
would guess that on home purchase transactions where the purchaser
has an existing mortgage, the lender holding that mortgage gets the
new loan less than 5% of the time.
On refinances, one might expect
that the existing lender would get most of the loans. The existing
lender (or the lender’s agent) has a continuing relationship with
the borrower, has better information about the borrower than any
other lender, and is usually able to make the loan at a lower cost
than a new lender. Nonetheless, the incidence of repeat business,
while larger than on purchase transactions, remains very low.
The repeat business rate is much
higher in the travel tour industry because tour companies can
control the quality of their service much better than mortgage
lenders. Furthermore, tour companies can convert quality experience
by clients into favorable brand identification, which mortgage
lenders have problems doing.
Difficulties in Creating a Quality Experience
Employee selection is the key to
providing a high-quality service. Tour companies look for
affability, subject-matter knowledge, and other traits that clients
respond to positively.
Mortgage lenders, in contrast,
select loan officers who can deliver loans, how they do it, so long
as they don’t violate the law, is largely up to them. Successful
loan officers are good sales persons, and they are good at
establishing relationships with referral sources, especially real
estate agents. If there was an objective measure available of the
true quality of the service they provide to clients, it would vary
from excellent to abysmal, but abysmal won’t get you fired if you
bring in the loans and don’t generate any lawsuits.
If the transaction involves a
broker, the lender has even less influence over service quality at
the point of sale. Brokers are independent contractors for whose
behavior lenders assume virtually no responsibility.
In the travel tour business,
furthermore, consumers understand what they are looking for, and are
quite consistent in evaluating how well their expectations are being
met. This is not the case with mortgages, which involve pricing and
approval processes that few borrowers fully understand.
As a consequence, mortgage
borrowers are sometimes treated exactly right and they end up
critical; and sometimes their pocket is picked and they are
blissfully unaware of it.
Converting Service Quality Into Brand Identity
Clients of tour companies usually
deal with a number of employees on any one trip, and if the
experience is favorable, it results in a favorable image of the
firm. Clients assume that another trip with the same company will
also be a good one.
In the mortgage business, in
contrast, positive brand identification with the lender seldom
arises out of the lending process. Borrowers usually deal with only
one person, and if the experience is a good one, it is usually
associated with that individual rather than with the lending firm.
The lender support services that help smooth the process are largely
out of sight.
If the deal founders, on the
other hand, the deficiencies of the support services may become
glaringly evident and will be associated with the lending firm. From
a branding perspective, the lender is largely in a situation of
"heads the loan officer or broker wins, tails the lending firm
loses."
From a consumer perspective, the
absence of quality branding is very costly. It results in most of
them not knowing where to go to get a loan, which makes them
vulnerable to misinformation from con men and fraudsters of every
shape and description.
Is there any way that mortgage
lenders can brand themselves as quality loan providers? Stay tuned.
Copyright Jack Guttentag 2007