Subscriptions in banking: The payment preference for payment services?

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Grabowska, Karolina. (2020). Shopping Cart with Money on Top of a Laptop [Photograph] Pexels. https://www.pexels.com/photo/shopping-cart-with-money-on-top-of-a-laptop-5632379/

There’s a growing discontent for traditional bank fees; subscription-based banking offers a potential solution:


I found this article to be biased towards subscription services; it holds the notion banks should take inspiration from them. Rather than combating these services’ recurring payments with per-use fees, the author insists we should leverage more of those payments in banking. This greatly contrasts the article I read that believes subscriptions are ruining financial wellness and should rather be influenced by banking. I believe banks and subscription services parallel each other and that there is an opportunity to learn from one another to benefit our well-being. The question is then, should banks leverage subscriptions services or be combating them?

I read up on some strategies to encourage customer-centric design, but this was the first mention I had of customer-centric pricing. If personalization is the future, why wouldn’t that apply to the price tag? How can helping customers achieve their individual goals begin with a general price tag? I think validating customers’ needs should extend to price.

What I found most interesting was this article’s correlation between paying for bills and subscriptions. To be missing out on possible rewards, simply because it is common to put these services on credit cards should not be overlooked. Here’s an opportunity to go beyond a subscription command center and look further into the system in which we pay for them.


References

van Driel, D. (2024, May 28). Subscriptions in banking: The payment preference for payment services?. AirPlus Communications. https://comms.airplus.com/en/blog/subscriptions-in-banking