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POSITIONING BUSINESS MOBILE DEPOSIT TO WIN WITH SMBS THE DEVIL’S IN THE DETAILS
Bob Meara
August 23, 2016
This report was commissioned by Deluxe Corporation, at whose request Celent developed this research. The analysis and conclusions are Celent’s alone, and Deluxe had no editorial control over report contents.
For more information, please contact Celent through
our website (www.celent.com) or info@celent.com.
CONTENTS
Executive Summary ........................................................................................................ 1
Key Research Questions ............................................................................................. 1
Defining Business Mobile Deposit ................................................................................... 4
A Snapshot of US Small Businesses............................................................................... 7
Check Acceptance among SMBs .............................................................................. 10
Banking Relationships and Deposit Behavior ................................................................ 12
Product Usage .......................................................................................................... 12
Branch and ATM Deposit Behavior............................................................................ 17
Bank Engagement .................................................................................................... 19
SMB Reactions to Business Mobile Deposit .................................................................. 22
Attribute Importance .................................................................................................. 22
Pricing Expectations.................................................................................................. 27
Market Opportunity ....................................................................................................... 32
Recommendations........................................................................................................ 36
Appendix I: Research Methodology............................................................................... 38
Appendix II: Survey Instrument ..................................................................................... 39
Leveraging Celent’s Expertise ...................................................................................... 44
Support for Financial Institutions ............................................................................... 44
Support for Vendors .................................................................................................. 44
Related Celent Research .............................................................................................. 45
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The small and medium size business (SMB) market is of increasing interest among US financial institutions as an important and profitable customer segment. So is the idea of migrating expensive branch transactions to self-service channels. The advent of Business Mobile Deposit, which became generally available in 2015, offers banks a unique opportunity to “kill two birds with one stone.” But doing so is tricky. This is
because:
The SMB market is diverse, with widely varying affinity for Business Mobile Deposit. Product positioning will need to uniquely fit for the value proposition to resonate.
Banks have taught SMBs to expect free stuff. Thus, most SMBs expect business Mobile Deposit to be free, or at least have a very low price point.
A significant percentage of SMBs already use Desktop Deposit (a.k.a. commercial remote deposit capture). While this doesn’t rule out Business Mobile Deposit for
these customers, different product attributes will need to be highlighted.
KEY RESEARCH QUESTIONS This report seeks to answer these three questions:
1 What is RDC adoption among US SMBs? 2
What Business Mobile Deposit features resonate with SMBs?
3 What is the market opportunity for Business Mobile Deposit?
To address these questions, Celent and Deluxe Corporation collaborated to survey US SMBs in June 2016. Respondents were recruited from among Deluxe Corporation’s 20,000+ SMB clients via email. Deluxe sells a variety of products and services to US small businesses, including business supplies and forms, checks, retail packaging, and a variety of marketing services. Survey results provide a comprehensive view of SMB usage and attitudes toward Desktop and Business Mobile Deposit across multiple market segments and annual revenue tiers. These much needed insights can equip financial
institutions to position Business Mobile Deposit to win with SMBs.
Findings
A number of findings are apparent from the survey results, including:
Lots of SMBs get checks. On average, SMBs receive about two checks per day, with significant variation from business to business. Traditional merchants with physical locations receive 6.5 checks per day, and those operating online stores in addition to physical locations receive nearly nine checks per day.
Check deposits continue to drive branch traffic, with 93% of surveyed SMBs making branch deposits. Non-RDC users made 2.1 branch deposits per week on average, compared to just 1.2 deposits for RDC users. The presence of cash in a minority of deposits keeps some RDC-using SMBs returning to the branch – albeit less frequently. This presence of cash in branch deposits means that widespread RDC adoption won’t eliminate branch deposit activity. On average, RDC cuts the
frequency of branch deposits in half.
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Overall, 17% of surveyed SMBs use commercial Desktop RDC for their business. Usage is predictably related to where the checks are. That is, the larger the business (the more checks it receives), the greater the desktop RDC utilization. Thirty-five percent of SMBs with annual revenues over $2 million are Desktop RDC users, compared to just 6% of micro-businesses. Among surveyed businesses with over $5 million in revenue (8% of the sample), 48% use Desktop Deposit.
Mobile deposit utilization varies significantly between personal and business accounts. While 25% of surveyed SMBs use mobile RDC (mRDC) for business purposes, twice that many (46%) use mRDC for personal accounts. Personal use of mRDC does not correlate with the size of the business, but business utilization does. The smallest SMBs were the most likely to use mRDC for both personal and business accounts, consistent with their higher utilization of Mobile Banking.
Based solely on a brief product description and without the ability to clarify their understanding of various product attributes (as would be the case in a sales situation), respondents were asked to indicate how important each attribute would be to their decision to use Business Mobile Deposit for their business. SMBs offer a clear attribute rating hierarchy with the ability to capture multiple checks in a single deposit judged as the most important attribute.
SMBs regard several attributes similarly: multi-check deposits; the option to deposit using a desktop scanner, smartphone, or both (an integrated product); automatic accounting system updates; and research/reporting. By comparison, attributes addressing multiple users within the company scored poorly. For example, separation of duties (having one person scan checks and another person review and deposit) was viewed as least important among the Business Mobile Deposit attributes.
SMBs don’t speak with their bankers often, nor do they wish to. Fully half of surveyed SMBs “rarely if ever” speak with a banker about products or services that might benefit their business, and only 20% of SMBs speak with their banker quarterly or more often. When asked “About how often would you want your bank to contact you about products or services that might benefit your business?” about two-thirds of SMBs said they would want to hear from their bank annually or somewhat more frequently. Only 1 in 10 SMBs interact with their banker more than quarterly, or even want to.
Despite the diversity in how often SMBs would like to hear from their banks, there was clear consensus on how they would like to engage. Email is the overwhelmingly
preferred mechanism—preferred by two-thirds of SMBs across all segments.
Market Opportunity According to the US Census Bureau’s 2012 Survey of Small Businesses, there are a total of 27,626,000 small businesses in the US. Just over 12.5 million of them have annual revenues of $25,000 or more. Accounting for the roughly 25% of Desktop Deposit users that are also using Mobile Deposit, 4.5 million US SMBs (36%) with revenues over
$25,000 may be currently using some form of RDC .
Celent estimates the SMB Business Mobile Deposit market opportunity to be 4 million incremental SMBs. If reached, combined RDC utilization would extend to 8.3 million
SMBs or 67% of those with annual revenue over $25,000.
If Business Mobile Deposit carries a fee of $5/month, surveyed usage drops sharply. In this scenario, Celent estimates the market opportunity to be 2.8 million additional SMBs with annual revenues over $25,000. Of these, 1.9 million will be new RDC users and 900,000 will result from mRDC migration from free to a fee based product. If reached, combined RDC utilization would extend to 7.2 million US SMBs or 58% of all SMBs with annual revenue over $25,000. The resulting industrywide annualized revenue at
$5/month would be approximately $170 million.
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Recommendations Regardless of a bank’s strategic intent, maximizing the value of Business Mobile Deposit to the institution will involve product, positioning, pricing, and promotion. We offer
recommendations in each area.
Product: Maximizing the market opportunity requires a product offering that supports
both SMBs that use Mobile Banking as well as those that do not. Celent advocates a two-tier product design. Some institutions may wish to create more distinct product differentiation by limiting certain capabilities on the less expensive product. Embracing a two-tier product offering is important because it allows institutions to offer a low-cost solution for SMBs with low average daily check volumes and a higher-priced solution for larger businesses having both desktop and mobile check acceptance. This latter product could be offered to both SMB and commercial/corporate market segments with less risk
of cannibalization by the lower-priced offering.
Positioning: Even banks seeking to maximize RDC utilization as part of a transaction
migration strategy won’t want to leave revenue on the table. For this reason, Celent recommends banks position each of the above products distinctly. Most SMBs will be attracted to the “entry-level” Business Mobile Deposit product, particularly if offered as a no-fee option on the Mobile Banking app. SMBs with higher average daily check volume are more likely to already use Desktop Deposit and are less likely to be enrolled in Mobile Banking. Clearly defined positioning like this will enhance banks’ ability to charge a monthly fee on the more advanced product—both among larger SMBs as well as within
commercial, middle market, and corporate market segments.
Pricing: While each institution must make its own decision, Celent views the branch channel cost saving opportunity that broad SMB RDC adoption affords to be more compelling than a modest fee revenue stream. For this reason, Celent recommends differentiated pricing based on the two-tier positioning advocated above. Offering an entry-level product free of charge alongside a modestly priced and clearly differentiated alternative will likely maximize overall utilization and minimize unintentional cannibalization. This outcome maximizes transaction migration to self-service channels
without leaving money on the table.
Promotion: Use email marketing as the centerpiece, with focused direct sales efforts
where it will be most effective. Specifically, Celent recommends segmenting prospects based on historic deposit behavior, with specifically tailored promotions and sales campaigns for low-volume and high-volume depositors. This segmentation would likely
be more successful than one based on business model or annual revenue.
After a definition of Business Mobile Deposit, this report begins with a snapshot of the US small business market, with a focus on check acceptance, deposit behavior, and product usage. An analysis of surveyed SMB reactions to Business Mobile Deposit concepts follows, along with a market opportunity assessment and recommendations for financial
institutions offering or intending to offer Business Mobile Deposit to SMB clients.
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DEFINING BUSINESS MOBILE DEPOSIT
According to FI Navigator, through March 2016, over 4,000 US banks and credit unions offered mobile RDC (mRDC) capability within their consumer mobile banking apps. Before mRDC was available, thousands of banks launched desktop commercial RDC, aimed primarily at commercial and corporate clients. What is Business Mobile Deposit
and how does it compare to Commercial Desktop Deposit and consumer mRDC?
Said simply, Business Mobile Deposit refers to a product category that uses a mobile device for check deposit image capture. Unlike consumer mRDC, which is typically a
Mobile Banking app function, Business Mobile Deposit is being deployed in several ways:
Integrated to an institution’s Business Mobile Banking app. In this configuration,
all aspects of deposit management (image capture, deposit review, searching historic deposits, etc.) are accomplished within the Mobile Banking app.
As a stand-alone single-function app. For speed to market and as a way to offer
mobile capture capability to multiple users within a business without granting access to other Mobile Banking functionality, some banks offer stand-alone Business Mobile Deposit apps. An HVAC installation and maintenance firm, for example, may represent an ideal use case for this Business Mobile Deposit configuration.
Offered alongside Desktop Deposit. This allows Business Mobile and Commercial
Desktop RDC to be used in a coordinated way by a firm that may accept checks both in the field as well as in the back-office. Alternatively, firms that do not utilize Mobile Banking could use Business Mobile Deposit for image capture and perform all other
deposit administration functions within Online Banking.
Many RDC vendors position Business Mobile Deposit as a mobile capture capability of
their Desktop Deposit solution with a mobile-only deployment option (Figure 1).
Figure 1: Integrated Mobile and Desktop RDC Solutions are Now Common
Source: Celent
Table 1 lists common Business Mobile Deposit solution attributes.
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Table 1: Business Mobile Deposit Solution Attributes
Attribute Definition
Multi-item deposits Most products currently rely on the consumer mRDC end user workflow of single-item deposits. Post-capture, however, many products allow users to aggregate items into deposits as a separate step, typically as part of deposit review. Mitek’s Mobile Multi-Check Mobile Capture creates an end-user workflow that permits capturing multiple checks and performing deposit review on a mobile device.
Common platform This would allow users to use a desktop device, smartphone or both to capture check images. Rather than a separate platform, Business Mobile Deposit could be an alternative capture option that would leverage existing desktop RDC risk management capabilities. By so doing, banks could implement a consistent risk management program across all RDC customers regardless of the image capture mechanism.
Automatically update AR Some SMBs want to associate remittance information with each check. This capability has been supported broadly for years among desktop RDC products in the form of user-definable fields. A subset of products applies image analytics to automate data capture and validation.
Research and reporting A staple capability of Commercial Desktop RDC, typical consumer mRDC variants do not offer any research and reporting businesses want. Business Mobile Deposit offers this capability – typically by exposing a single admin layer to both desktop and mobile devices (see below).
Multiple users Separation of duties
A common admin layer allows users, if desired, to maintain separation of duties, perform back office deposit review, and submit deposits separately from mRDC item capture. Said another way, using a common admin layer for desktop and mRDC allows banks to offer the same common sense administration capabilities to users without deploying a separate platform. It also reflects the likelihood that some commercial RDC clients will utilize both desktop and mobile capture methods.
Stand-alone mobile app While most agree mRDC capability is best integrated into a bank’s mobile banking app, there are some persistent reasons why a bank might like to offer a stand-alone mRDC app. One reason is time to market. Few banks have a small business mobile banking platform, for example. Many vendors don’t yet offer suitable solutions, and when they do, they will have to integrate with RDC vendors. A stand-alone app would hasten time to market for those banks. For larger businesses with a mobile use case, a stand-alone app for item capture may be preferred.
Source: Celent
While historically available Desktop Deposit solutions were too expensive for most SMBs and too complex for branch staff to effectively sell and onboard, new single-platform products that support both desktop and mobile capture options fit the bill perfectly.
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Leveraging mRDC for both mobile and low-volume use cases benefits both banks and
their SMB customers by offering:
The lowest possible product cost (no scanner, lower cost license) for the majority of SMBs that receive check payments in relatively low volumes.
An upgrade path for higher-volume check depositors desiring the speed and efficiency of desktop scanners.
An integrated mobile / desktop product for businesses that capture check payments both in the back-office and in the field, or for businesses that otherwise do not utilize
their bank’s Mobile Banking app.
Armed with an understanding of how generally available Business Mobile Deposit products can support all common SMB use cases, the next section looks at the US small
business market through the lens of check payments.
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A SNAPSHOT OF US SMALL BUSINESSES
US SMBs are a relatively well researched segment. US Census Bureau, the US Small Business Administration (SBA), and Small Business & Entrepreneurship (SBE) Council all publish statistics of US SMBs, for example. However, these resources, as useful as they are, do not provide much insight specifically related to check payments and Business Mobile Deposit. Our June 2016 survey of US SMBs sought to provide this
needed insight.
Before seeking to understand SMB’s affinity towards Business Mobile Deposit, the survey sought to explore readily identifiable segments that would likely correlate to how SMBs
would value Business Mobile Deposit. Specifically:
Annual revenue
Business model—how they conduct business
Accounting system used
Check acceptance and average daily volume
Annual Revenue According to the US Census Bureau, there are over 27 million small businesses in the US. Two-thirds of them (18 million) report annual revenues less than $50,000. Over half (15 million) report revenue of $25,000 or less. Celent’s survey examined those 12 million SMBs with annual revenue between $25,000 and $10 million. Smaller businesses are of interest, but are not generally associated with direct product fee based revenue. Figure 2 shows the respondent mix by annual revenue, along with the overall market’s revenue
profile according to the US Census Bureau.
Figure 2: Respondent Revenue Profile Resembled the US SMB Population
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397, US Census Bureau 2012 Survey of Small Businesses
Q: What is your company's approximate annual revenue?
37%
17% 18%
10%
18%
69%
12% 8% 7%
4%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
<$250k $250k to $500k $500k to $1 m $1 m to $2 m $2 m+
Re
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%)
Respondent mix by annual revenue (survey sample vs. market)
Sample Market
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Many institutions segment businesses by annual revenue, with larger businesses (typically those with annual revenues over $1 million) assigned to specific business bankers and smaller businesses served exclusively by the branch network. The survey purposefully over-sampled businesses over $1 million in annual revenue in order to have
statistically significant results across all annual revenue segments.
Business Model The US SMB market is far from homogeneous. Annual revenue isn’t the only attribute separating one SMB from another. Another way to view the market is by business model.
Survey respondents were asked how they conducted business among these choices:
Online – These SMBs operate exclusively in the digital realm and have no brick and
mortar presence. Examples include eBay and Amazon affiliate stores.
Brick and mortar location(s) only – Many of these businesses are classic retail
merchants, e.g., dry cleaners or restaurants.
Both online and brick and mortar location – Examples of these businesses
include restaurants with digital take-out and delivery services, and local merchants
with an online store.
All in-person service related – These businesses have no office or online
presence. Examples include electricians, HVAC firms, pest control, plumbers, and roofing contractors. Many of these businesses operate an office, but deliver their goods and services exclusively in-person. As such, they likely receive checks both in
the field and in the back-office.
Other – These businesses are remote workers or operate a mixture of the other
business models. Examples include home builders, churches, trucking businesses,
homeowners associations, and non-profit organizations.
Figure 3 shows the survey respondent mix by business model. We refer to the largest
four segments throughout this report.
Figure 3: Respondent Revenue Profile Resembled the US SMB Population
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: How does your company conduct business?
To better understand these business model segments, we looked at the annual revenue profile of each segment. The online-only business segment is comprised mostly of micro-businesses, with 61% having annual revenues less than $250k, but with 22% with
Online/Web only 6%
Physical location(s) only
30%
Both online and physical
location(s) 42%
All in-person service related
16%
Remotely 4%
Other 3%
Respondent mix by business model
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revenues over $2 million. SMBs operating traditional brick and mortar retail locations have a more diverse annual revenue mix. SMBs that operate both online and physical stores lie in between the other two segments. Lastly, SMBs operating in-person services
have a broad revenue profile as well (Figure 4).
Figure 4: Online-only Businesses Tend to be Micro Businesses
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Accounting System Usage Usage of Intuit QuickBooks dominates among our survey sample, with 63% of respondents using the software. Its market share exceeded 50% across all market and revenue segments. Businesses in the $500k–$1m revenue range were the heaviest QuickBooks users (79%), while the smallest of the SMBs were more likely to be Excel Spreadsheet users (24%). Conversely, businesses in the largest revenue segment were
significantly more likely to use “other” software (45%) (Figure 5).
Figure 5: QuickBooks Is the Clear SMB Accounting System Market Share Leader
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: What type of accounting software application do you use to manage your business accounting?
61%
23%
40%
42%
6%
20%
19%
18%
6%
26%
15%
20%
6%
17%
6%
11%
22%
15%
20%
9%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Online
Physical location(s) only
Online & physicallocation(s)
In-person services
Annual Revenue Mix (% of SMBs in each segment)
Revenue profile of each business model segment
<$250k $250k to $500k $500k to $1 m $1 m to $2 m $2 m+
54% 65%
79% 63%
65% 50%
4%
4%
6%
7% 17%
8%
4%
7% 8% 7%
4%
8%
24%
11% 12%
0% 4%
8%
10% 11%
12%
20% 30%
46%
12% 7% 3% 4%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
<$250k $250k to$500k
$500k to$1 m
$1 m to$2 m
$2 m to$5 m
$5 m+
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%)
SMB accounting system usage
None
Other, please specify
Excel spreadsheet
Online banking website
Xero
Yardi
Wave Accounting
FreshBooks
Peachtree
QuickBooks
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As far as small business RDC goes, the only accounting system integration that matters is QuickBooks. Users of other accounting systems could be accommodated with file
export capability.
CHECK ACCEPTANCE AMONG SMBS Many wrongly believe that most businesses no longer accept checks. While check acceptance is a rarity among some retail segments such as restaurants, the significant majority of US SMBs accept checks. In our survey sample, virtually all (99%) accept checks. Doing so was a prerequisite to complete the survey, but was not mentioned in email invitations. We believe our use of the Deluxe Corporation client base from which to recruit survey respondents resulted in an overstated check acceptance compared to the
overall market.
Even though check acceptance may still be widespread, most small businesses don’t receive many check payments on an average day. Roughly 40% of surveyed SMBs receive less than one check per day and 60% receive two or fewer checks per day. Forty
percent of SMBs receive three or more checks per day (Figure 6).
Figure 6: 40% of SMBs Receive Three or More Checks per Day
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: About how many checks does your business receive on an average day?
As most would expect, larger SMBs – those with higher annual revenue—tend to have a higher transaction volume, and thus, receive a higher volume check payments. The correlation is weak, however, because of the tangible differences in payment practices across business models. More than half of businesses with $5 million or more in annual revenue receive over 10 checks per day, compared to 36% among $1m–$5m annual
revenue businesses.
Figure 7 on the next page graphs the average daily check volume for SMBs in each annual revenue tier. The outliers in this graph are microbusinesses. We believe the reason why the smallest businesses receive more checks per day than many larger businesses is the large percentage of online and physical business models in that revenue segment (57%). From other research, we know that the payment mix for online purchases is more check and PayPal heavy than one would see at most traditional brick
and mortar retailers.
39%
20%
19%
8%
8%
3%
3%
0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50%
< 1
1-2
3-5
6-10
11-20
21-50
51+
Resp. (%)
Avg
. # o
f ch
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# Checks received per day
41%
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Figure 7: Larger SMBs Generally Receive More Checks
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397 Q: About how many checks does your business receive on an average day?
A view by business model shows dramatic variation in average daily check volumes (see Figure 8). Businesses with physical locations receive more checks on an average day, particularly those also operating online businesses. Online-only businesses are, on average, smaller than businesses in other segments. So, even though their payment mix may be more check-heavy, their comparatively low annual revenue results in lower
average daily check volume than other comparatively sized firms’ experience.
Figure 8: Check Volume Varies Dramatically Across SMB Business Models
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: About how many checks does your business receive on an average day?
Armed with this perspective, the next section looks into SMB’s banking relationships and
deposit behavior.
2.5
1.7
2.2
2.4
2.6
4.8
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
<$250k
$250k to $500k
$500k to $1 m
$1 m to $2 m
$2 m to $5 m
$5m+
Avg. # checks per day
An
nu
al r
eve
nu
e
# Checks received per day
0.7
1.6
6.5
8.7
0 2 4 6 8 10
Online only
All in-person servicerelated
Physical location(s)only
Online & physicallocation(s)
Avg. # checks per day
# Checks received per day
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BANKING RELATIONSHIPS AND DEPOSIT BEHAVIOR
This section looks at bank products used by US SMBs, their deposit behavior and frequency of, and preference for, interacting with their banks. These aspects are
important for their ability to assist banks’ position and sell Business Mobile Deposit.
PRODUCT USAGE Internet banking usage is pervasive among SMBs, with over 90% utilization across most segments. Not so for mobile banking, particularly among large businesses (just 20% utilization). The smaller the business, the more likely it is to use mobile banking (Figure
9). This is important, because mRDC is typically a Mobile Banking capability.
Figure 9: Mobile Banking Is More Heavily Used by Smaller Businesses
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following bank services do you use for your business?
Mobile banking utilization is similarly low when viewed across SMB business models. The lowest penetration is seen among traditional merchants (28%). Conversely, 59% of
online/web-based businesses use mobile banking (Figure 10).
Figure 10: Traditional Merchant SMBs Are More Likely to Use Online Banking
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
20%
29% 33% 34%
48%
90% 91%
93% 85%
92%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
$2 m+$1 m to $2 m$500k to $1 m$250k to $500k<$250k
Re
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%)
SMB digital banking usage by annual revenue
Mobile Banking
Online Banking
39% 37%
28%
59%
84%
93%
89%
94%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
In-person servicesPhysical & OnlinePhysical onlyOnline only
Re
sp
. (%
)
SMB digital banking usage by business model
Mobile Banking
Online Banking
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Overall, 17% of surveyed SMBs use commercial desktop RDC for their business. Usage is predictably related to where the checks are. That is, the larger the business (the more checks it receives), the more compelling the desktop RDC business case and the greater the desktop RDC utilization (Figure 11). Thirty-five percent of SMBs with annual revenues over $2 million are desktop RDC users, compared to just 6% of micro-businesses. Among surveyed businesses with over $5 million in revenue (8% of the sample), 48%
use Desktop Deposit.
Figure 11: SMB Desktop RDC Utilization Strongly Correlates with Annual Revenue
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following bank services do you use for your business?
Modestly more SMBs use mRDC for their business (25%), despite being available for a relatively short time and positioned squarely to consumers by most financial institutions. The survey did not distinguish between usage of these mRDC products and Business Mobile Deposit. Because so few banks make Business Mobile Deposit broadly available, Celent interprets surveyed SMB mRDC usage to refer to the consumer mRDC product
variant which is nearly universally offered free of charge.
Roughly a quarter of Desktop RDC users in the survey sample also use Mobile Deposit for their business (Figure 12). In contrast to Desktop RDC, however, larger businesses are the least likely to use Mobile Deposit. The smallest businesses, with their lower check
volumes, are more likely to use mRDC (34%) compared to larger businesses (15%).
6%
14%
17%
26%
35%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
<$250k $250k to $500k $500k to $1 m $1 m to $2 m $2 m+
De
sk
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RD
C U
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n (
%)
Desktop RDC utilization by annual revenue
Key Research Question
1
What is RDC utilization among US SMBs?
Commercial desktop RDC usage (17%) scales with the size of business – just the opposite for Mobile
Deposit (24%). Nearly 50% of SMBs use mRDC for
their personal accounts.
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Figure 12: Desktop and Mobile RDC Utilization Are Mirror Images
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following bank services do you use for your business?
The relationship between RDC utilization and average daily check volume is stark. Said simply, Mobile Deposit is used where Desktop Deposit is not (Figure 13). It appears that Mobile Deposit has gained adoption by SMBs that could not historically justify the business case for Desktop Deposit, with its scanner purchase and monthly fee
requirement.
Figure 13: Mobile Deposit Is Used Where Desktop Deposit Is Not
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following bank services do you use for your business?
Mobile deposit utilization varies significantly between personal and business accounts. While 25% of surveyed SMBs use mRDC for business purposes, twice that many (46%) use mRDC for personal accounts. Personal use of mRDC does not correlate with the size of business, but business utilization does. The smallest SMBs were the most likely to use
34%
19% 20%
18%
15%
6%
14%
17%
26%
35%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
Under $250k $250k to $500k $500k to $1 m $1 m to $2 m $2 m+
Re
sp
.(%
)
RDC utilization by annual revenue
mRDC Desktop RDC
31%
20%
24%
11% 12%
5% 7%
12%
19%
24%
35%
53%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
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< 1 1 -2 3-5 6-10 11-20 20+
Res
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%)
Avg. # of checks per day
RDC utilization by avg. daily check volume
mRDC Desktop RDC
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mRDC for both personal and business accounts (Figure 14), consistent with their higher
utilization of Mobile Banking.
Figure 14: Twice as Many SMBs Use Mobile RDC for Personal Accounts
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Based on what you know about Mobile Deposit, which of the following statements applies to you?
This makes sense because one’s personal circumstances typically bear little resemblance to one’s business receivables. Of course, Mobile Deposit usage strongly correlates with mobile banking utilization. That is because most institutions integrate Mobile Deposit with their Mobile Banking app. Across the entire survey sample, two-thirds of Mobile Banking users use mRDC for their business, but that ratio varied significantly across segments—from 43% among traditional retailers (higher check
volumes) to 90% among online businesses (low check volume) (Figure 15).
Figure 15: Digital-only Businesses Have the Highest mRDC Utilization
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following bank services do you use for your business?
51%
28%
45%
40% 39% 36%
14% 16%
20%
10%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
<$250k $250k to $500k $500k to $1m $1m to $2m $2m+
RD
C U
tiliz
atio
n (
%)
mRDC usage by annual revenue
Personal use Business use
39% 37%
28%
59%
23% 25%
12%
53% 59%
68%
43%
90%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
In-person servicesPhysical & OnlinePhysical onlyOnline only
Re
sp
. (%
)
Mobile Banking and mRDC utilization by business model
Mobile Banking
mRDC
mRDC % of Mobile
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When viewed by SMB annual revenue, the relationship between Mobile Deposit and Mobile Banking utilization was comparatively even, ranging between 56% and 75% (Figure 16). For both mRDC and Mobile Banking, larger businesses (with their generally
higher check volume) have lower utilization.
Figure 16: Mobile Deposit Utilization Mirrors Mobile Banking Usage across the Revenue Tiers
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following bank services do you use for your business?
Without regard to mobile banking utilization, the highest mRDC usage is among online-only businesses, for both personal and business use (Figure 17). Many SMBs, although familiar with Mobile Deposit through personal use, do not use the product for their
business. These are prime candidates for Business Mobile Deposit.
Figure 17: Digital-only Businesses Have the Highest mRDC Utilization
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397 Q: Based on what you know about Mobile Deposit, which of the following statements applies to you?
RDC utilization, whether desktop or mobile, certainly affects a business’s deposit
behavior, which we explore next.
20%
29% 33% 34%
48%
15% 18%
20% 19%
34%
75%
62% 61%
56%
71%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
$2 m+$1 m to $2 m$500k to $1 m$250k to $500k<$250k
Re
sp
. (%
)
Mobile Banking and mRDC utilization by annual revenue
Mobile Banking
mRDC
mRDC % of Mobile
71%
43%
42%
39%
57%
11%
23%
31%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
Online only
Physical location(s) only
Online & physical location(s)
All in-person service related
RDC Utilization (%)
mRDC usage by business model
Business use
Personal use
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BRANCH AND ATM DEPOSIT BEHAVIOR The survey looked into branch and ATM deposit behavior of SMBs because a growing number of institutions seek to reduce branch transaction activity through migrating
deposits to self-service channels, namely commercial desktop and mobile RDC.
SMBs in our survey sample generally shun ATMs in favor of branch deposits, with 72% of SMBs having never made an ATM deposit for their businesses. Conversely, 93% of SMBs make branch deposits, 25% of which report visiting a branch three or more times
each week (Figure 18).
Figure 18: SMBs Shun ATMs in Favor of Branches
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397 Q: How do you make business-related bank deposits? Indicate how and how often in each option below.
Larger businesses generally visit branches for deposits more often than smaller businesses, however, not dramatically so. On average, the smallest businesses (<$250k) make 1.2 branch deposits per week, while businesses with annual revenue of $2m and
greater make about 2.2 deposits in an average week (Figure 19).
Figure 19: Branch Deposit Frequency Grows with Annual Revenue, but Not by Much
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: How do you make business-related bank deposits? Indicate how and how often in each option below.
7%
33%
18% 17%
9% 5%
11%
72%
17%
6% 3% 2% 1% 0%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
Never < 1x 1x 2x 3x 4x 5x
Usa
ge
(%
)
Deposit frequency
Branch / ATM deposit activity
Branch ATM
6% 5% 8% 9% 6% 10%
48%
20% 25% 24%
13%
24%
19%
19% 18%
9% 34%
21%
15%
22% 18%
24% 13% 10%
12%
34% 31% 34% 34% 35%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
<$250k $250k-$500k $500k-$1 m $1m-$2m $2m-$5m $5m+
Re
sp. (
%)
Annual revenue
Branch deposit frequency by annual revenue (Avg. weekly deposits)
3x+
2x
1x
< 1x
Never
Avg.: 1.2 2.1 1.8 2.1 2.2 2.1
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Deposit frequency closely correlates to the number of checks received on an average day. Said simply, more checks per day translate to more frequent branch deposits
(Figure 20). Check deposits remain an important component of branch traffic.
Figure 20: Check Volume Heavily Influences Branch Deposit Frequency
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: How do you make business-related bank deposits? Indicate how and how often in each option below.
With many SMBs using remote deposit (Figure 12), why would the majority of them still make branch deposits? Two reasons:
1. Many SMBs still do not use RDC for check deposits (70% of the survey sample).
2. Many branch deposits include both cash and checks.
As shown in Figure 21, cash shows up significantly in roughly a third of branch deposits.
A smaller minority of deposits are “mostly cash.”
Figure 21: Cash Is Prevalent in SMB Branch Deposits
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: For branch or ATM deposits, what typically makes up your deposit?
10% 3% 4% 8% 4% 5%
49%
22% 21% 14% 31%
7%
19%
22% 19%
11%
4%
33%
12%
25%
16%
24% 15% 14%
9%
28% 40% 43% 46% 52%
0%
20%
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60%
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100%
< 1 1 -2 3-5 6-10 11-20 20+
Res
p. (
%)
Avg. daily check volume
Branch deposit frequency by avg. daily check volume (Avg. weekly deposits)
3x+
2x
1x
< 1x
Never
8% 11% 8%
29%
31% 26% 34%
71% 62% 64%
57%
0%
20%
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60%
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100%
Online only In-personservices
Physical & Online Physicallocation(s) only
Re
sp. (
%)
Business model
Branch Deposit Mix by Business Model
Mostly checks
Mix of cash and checks
Mostly cash
1.0 1.9 2.2 2.4 2.4 2.6 Avg.:
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The presence of cash in branch deposits means that widespread RDC adoption won’t eliminate branch deposit activity. But, RDC will take a big bite out of it. In the survey sample, non-RDC users made 2.1 branch deposits in an average week, compared to just
1.2 deposits for RDC users.
Might the presence of cash in a business’s deposit mix affect RDC adoption? Apparently, cash is not the reason many SMBs don’t use RDC. If it were, cash would largely be
absent in the branch deposit mix of RDC users, but that is hardly the case (Figure 22).
Figure 22: Cash Is Not the Reason Some SMBs Don’t Use RDC
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: How do you make business-related bank deposits? Indicate how and how often in each option below.
Banks seeking to reduce branch deposit activity should consider remote cash capture (RCC) in addition to RDC. Burroughs, Fiserv, and others offer turnkey solutions for banks wishing to offer RCC without a large capital expense. Small business RCC adoption may prove challenging, however. A big factor in the historic RCC value proposition is the promise of a reduction in armored courier transportation cost. Armored courier usage is virtually nonexistent among surveyed SMBs. That suggests RCC usage will be a niche
market among SMBs, but potentially important among cash-heavy businesses.
BANK ENGAGEMENT The survey sought to understand how often SMBs engage with their banks—whether initiated by the bank or the business, as well as each business’ preferred method of
engagement when their bank had a new product or service to discuss.
SMBs don’t speak with their bankers often, nor do they wish to. Fully half of surveyed SMBs “rarely if ever” speak with a banker about “products or services that might benefit their business.” Only 20% of SMBs speak with their banker quarterly or more often. When asked, “About how often would you want your bank to contact you about products or services that might benefit your business?”, about two-thirds of SMBs said they would want to hear from their bank annually or somewhat more frequently. Only 1 in 10 SMBs
interact with their banker more than quarterly—or even want to (Figure 23).
10%
22%
6%
29%
24%
30%
62% 54%
64%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
mRDC Users Desktop RDC Users Non-RDC Users
Re
sp. (
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RDC utilization
Branch deposit mix by RDC utilization
Mostly checks
A mix of cash and checks
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Figure 23: SMBs Don’t Talk with Their Bank Often, nor Do They Wish To
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397 Q: How often do you speak with a banker about products or services that might benefit your business?
Q: How often would you want your bank to contact you about products or services that might benefit your business?
Engagement interval did not correlate strongly with size of business, but did show a marked increase at the $500k annual revenue mark. If true (recollection among survey respondents may not be certain), the data places business banker client coverage patterns in question. If business bankers were calling on their larger SMB clients more frequently, it would likely show up in surveyed frequency of interaction. It may be that much bank/customer engagement is business-driven, not bank-initiated. Even though many banks place larger businesses (those over $1 million in annual revenue) in sales coverage, those businesses did not assert significantly more frequent conversations with
their banker (Figure 24).
Figure 24: Engagement Frequency Picks Up Slightly among Businesses Over $500k/yr.
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: About how often do you speak with a banker about products or services that might benefit your business—
whether you or the bank initiates the conversation?
51%
16% 13%
9% 11%
39%
18%
11%
22%
10%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
Rarely, if ever Annually Bi-annually Quarterly More thanquarterly
Re
sp. (
%)
Frequency of Interaction
Speak with banker Prefer to hear from banker
60% 63%
38% 35% 44%
13% 15%
17% 21% 13%
13% 5%
20% 21% 12%
7% 7%
12% 6% 17%
6% 10% 13% 18% 15%
0%
20%
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60%
80%
100%
<$250k $250k to$500k
$500k to$1 m
$1 m to$2 m
$2 m+
Re
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SMB interaction frequency by size of business
More than quarterly
Quarterly
Bi-annually
Annually
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Businesses showed great diversity in their desired engagement interval, with no apparent correlation to size or type of business. Roughly a third of surveyed SMBs said they would prefer not hearing from their bank with product or service ideas. The other two-thirds
preferred generally infrequent interaction—quarterly or less frequently.
Despite the diversity in how often SMBs would like to hear from their banks, there was clear consensus on how they would like to engage. Email is the overwhelmingly preferred mechanism (Figure 25)—preferred by SMBs across all segments. Fewer than 10% would prefer a phone call, except SMBs with annual revenues over $5 million (13%). There is
no mystery around how banks should promote Business Mobile Deposit!
Figure 25: SMBs Prefer Email Engagement by a Large Margin
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: If your bank had a new product or service that it felt would benefit your business, how would you prefer to
hear from them?
It’s clear that institutions wishing to promote Business Mobile Deposit would be well advised to use email to do so. The next section explores how to position the product in a
way that resonates with SMBs.
63%
9%
3%
9%
7%
6%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
Telephone call
Text message
Direct mail
Conversation at a branch
In-person visit
Resp. (%)
Desired contact mechanism
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SMB REACTIONS TO BUSINESS MOBILE DEPOSIT
Awareness of mobile deposit is high (80%), with relatively little variation across size of business or business models. Banks that offer mRDC have done a good job getting the word out. Just 17% of surveyed SMBs say their bank doesn’t offer mRDC, and another 12% are aware of mRDC but don’t use it. No doubt, the high awareness and usage of
mRDC for personal accounts influences SMB attitudes towards mRDC for their business.
ATTRIBUTE IMPORTANCE Prior to asking SMBs to weigh in on business mobile deposit attributes, the survey offered a brief product description (see Appendix II)—without an objective sales pitch.
Respondents were then asked their opinions on various aspects of the product.
The most compelling surveyed business mRDC attribute is the ability to capture multiple checks in a single deposit, favored by 39% of respondents. Many respondents (45%) showed ambivalence toward the business mRDC concept as presented in the survey, indicating it “sounds the same as Mobile Deposit,” now offered broadly (Figure 26).
Product pricing had not been introduced at this point in the survey.
Figure 26: The Ability to Capture Multiple Checks in a Single Deposit Is a Win for Business mRDC
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following Business Mobile Deposit capabilities would make it appealing for use by your
business? (Select all that apply.)
21%
23%
32%
39%
45%
0% 20% 40% 60%
Real-time research and reporting fordeposits and payments made
Opportunity to capture documentation suchas an invoice along with your check when…
Automatic updates to your accountingsoftware when a deposit is made
Ability to capture multiple checks in a singletransaction (vs. one check per deposit)
None of these. Business Mobile Depositsounds the same as Mobile Deposit.
Resp. (%)
Appealing aspects of Business Mobile Deposit
Key Research Question
2
What features resonate with SMBs?
The most compelling business mobile deposit benefit is the ability to capture more than one check
per deposit.
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Importantly, current mRDC users showed the least ambivalence towards Business Mobile Deposit. Moreover, these users of an ultra-simple product designed for consumers found most aspects of Business Mobile Deposit significantly more appealing than did either non-users or Desktop RDC users (Figure 27). The survey’s brief product
description resonated with these businesses!
Figure 27: Current mRDC Users Find Many Aspects of Business Mobile Deposit Appealing
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following Business Mobile Deposit capabilities would make it appealing for use by your business? (Select all that apply.)
Without mention (yet) of pricing, Mobile Deposit users clearly resonated with Business Mobile Deposit compared to Desktop Deposit users and non-RDC users. This was reinforced in a separate question, where respondents were asked to indicate their level of agreement to several statements. The question was designed to uncover why certain
product attributes might be important, or not. Among current mRDC users:
Over 70% agreed that not having to install a scanner is attractive.
Over 70% agreed that they would want Business Mobile Deposit to be integrated to
their Mobile Banking app.
60% agreed an attractive aspect of Business Mobile Deposit is based on their
accepting some checks in the field.
Next, the survey sought to measure attribute importance—how each attribute would
affect SMBs’ decision to use Business Mobile Deposit.
Overall Attribute Rankings Based solely on a brief product description and without the ability to clarify their understanding of various product attributes (as would be the case in a sales situation), respondents were asked to indicate how important each attribute would be to their decision to use Business Mobile Deposit for their business. SMBs offer a clear attribute rating hierarchy with the ability to capture multiple checks in a single deposit judged as
the most important attribute.
Broadly, SMBs regard several attributes similarly: multi-check deposits; the option to deposit using a desktop scanner, smartphone, or both (an integrated product); automatic accounting system updates; and research/reporting. By comparison, attributes addressing multiple users within the company scored poorly. For example, separation of
35%
38%
45%
57%
27%
27%
35%
39%
17%
17%
25%
33%
0% 20% 40% 60%
Real-time research andreporting for deposits
Ability to capturedocumentation such as an
invoice
Automatic updates toaccounting software
Ability to capture multiplechecks in a single transaction
Resp. (%)
Appealing aspects of Business Mobile Deposit
Non-RDC Users
Desktop RDC Users
mRDC Users
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duties (having one person scan checks and another person review and deposit) was
viewed as least important among the Business Mobile Deposit attributes (Figure 28).
Figure 28: Four Business Mobile Deposit Product Attributes Scored Similarly
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: How important would the following be to your decision to use Business Mobile Deposit?
Since many banks can segment their SMB client base by business model (type of business), annual revenue, historic deposit activity, and mRDC utilization, Celent examined product attribute ratings across these variables to see if there were particular attributes that resonated in certain segments. Generally, Celent found the attribute importance hierarchy in Figure 28 was apparent across market segments, with nuanced differences that may impact how banks position and sell Business Mobile RDC. When applicable, we note these key differences below.
Attribute Rankings by Business Model The ability to capture multiple checks in a single deposit was viewed as important uniformly across business models as were other product attributes to a somewhat lesser extent. The one product attribute showing the most significant variation in perceived importance across business models was the ability to automatically update accounting software when a deposit is made. This attribute was rated as modestly more important by
in-person services businesses (Figure 29).
Celent does not regard attribute rating differences by business model meaningful enough
to warrant targeted product positioning.
16%
13%
16%
20%
17%
19%
18%
12%
19%
24%
26%
33%
33%
37%
0% 20% 40% 60%
Optional separation of duties
Multiple people scan checks
Capture documentation
Research and reporting
Automatically update AR
Use desktop, smartphone orboth
Capture multiple checks in asingle transaction
Importance (%)
Business Mobile Deposit attribute importance
Moderate Very
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Figure 29: Automatic AR Updates Are Modestly More Important to In-Person Services Businesses
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: How important would the following be to your decision to use Business Mobile Deposit?
Attribute Rankings by Annual Revenue Most Business Mobile Deposit product attributes were viewed similarly by SMBs regardless of annual revenue. One exception was the ability to provide separation of duties, which rates poorly overall, but appeals more strongly to larger firms (Figure 30). This makes sense because larger annual revenue firms are more likely to have more
than one user.
Figure 30: Separation of Duties Appeals to Larger Firms
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397 Q: How important would the following be to your decision to use Business Mobile Deposit?
In addition, larger firms which generally receive more checks and have more than one location are more likely to use desktop RDC and place comparatively greater importance
20% 20%
10% 14%
33% 28%
33% 29%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
In-personservices
Physical &Online
Physical only Online only
Imp
ort
an
ce
(%
)
Business Model
Importance: Ability to update AR when a deposit is made
Very
Moderately
20%
12% 14%
17% 18% 14%
7%
8% 8%
7%
23%
19%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
Imp
ort
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(%
)
Importance: Optional separation of duties
Very
Moderately
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on separation of duties as well as the ability to capture using a desktop or mobile device, or both. The <$250k micro business segment is surprisingly pro-business mRDC, rating
several attributes significantly higher than modestly larger businesses. In summary:
SMBs across all segments value the ability to capture more than one check in a
deposit.
Attributes suggesting a bundled mobile/desktop solution appeal to larger SMBs,
many of whom already use Desktop RDC.
In Celent’s view, an annual revenue view of SMBs is of some value in positioning and selling Business Mobile Deposit, but a more useful segmentation looks at where the
checks are.
Rankings by Average Daily Check Volume Recall that SMBs see a wide range of check volumes, with higher annual revenue firms generally receiving more checks (Figure 7) and businesses that operate physical locations (Figure 8). Unlike other SMB segmentation, average daily check volume is a strong predictor of a business’s affinity to Business Mobile Deposit as well as specific attribute importance. Figure 31 looks at respondents’ agreement to several statements about Business Mobile RDC, showing a clear relationship between perceived product efficacy and average daily check volumes. While the idea of not having to install a scanner was comparatively appealing across all businesses regardless of check volume, belief that mRDC would be more efficient than Desktop RDC fell into disagreement among SMBs with more than a handful of checks per day. At higher check volumes,
SMBs didn’t value Business Mobile Deposit being integrated with Mobile Banking.
Figure 31: Average Daily Check Volume Is a Reliable Predictor of Business Mobile Deposit Efficacy
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Which of the following Business Mobile Deposit capabilities would make it appealing for use by your
business?
Attribute importance varied dramatically as a function of daily check volume, but not uniformly so. For example, the ability to capture multiple checks in a single deposit, and the ability to use a desktop scanner or mobile device were both uniformly highly rated attributes (50% to 60% top 2-box importance). Invoice capture was fairly evenly rated as well, but judged less important (30% to 45% top 2-box). The attributes with the greatest
43%
34%
52%
55%
59%
26%
48%
58%
56%
61%
10%
30%
44%
43%
54%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80%
20+
11-20
6-10
3-5
1-2
Agree (%)
Avg
. dai
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he
ck v
olu
me
Appealing aspects of Business Mobile Deposit
Seems more efficient thandesktop RDC
Would want to be part ofmobile banking App
Attractive because noscanner to install
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importance variation tend to be more important to firms with higher check volumes. Like in other segmentations, separation of duties scored the lowest in attribute importance
(Figure 32).
Figure 32: Some Variations in Attribute Importance Appear to Be Linked to Check Volume
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: How important would the following be to your decision to use Business Mobile Deposit?
As stated before, Celent regards these differences in attribute importance secondary to
these distinguishing characteristics of Business Mobile Deposit:
The ability to capture multiple checks in a single deposit
Automatic AR system updates
The ability to capture non-check documents
Real time research and reporting
PRICING EXPECTATIONS Few readers would likely be surprised at the idea that several years of free consumer mRDC has impacted pricing expectations for Business Mobile Deposit. The good news is
that at least some SMBs expect to be charged for it.
Overall, two-thirds of surveyed SMBs expect business mRDC to be offered free of charge—like they’re used to getting for their personal accounts. Expectations to pay tend
to grow somewhat with the size of business, but not by much (Figure 33).
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
< 1 1-2 3-5 6-10 11-20 20+
To
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mp
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Avg. Daily check volume
Business Mobile Deposit attribute importance
Automatically
update AR
Separation of
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Research &
Reporting
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Figure 33: Most SMBs Expect Business Mobile Deposit to Be Free
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: Based on your understanding thus far, what would you expect to pay for Business Mobile Deposit?
Existing mRDC users tend to have the lowest pricing expectations (80% free/nothing), while existing Desktop RDC users, who have been used to paying a monthly fee, have among the highest pricing expectations (60% free/nothing) (Figure 34). Still, the overall numbers portend bad news for banks expecting to garner significant fee revenue from
Business Mobile Deposit.
Figure 34: Existing mRDC Users Are More Likely to Expect Free Business Mobile Deposit
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397 Q: Based on your understanding thus far, what would you expect to pay for Business Mobile Deposit?
Explicitly stated interest in the product at different price points paints an even more difficult picture—one suggesting even small fees would significantly impede adoption. Figure 35 compares stated usage interest for varying pricing models—no charge, monthly fee, and per-deposit pricing among all SMB survey respondents. If offered free of charge, 57% of surveyed SMBs were “very” or “extremely interested” in Business Mobile
8% 10% 10%
24% 15%
16% 20%
14%
23%
21%
76% 70%
76%
53%
65%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
<$250k $250-$500k $500k- $1m $1m-$2m $2m+
Re
sp
. (%
)
Annual Revenue
Business Mobile Deposit pricing expectations
Free / Nothing
Monthly fee
Per item /
deposit fee
6% 13% 13%
14%
27% 16%
80%
60% 71%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
mRDC Users Desktop RDC Users Non-RDC Users
Res
p. (
%)
Business Mobile Deposit pricing expectations
Free / Nothing
Monthly fee
Per item / depositfee
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Deposit. With a $5/month fee, interest dropped to 23%; lower still for other pricing
schemes. The survey did not examine lower monthly price points.
Figure 35: A Modest Fee for Business Mobile Deposit Sharply Erodes SMB Interest
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: What is your level of interest in Business Mobile Deposit for your business if it was offered at these levels?
Further evidence of a relationship between check volume and mRDC interest is apparent when comparing stated interest when offered at no cost as a function of average daily
received check volume (Figure 36).
Figure 36: Business Mobile Deposit Appeal Is Greatest among SMBs Receiving Few Checks
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: What is your level of interest in Business Mobile Deposit for your business if it was offered free of charge?
21%
51%
71% 67%
80%
10%
13%
12% 12%
10%
12%
14%
10% 11%
7%
57%
23%
7% 10% 2%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
No charge $5 per month $10 per month $.50 per
deposit
$1.00 per
deposit
Re
sp
. (%
)
Pricing Model
SMB Business Mobile Deposit usage interest
Very/Extremely
Moderately
Slightly
Not at all
16%
18%
27%
27%
33%
54%
15%
8%
6%
10%
10%
6%
9%
19%
6%
17%
14%
6%
61%
55%
61%
47%
43%
35%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
< 1
1-2
3-5
6-10
11-20
21+
Resp. (%)
Avg
. # c
he
cks
rece
ive
d p
er
day
Usage interest (no fee attached)
Not Slightly Moderately Very / Extremely
Interest level:
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Figure 37 illustrates how introducing a modest $5/month fee dramatically reduces stated interest in Business Mobile Deposit. Note that interest is eroded most dramatically among businesses with low check volume. Higher monthly pricing or per-transaction pricing erodes interest even further and must be concluded to be unviable (i.e., less than 10%
top 2-box interest).
Figure 37: A $5/month Fee Deeply Erodes Business Mobile Deposit Interest
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: What is your level of interest in Business Mobile Deposit for your business if it was offered for $5/month?
Beyond the average daily check volume view of Figure 36 and Figure 37, two more views help uncover the market opportunity for Business Mobile Deposit—RDC usage and SMB
business models.
For financial institutions intent on seeking fee revenue from Business Mobile Deposit, the most fertile ground may be among online businesses (approximately 6% of US SMBs). This small segment offered the highest explicit interest in Business Mobile Deposit when
a $5/month fee was attached (43% very/extremely interested) (Figure 38).
58%
45%
43%
47%
52%
66%
17%
11%
14%
10%
11%
19%
12%
17%
10%
11%
15%
25%
30%
26%
38%
24%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
< 1
1-2
3-5
6-10
11-20
21+
Resp. (%)
Avg
. # c
he
cks
rece
ive
d p
er
day
Usage interest ($5/mo.)
Not Slightly Moderately Very / Extremely
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Figure 38: Online Merchants May be a Viable Business Mobile Deposit Fee Revenue Target
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: What is your level of interest in Business Mobile Deposit for your business if it was offered for $5/month?
For financial institutions seeking to maximize Business Mobile Deposit utilization, Celent recommends targeting existing mRDC users. Those SMBs resonate with several product attributes and display the highest usage interest of all segments analyzed, with 79% top
2-box usage interest (Figure 39).
Figure 39: Online Merchants May Be a Viable Business Mobile Deposit Fee Revenue Target
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
Q: What is your level of interest in Business Mobile Deposit for your business if it was offered with no fee?
53%
52%
51%
43%
18%
14%
11%
8%
15%
15%
14%
20%
20%
23%
43%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
In-person services
Physical & Online
Physical only
Online only
Usage interest ($5 monthly fee)
Not interested Slightly Moderately Very/Extremely
6%
31%
24%
11%
4%
11%
4%
12%
15%
79%
54%
50%
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
mRDC Users
Desktop RDC Users
Non-RDC Users
Usage interest (no fee attached)
Not interested Slightly Moderately Very/Extremely
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MARKET OPPORTUNITY
The market opportunity for Business Mobile Deposit depends on each institution’s strategic intent—to maximize utilization for transaction migration and its resulting cost savings, or to maximize fee revenue. We provide both perspectives in this section. To be conservative, the market is defined as SMBs with annual revenues between $25,000 and
$5 million.
According to the US Census Bureau’s 2012 Survey of Small Businesses, there are 27,626,000 small businesses in the US. Just over 12.5 million of them have annual revenues of $25,000 or more. Celent’s market opportunity estimate is based on this market size and surveyed current RDC adoption (Table 2). Accounting for the roughly 25% of Desktop Deposit users that are also using mRDC, 4.5 million US SMBs (36%)
may be currently using some form of RDC.
Table 2: Roughly 4.5 Million SMBs May Be Currently Using Some Form of RDC
Surveyed Usage
Segment # SMBs Desktop RDC mRDC Cumulative*
Resulting
SMBs
<$250k 8,561,739 6% 34% 37% 3,124,160
$250k to $500k 1,467,664 14% 19% 30% 432,960
$500k to $1 m 1,042,930 17% 20% 34% 341,560
$1 m to $2 m 837,713 26% 18% 38% 314,140
$2 m+ 558,475 35% 15% 41% 230,370
Total 12,468,521 36% 4,461,195
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397, US Bureau of Census 2012 Survey of Small Businesses * Cumulative RDC usage accounts for the 25% of Desktop RDC users that also report using mRDC.
The market opportunity for additional adoption of Business Mobile Deposit is heavily
influenced by at least five factors:
1. The average number of checks received. Business Mobile Deposit resonates more strongly among SMBs with low check volumes.
2. The presence of a genuinely mobile use-case. This shows up most strongly
among SMBs with an in-person or remote business model. Some of these businesses already use Desktop RDC, but may subsequently employ Business Mobile Deposit if offered as an integrated solution (desktop and mobile capture).
Key Research Question
3
What is the market opportunity for business mobile RDC?
Celent estimates 4 million additional SMBs could adopt Business Mobile Deposit if offered at no fee
or 2.8 million at $5/month.
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3. Mobile banking usage. Segments with higher mobile banking utilization also
tend to attach greater importance to business mobile RDC. Most likely, this is because virtually all institutions offer mRDC as a Mobile Banking feature. The survey did not help us understand the extent to which Business Mobile Deposit might influence Mobile Banking adoption among SMBs, if offered.
4. Pricing. Surveyed usage interest is dramatically impacted by product pricing.
5. Cannibalization of Desktop RDC. Some users of Desktop RDC may
discontinue its use in favor of Business Mobile Deposit if offered at lower price points. The survey did not explore this scenario, but the risk is manifest.
Maximum Utilization In the maximum utilization scenario, SMB “consumer” mRDC users that migrate to Business Mobile Deposit would not result in incremental RDC utilization. In other words, migration to Business Mobile Deposit would not likely influence the depositing behavior of those businesses and have no likely impact on branch traffic. Net incremental RDC
adoption is what counts for institutions pursuing a transaction migration strategy.
Celent estimates the Business Mobile Deposit market opportunity to be nearly 4 million incremental SMBs with annual revenues over $25,000. The estimate is based on surveyed existing RDC utilization and the lowest surveyed top 2-box no-fee usage interest (“very” or “extremely”) in each annual revenue segment. If reached, combined RDC utilization would extend to 8.3 million SMBs or 64% of those with annual revenue over $25,000 (Table 3). To be conservative, this estimate does not include businesses that indicate “moderate” interest in using the product, nor does it include the 15 million businesses with annual revenues less than $25,000.
Table 3: Estimated Business Mobile Deposit Market Opportunity – Maximum Utilization
Segment # SMBs
Cumulative
RDC Users
Top 2-Box
Interest
Incremental
Utilization
Total
Utilization
<$250k 8,561,739 3,142,158 49% 2,655,595 5,797,753
$250k to $500k 1,467,664 432,960 42% 434,575 867,536
$500k to $1 m 1,042,930 341,559 49% 343,672 685,231
$1 m to $2 m 837,713 314,142 49% 256,550 570,692
$2 m+ 558,475 230,371 49% 160,771 391,142
Total 12,468,520 4,461,190 3,851,160 8,312,355
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397, Celent estimates * Market opportunity based on US Census Bureau estimate of US SMBs with revenue over $25k.
Of course, maximum RDC utilization would require extending consumer mRDC’ s prevailing “no fee” pricing to Business Mobile Deposit. From a product perspective, maximum utilization would require at least two solution options: one integrated to Mobile Banking and a separate stand-alone app-based option tied to the bank’s online banking portal. This second option would extend Business Mobile Deposit beyond the existing Mobile Banking SMB client base. Figure 40 on the next page shows this graphically.
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Figure 40: Estimated Business Mobile Deposit Market Opportunity—Maximum Utilization
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397, Celent estimates
* Market opportunity based on US Census Bureau estimate of US SMBs with revenue over $25k.
Maximum Fee Revenue Estimating the Business Mobile Deposit market opportunity for the maximum fee revenue
scenario is more difficult for several reasons. Among them:
Cannibalization of existing Desktop Deposit users could be significant. The survey did not explore this dynamic. Absent evidence to the contrary, Celent assumes current desktop RDC users will continue its use, with a percentage of
existing users licensing additional Business Mobile Deposit capability.
Price elasticity is an important variable. The survey did not measure price elasticity. Rather, it offers a directional indication of Business Mobile Deposit’s
sensitivity to pricing.
Segments showing the greatest business mobile RDC affinity are those that rate one or more product attributes highly (top 2-box importance) and display significant interest in using (top 2-box interest) assuming at a specified price point. We all know business mobile deposit would be hugely popular if offered free of charge, as most every institution does with its consumer mRDC offering. Four key assumptions helped estimate the maximum fee revenue market opportunity:
Mobile Banking integration. This would be a popular option for smaller businesses and those with low average daily check volumes.
Desktop Deposit integration. This would be a popular option for larger businesses and those with higher average daily check volumes, as well as those SMBs that do not use Mobile Banking.
$5/month recurring fee, with continued option to use Consumer Mobile Deposit. $10/month and transaction-based pricing was assessed in the survey, but scored poorly by comparison.
Some existing mRDC users would migrate to Business Mobile Deposit, based on
the 25% top 2-box usage interest among these SMBs.
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
<$250k $250k-$500k $500k-$1 m $1m-$2m $2m+
Uti
lizat
ion
(%
)
Annual revenue
(Business Mobile Deposit market opportunity (Maximum utilization scenario)
New User Opportunity
mRDC Users
Desktop RDC Users
1.1M
3.6M
3.8M
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Celent estimates the Business Mobile Deposit market opportunity for the maximum fee revenue scenario to be 2.8 million SMBs with annual revenues over $25,000. There will be 1.9 million new RDC users, and 900,000 will result from mRDC migration. The estimate is based on surveyed existing RDC utilization and the lowest surveyed top 2-box $5/month usage interest in each annual revenue segment. If reached, combined RDC utilization would extend to 5.6 million US SMBs or 45% of all SMBs with annual revenue over $25,000. The resulting industrywide annualized revenue at $5/month would be 150
million (Table 4).
Table 4: Estimated Business Mobile Deposit Market Opportunity – Maximum Fee Revenue
Segment RDC Users
Non RDC
Users
User
Interest
Non User
Interest
Incremental
Utilization
Total Utilization
<$250k 3,142,158 5,650,748 25% 18%
1,800,362 4,942,521
$250k to $500k 432,960 1,188,808 25% 19% 324,354 757,315
$500k to $1 m 341,559 834,344 25% 19% 251,138 592,697
$1 m to $2 m 314,142 686,924 25% 19% 235,732 549,875
$2 m+ 230,371 474,704 25% 19%
171,731 402,102
Total 4,461,191 8,835,528
2,783,317 7,244,509
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397, Celent estimates * Market opportunity based on US Census Bureau estimate of US SMBs with revenue over $25k.
Figure 41 on shows this graphically.
Figure 41: Estimated Business Mobile Deposit Market Opportunity—Maximum Fee Revenue
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397
* Market opportunity based on US Census Bureau estimate of US SMBs with revenue over $25k.
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
<$250k $250k-$500k
$500k-$1 m $1m-$2m $2m+
Uti
lizat
ion
(%
)
Annual revenue
(Business Mobile Deposit market opportunity (Maximum fee revenue scenario)
New User Opportunity
mRDC Users
Desktop RDC Users
1.1M
2.7M
2.8M
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RECOMMENDATIONS
For banks seeking to maximize SMB Business Mobile Deposit utilization, there is much good news. Banks seeking to maximize fee revenue in the process, however, will be disappointed. Several years of no-fee consumer Mobile Deposit, unfortunately, has spoiled the Business Mobile Deposit revenue opportunity to a large extent. The challenge is straightforward. Many SMBs receiving significant daily check volume are already
desktop RDC users, while those with low check volumes already use Mobile Deposit.
Regardless of a bank’s strategic intent, maximizing the value of Business Mobile Deposit to the institution will involve product, positioning, pricing, and promotion. We offer
recommendations in each area.
Product Maximizing the market opportunity requires a product offering that supports both SMBs
that use Mobile Banking as well as those that do not. It would include:
Business Mobile Deposit integrated with the institution’s Mobile Banking app. This product variant would be embraced by SMBs with low average daily check volumes—principally those already using a consumer mRDC product, as well as those with moderate check volumes that have not historically embraced Desktop RDC, with its associated requirement to purchase and maintain desktop check
scanners.
Business Mobile Deposit integrated with the institution’s Desktop Deposit platform. This product variant would be embraced by a segment of existing Desktop RDC users that accept check payments in the field, as well as SMBs that do not use
Mobile Banking.
Some institutions may wish to create more distinct product differentiation by limiting certain capabilities on the first product. Examples could include separation of duties or invoice capture. These attributes tend to be more important to larger organizations that
are more likely to already use Desktop RDC.
Embracing a two-tier product offering is important because it allows institutions to offer a low-cost solution for SMBs with low average daily check volumes and a higher-priced solution for larger businesses having both desktop and mobile check acceptance. This latter product could be offered to both SMB and commercial/corporate market segments
with little risk of cannibalization by the lower-priced offering.
Positioning Even banks seeking to maximize RDC utilization as part of a transaction migration strategy won’t want to leave revenue on the table. For this reason, Celent recommends
banks position each of the above products distinctly:
Most SMBs will be attracted to the “entry-level” Business Mobile Deposit product, particularly if offered as a no-fee option on a bank’s Mobile Banking app. Winning attributes consist of: multiple checks per deposit, the ability to capture non-check
information with each payment, QuickBooks integration, and basic reporting.
SMBs with higher average daily check volume are more likely to already use Desktop Deposit and are less likely to be enrolled in Mobile Banking. These customers will more readily embrace a differentiated product that allows both desktop and mobile capture, separation of duties, automatic AR system updates (beyond QuickBooks),
and the ability to have multiple users capture check payments.
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Clearly defined positioning like this will enhance banks’ ability to charge a monthly fee on the more advanced product—both among larger SMBs and within commercial, middle
market, and corporate market segments.
Pricing While each institution must make its own decision, Celent views the branch channel cost saving opportunity that broad SMB RDC adoption affords to be more compelling than a modest fee revenue stream. For this reason, Celent recommends differentiated pricing based on the two-tier positioning advocated above. Offering an entry-level product free of charge alongside a modestly priced and clearly differentiated alternative will likely
maximize overall utilization and minimize unintentional cannibalization.
From surveyed usage interest data, it is clearly important that institutions follow the Commercial Desktop RDC flat monthly fee pricing model, rather than a per-deposit or per-item scheme. Per-deposit pricing appears to be a loser among SMBs. Institutions pursuing this approach will be well advised to constrain monthly deposit volume as a way
of managing product cost in the current Mitek per-item license fee environment.
Promotion Use email marketing as the centerpiece, with focused direct sales efforts where it will be most effective. Specifically, Celent recommends segmenting prospects based on historic deposit behavior, with specifically tailored promotions and sales campaigns for low-volume and high-volume depositors. This segmentation would likely be more successful
than one based on business model or annual revenue.
Don’t forget existing mRDC users! While they may represent a small revenue opportunity, they resonate with Business Mobile Deposit attributes and show great interest in adopting. Don’t leave them out as you seek to grow incremental RDC utilization. You’ll be
rewarded with their greater satisfaction, and perhaps fewer trips to the branch.
Was this report useful to you? Please send any comments, questions, or suggestions for
upcoming research topics to info@celent.com.
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APPENDIX I: RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
The results presented in this report were based on responses from 397 small and medium sized businesses between June and July 2016. Respondents were recruited from among Deluxe Corporation’s 20,000+ SMB clients via email. Deluxe sells a variety of products and services to US small businesses beyond checks, including business
supplies and forms, retail packaging, and a variety of marketing services.
Prior to fielding the survey, Deluxe conducted telephone interviews among a sampling of customers to test and improve the survey instrument to ensure it was interpreted as intended. Qualified survey respondents were those that accept check payments. Of the 397 respondents, 383 accepted check payments and completed the balance of the
survey (96%).
Figure 42: Research Involved Both Qualitative and Quantitative Methods
Source: Celent
The survey sample purposefully overrepresented SMBs with annual revenues of $1 million and over in order to provide a statistically significant sample size among these
businesses (Figure 43).
Figure 43: The Survey Sample Overrepresented Larger SMBs on Purpose
Source: Celent survey of US SMBs, July 2016, n=397, US Census Bureau 2012 Survey of Small Businesses
37%
17% 18%
10%
18%
69%
12% 8% 7%
4%
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
<$250k $250k to $500k $500k to $1 m $1 m to $2 m $2 m+
Re
sp. (
%)
Respondent mix by annual revenue (survey sample vs. market)
Sample Market
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APPENDIX II: SURVEY INSTRUMENT
In the interest of transparency, Celent provides the full survey instrument in this appendix.
Thank you for participating in this research survey. The information you provide will be used to influence payment products for small businesses like yours. No individual responses or contact information will be shared. 1. How does your company conduct business?
o Online—web-based only o Brick and mortar location(s) only o Both online and brick and mortar location o All in-person service related—no office or online presence o Other (please describe) ____________________
2. What is your company’s approximate annual revenue? o Under $250,000 o $250,001 to $500,000 o $500,001 to $1 million o $1 million to $2 million o $2 million to $5 million o $5 million or more o I don’t know
3. About how many checks does your business receive on an average day?
o < 1 o 1-2 o 3-5 o 6-10 o 11-15 o 16-20 o 20+ o Our business does not accept checks (disqualify if selected)
4. What type of accounting software application do you use to manage your business
accounting? o QuickBooks o Peachtree o FreshBooks o Wave Accounting o Xero o Online banking website o Excel spreadsheet o Other, please specify ____________________ o None
5. Which of the following bank services do you use for your business? Select all that
apply. o Online banking o Online bill pay or e-billing o Mobile banking o Desktop deposit o Mobile deposit
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6. About how often do you speak with a banker about products or services that might benefit your business—whether you or the bank initiates the conversation? o Rarely, if ever o Annually o Bi-annually o Quarterly o Frequently, more than quarterly
7. If your bank had a new product or service that it felt would benefit your business, how
would you prefer to hear from them? o Email o Telephone call o Text message o Direct mail o Conversation at a branch o In-person visit o Other, please specify ____________________ o I'd rather not be bothered
8. How do you make business-related bank deposits? Indicate how and how often in each option below.
Never < 1 time a week
1 time a week
2 times a week
3 times a week
4 times a week
5 times a week
At a bank
branch
At an ATM
Using remote
deposit
Using an
armored courier
9. For branch or ATM deposits, what typically makes up your deposit?
o Mostly cash o A mix of cash and checks o Mostly checks o I do not make branch or ATM deposits
We’d like to ask you about this product that banks offer: Mobile Deposit is the capability to deposit a check with your smartphone. Most examples of Mobile Deposit are free to use and are designed for consumers that receive checks infrequently and do not apply cash to accounts receivable. 10. Based on what you know about Mobile Deposit, which of the following statements
about Mobile Deposit applies to you? Select all that apply. o This is the first I’ve heard of it o I would use Mobile Deposit if I ever received checks personally o I use Mobile Deposit for my personal account(s) o My company uses Mobile Deposit for business account(s)
Now, we’d like to ask you about another product that banks offer: Business Mobile Deposit offers capabilities specifically designed for small businesses, such as: ability to
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capture multiple checks in a single transaction (vs. one check per deposit); automatic updates to your accounting software when a deposit is made; opportunity to capture documentation, such as an invoice along with your check when making a deposit; on-demand research and reporting for deposits and payments made. 11. Based on what you know about Business Mobile Deposit, indicate your level of
agreement to the following statements concerning Business Mobile Deposit:
Completely Disagree
Somewhat Disagree
Neutral Somewhat Agree
Completely Agree
Desktop Deposit* appeals
more because of the
number of checks we
receive.
Business Mobile Deposit
is attractive because
there’s no scanner to buy
and hook up.
I would want Business
Mobile Deposit to be part
of my bank’s mobile app.
Business Mobile Deposit
is attractive because we
accept checks in the field.
Business Mobile Deposit
appeals more than
Desktop Deposit.
*Desktop deposit is using a desktop scanner or all-in-one to deposit your check rather than your mobile phone.
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12. How important would the following be to your decision to use Business Mobile Deposit?
Not at all important
Slightly unimportant
Slightly important
Moderately important
Very important
Ability to automatically
update to accounting
software when a
deposit is made
Ability to capture
multiple checks in a
single transaction vs.
one check per deposit
Ability to capture
documentation such as
invoice along with check
when making a deposit
Offer optional
separation of duties;
one person captures
checks/invoices and
another reviews and
submits deposit to bank
Ability to have multiple
people scan checks for
deposits without having
access to other online
or mobile bank
functions
Option to use a desktop
scanner, smartphone,
or both
On-demand research
and reporting for
deposits and payments
made
13. Based what you know thus far, what would you expect to pay for Business Mobile Deposit? o I would expect it to be offered at no cost
o I would expect a minimal monthly fee
o I would expect a minimal fee for each deposit
o Other, please specify ____________________
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14. What is your level of interest in Business Mobile Deposit for your business if it was offered at these levels?
Not at all
interested Slightly
interested Moderately interested
Very interested
Extremely interested
No charge
$5 monthly fee
$10 monthly fee
$0.50 per deposit
$1.00 per deposit
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LEVERAGING CELENT’S EXPERTISE
If you found this report valuable, you might consider engaging with Celent for custom analysis and research. Our collective experience and the knowledge we gained while working on this report can help you streamline the creation, refinement, or execution of
your strategies.
SUPPORT FOR FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS Typical projects we support related to remote deposit capture include:
Vendor short listing and selection. We perform discovery specific to you and your
business to better understand your unique needs. We then create and administer a custom RFI to selected vendors to assist you in making rapid and accurate vendor
choices.
Business practice evaluations. We spend time evaluating your business processes.
Based on our knowledge of the market, we identify potential process or technology
constraints and provide clear insights that will help you implement industry best practices.
IT and business strategy creation. We collect perspectives from your executive team,
your front line business and IT staff, and your customers. We then analyze your current position, institutional capabilities, and technology against your goals. If necessary, we help you reformulate your technology and business plans to address short-term and long-
term needs.
SUPPORT FOR VENDORS We provide services that help you refine your product and service offerings.
Examples include:
Product and service strategy evaluation. We help you assess your market position in
terms of functionality, technology, and services. Our strategy workshops will help you
target the right customers and map your offerings to their needs.
Market messaging and collateral review. Based on our extensive experience with your
potential clients, we assess your marketing and sales materials—including your website
and any collateral.
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