Another month, another update from the FCA Consumer Duty, and with each update we can build a more concrete idea of best practices.
The most recent update from the FCA focused on vulnerable customers to set out examples of good practices and areas for improvement. They found that most firms have been unable to effectively monitor and take action on outcomes for customers in vulnerable circumstances. The issues the FCA cite originate in a series of five data gaps, which you can use research to help close.
It's not all doom and gloom. The FCA have said there are a small number of firms that are effectively monitoring the outcomes of vulnerable customers. These firms’ best practices include offering flexibility in tailored consumer support, and incorporating vulnerable consumers’ experiences into product and service development processes. And from an implementation point of view there’s good news too: the FCA emphasises they don’t want to add more rules or change their guidance, just to help firms implement the current rules better.
Great work if you’re one of the small set that are effectively monitoring those outcomes, but for the rest, what does this guidance mean for your customer research?
One of the key challenges firms have in addressing the five data gaps is that research is not framed or reported in a way that guides the actions firms should take. Behavioural science offers some robust and practical tools to put insights into practice, changing the behaviour of your customers and even your employees to bring measurably better outcomes. This includes developing good defaults, providing well-structured information that is intuitively understandable, and building a choice process that reflects the ways a responsible decision-maker would make good financial choices.
According to FCA research a major factor for vulnerable customers in getting better outcomes is ‘the ability to tell their story’. The best way to help people do this is using a narrative approach with vulnerable customers.
This narrative approach involves creating an open space where customers feel safe, free and empowered to tell real stories of vulnerability. There are a range of research techniques that can create a space like this – for example moderators can tell stories about their own lives to show empathy and create permission for respondentsto share in return.
Other techniques firms can use to close those gaps are:
Understanding good outcomes and implementing best practice of vulnerable customers is a key pillar of the FCA Consumer Duty, so it’s no surprise that the regulatory body are focusing on this area from the outset of their ongoing review process. As long as firms continue to have difficulty in identifying and monitoring those outcomes we can expect pressure from the FCA on a regular basis. If you want to discuss the challenge and the best practice insight solutions in more detail, get in touch with Leigh Caldwell at leigh@irrationalagency.com for a chat.