IUP Publications Online
Home About IUP Magazines Journals Books Archives
     
Recommend    |    Subscriber Services    |    Feedback    |     Subscribe Online
 
The IUP Journal of Bank Management
Customer Satisfaction with e-Banking: A Comparative Study of Public and Private Sector Banks
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Customer satisfaction is one of the major factors to measure the performance of banks. This paper presents the impact of e-services on customer satisfaction. A comparative study of customer satisfaction level in three major public sector banks (State Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtra and Bank of Baroda) and three major private sector banks (ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank and Federal Bank) is done, with special reference to the problems faced by customers using online services. The paper also examines the relationship between various online facilities, factors affecting the choice of Internet banking and its interplay with customer satisfaction.

 
 
 

The banking industry is expected to be a leading player in e-business. While the banks in the developed countries are working primarily via the Internet as non-branch banks, banks in the developing countries use the Internet as an information delivery tool to improve their relationship with customers. Banks have established an Internet presence with various objectives. Most of them are using the Internet as a new distribution channel with the help of Information and Communication Technology (ICT). In India, approximately 1% of high and middle-income group bank customers conducted banking on the Internet in 2000, compared to 5 to 6% in Singapore and South Korea.

Financial services, with the use of the Internet, may be offered in an equivalent quantity with lower costs to more potential customers. There may be contacts from each corner of the world at any time of the day or night. This means that banks can expand their markets without opening new branches. The banks in India are using the Web for three different purposes: to market information, to deliver banking products and services, and to improve customer relationship.

In 2001, an RBI survey revealed that more than 20 major banks were either offering e-banking services at various levels or planned to do so in the near future. This included some of the private banks like ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, IndusInd Bank, IDBI Bank, Citibank, Global Trust Bank, Bank of Punjab and UTI Bank. In the same year, out of an estimated 0.9 million Internet user base, approximately 17% were reported to be banking on the Internet. The above statistics reveal that India does have a high growth potential for e-banking. The banks have already started focusing on increasing and improving their e-banking services. As a part of this, the banks have begun to collaborate with various utility companies to enable the customers to perform various functions online (Boyes and Stone, 2003). According to Harris (2000), over 50% of the banks in the US were offering e-banking services.

 
 
 
Bank Management Journal, Customer Satisfaction, e-Banking, Public and Private Sector Banks, Information and Communication Technology (ICT), State Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtra, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, Federal Bank, Bank of Baroda.