The news: Youth banking is a gateway to long-term customer relationships. But many financial institutions (FIs) miss out on properly building these relationships, per The Financial Brand.
What they should be doing instead: The article suggested a multipronged approach, including:
-
Redesigning the digital experience: Replace one-size-fits-all dashboards with age-appropriate visuals (icons, avatars, simplified layouts) and plain, relatable language (“allowance,” “my money”) that grows with the user.
-
Embedding financial education into banking tasks: Use short, interactive content (videos, animations) directly in workflows so kids learn while saving, spending, or borrowing. Remember: They’re likely multitasking while watching these videos.
-
Offering functionality that mirrors real life: Help kids learn with features like allowances; chores; goal-based savings; charitable giving; and safe, parent-controlled borrowing.
-
Evolving the journey over time: Dynamically adapt tools and content as kids age, turning youth banking into a guided path that cements loyalty and staves off fintech competitors. Why should customer-centric experiences be limited to adults?
Demonstrating an understanding of this demographic’s needs is also important when attempting to build a relationship with them. For example, offering appointments during non-school hours shows FIs understand Gen Alpha’s current commitments.
Why this matters: While it’s important to tailor marketing campaigns to young customers and their parents, the courting shouldn’t end with account openings. The longest-term customer—a Gen Alpha at the very beginning of their banking journey—will eventually make their own decisions about where to bank.
If they’ve enjoyed using an FI’s app and resources and feel like the FI understands them and their needs, they may stay put. Otherwise, their banking needs could be met by a combination of fintechs, as is the case with their slightly older counterparts.