Showing posts with label customer Service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label customer Service. Show all posts

Friday, July 28, 2023

SBI The Old and The New

 I have the pride and honour of serving for 28 years, the State Bank of India, till February 1994 and as a pensioner for the last 29 years. I see vast difference in the way the Bank deals with its customers from then to now – both internal and external. It has one of the biggest balance sheets among its peers as on 31st March 2023 and with very low NPAs. There is speed of service for those who help themselves. SBI celebrates 75 years of independence, Azadi ka Amritotsav with a unique gesture of giving a pension bonus for those who are above 75years according to the cadre at which they retired. We, the old-SBI-ites thus had a pleasant surprise in that it still could remember that generation despite the generational divide and technology disruption.

On the 8th June, 2023 we heard the news that its Chief Financial Officer, Attar resigned from the Bank. In fact, his appointment raised several eyebrows couple of years back, because he came from a consulting experience with Ernst & Young and banking experience with its rival ICICI Bank. Conflict of interest is not ruled out. This is a governance issue. 

For those who visit the Personal Banking branch, one stares at long ques. Technology of which we are all proud of, looks a harrowing experience for the staff. The staff, despite all good intentions feel helpless many a time because the system just does not respond.

The SBI I worked at was ‘the largest bank for the smallest man’. There were concept branches dedicated to Agricultural and SSI sectors. It’s primacy in these two areas and domain expertise whittled away with not many field level managers and staff having no time to visit the villages and enterprises. They do not have much time to discuss with them their problems. Most problems are left for the system to resolve.

The SBI today is SBI plus seven Associate Banks merged with it assimilating seven work cultures. Both are thus entirely different. I am reminded of a Chairman who said a few years ago: “We are a technology company. Banking also we do.” Very true. There are more retail loans, personal loans, vehicle loans, more housing and real estate, and corporate loans. Property and Collateral verifications take more time than client interactions. There is little time for the small segment, who need most the banking services. ‘Its old slogan:” the biggest bank for the smallest man” is consigned to history. Anything small, except where it is a regulatory responsibility, is not to their taste.

Now SBI does little of banking as all the staff and managers look to the machines for instructions. If the machine fails to respond, the employee or manager has no answer for the banking problem that the customer faces. If one wants to post a grievance on the system, there is a drop-down menu. If you can’t click one of them, in ‘others’ you have to post in just 100 letters. The CACHE appears and you copy it. It disappears directing you to re-input. There is also a cultural transformation.

If a pensioner wants to see the Chief General Manager, he has to seek appointment through a letter either by mail or email. Earlier, pensioner could telephone and seek his time and meet him. Both the SBIs are different on several counts.

Earlier, there used to be Customer Committees meeting on the 15th of every month. They have become things of the past for the last five years.  

I gave an auto-debit instruction for my Electricity Bills. For fifteen years, it worked well. During the last three months the compliance is whimsical. It pays one bill and the other bill of the second meter is not paid. I had to pay a penalty on that count Rs.150 in the next bill!! If I want to change the auto debit instruction, branch does not have a mechanism to do it nor does it appear in the Standing Instruction menu of my internet account. Branch Manager, after spending lot of time and contacting even the system administrator could not resolve it.

SBI Pensioners’ Monthly Bulletin, Hyderabad has a banner line calling the pensioners for securing their ID cards both for the family and self, if alone, through MYHRM portal. The portal is the most unresponsive portal. It rarely works for loading all the inputs needed. When the ‘forgotten password’ is clicked either on mobile application or on desktop, it does not respond.

In fact, all the data that is required is in the form of KYC with the pension paying branch. Pensioner’s details should be available with the HR department. Further, even the spouse’s data likewise is available with the KYC where the pensioner and spouse have joint account and nominee details of the spouse, where the latter is the nominee, on the other deposit accounts held with the Bank. With so much of advanced technology and the Bank mentioning that they have AI application also for a decade, where is the need in the first place, for this harassment of the pensioner on the MYHRM portal? Can’t the Bank pull the data from the branch account of the pensioner? Photo, Aadhar, PAN, residential proof are all available with the Bank Branch.

During the first year of YONO it was ‘you’ for the bank and ‘no’ for the customer. It took two years to make it work efficiently and by this time, the UPI system overtook its strides. I am reasonably tech-savvy but fail to catch up with the SBI HRM portal.

Still, going by the call for a joint ID card with my spouse, I loaded all the details. The outcome is a disaster. My date of pension is wrong: Instead of 28.02.1994, it mentions 31.08.1997. Where from the data is produced, no one knows. Regarding my spouse data that has been faithfully loaded to MYHRM after great difficulty nearly six months back, her details are left blank, when the card is issued. 

I had to give up the card telling the branch manager, that I can do without the pensioner ID with my spouse details incorporated, as we have other IDs.

The staff who should have closed their systems at the end of the day at maximum 5pm sit till even 7pm entering KYC of new accounts or responding to printed requests of service!! They curse the system they work with day-in and day-out, but in silence. This is more because they continue to focus more on the sale of third party products like Insurance, Mutual Funds, Pension Funds etc.

I am writing this note with the hope that the Bank would make better use of technology and help many of my ilk not facing such risk.  Instead of being complacent, the Bank should introspect and it is not correction that is required but total replacement of its technology to stand in competition with its peers HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank.

Pensioners’ Association left a helpful note that those who have difficulty in accessing the MyHRM portal can seek its help in the Association office.

Is this necessary? Doorstep service to the pensioners announced by the RBI is in circulars. Can’t the tech-savvy bank think of better way of helping its customers and pensioners?

There are many unsung heroes. It’s time to have pity on them and find systemic remedies. I wish the Bank would regain its pride of place in the industry.

*The views are personal.

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Pre-merger SBI on the verge of bankruptcy?


Customers of State Bank of India (SBI), especially in south India, are forced to ask whether SBI is headed for bankruptcy as they find 99% of the automatic teller machines (ATMs) shut down and all branches declining withdrawals from the depositors’ savings account beyond a limit. Bank branches are refusing to honour cheques drawn on them, either their own or on third party, in spite of sufficient balance in the account. To top it, the bank’s branches refuse to give written objection for returning the cheque across the counter.  

In February, SBI, in a regulatory filing had stated, “…the entire undertaking of State Bank of Bikaner & Jaipur (SBBJ), State Bank of Mysore (SBM), State Bank of Travancore (SBT), State Bank of Patiala (SBP) and State Bank of Hyderabad (SBH) shall stand transferred to and vested in the State Bank of India from 1 April 2017.”

What does the rule-book say? Is it because of systemic failure or management failure? Does the blame rest with the SBI, or with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) as well, as it has been a silent spectator for the last 15 days? Just last week, when Bandaru Dattatreya, the Union Minister for Labour, approached the RBI’s office at  Hyderabad, the central bank said that it has pumped in Rs1,170 crore worth of currency into the system, with half of it in the ATMs of banks and the rest to the bank branches.

Section 5 (c) of the Banking Regulation Act, 1949 defines a banking company as any company that transacts ‘banking business’ in India. 

The Act clarifies, in clause (b) of the same section, that the expression ‘banking’ found in the definition should mean accepting, for the purpose of lending or investment, of deposits of money from the public, repayable on demand or otherwise, and withdrawable by cheques, drafts, order or otherwise. To constitute the business of banking today, the banker must also undertake to pay cheques drawn upon himself (the banker) by his customers in favour of third parties up to the amount standing to their credit in their ‘current accounts’, and to collect cheques for his customers and credit the proceeds to their current accounts. Lending by itself does not constitute banking business, clarifies ML Tannan. 

A recall to all this became necessary, for the banks, even of the ilk of the SBI, seem to have forgotten the basics of banking. Yesterday I paid a carpenter for the work done at my house, by way of a ‘bearer’ cheque drawn on my savings bank account, Rs13,750, which was presented at the counter. The official at the counter and the accountant refused to pay the amount, saying that they can pay cash only up to Rs5,000 as they do not have enough cash. This is not a solitary instance. During the last fortnight, many customers faced this situation. Many members of the Resident Welfare Association, Kalyanapuri, Hyderabad, brought up this issue and demanded its resolution.

The payee asked for written objection, which the bank officials refused to provide. The cheque was otherwise in order in all respects – with proper date, proper signature, with no difference between words and figures and on top of all adequate balance in the account.  Negotiable Instrument Act requires that if a cheque or Bill of Exchange, is returned either on the counter or in clearing, an objection memo duly signed by the authorised official of the bank shall be provided with relevant reason.

In case a bank branch declines to honour the cheque in writing for want of cash in its vaults it would amount to the bank going bankrupt. In the case of SBI it is also the Agent of Reserve Bank of India and operates currency chest at number of branches. Whenever one branch falls short of the cash, the Bank is supposed to make arrangement for filling the vault with the required quantum depending on the needs of the branch. The transaction between the branches on such count can form internal cash management of the bank and only information to the RBI is adequate.

Contrary to this entire practice if the bank chooses to tell its customers that since there are not enough deposits coming into its vault and is therefore restricting payments to its customers withdrawals up to whatever limit it decides surely amounts to sheer mismanagement and frustrates the customers.

Since the bank is shutting off the ATMs and refusing to pay cash either in full or in part, the customers seem to have stopped depositing cash into their accounts and preferred to keep cash for the rainy day and meeting their essential cash requirements. This sets the vicious circle into play.

Whenever creditors’ demands are not met and assets do not support liabilities of a bank, that bank is said to be on the verge of bankruptcy. But by statute, the SBI cannot go into liquidation at its will.

Customers are losing faith in the banks with which they have been transacting for decades!! Bad banking and good economy can never co-exist. Let not SBI declare bankruptcy ahead of its merger.




Friday, November 27, 2015

SpiceJet becomes SourJet

A Travelogue

Jetting off to Tirupati ?
‘Air India’ – Not liking to be in the air
Feels homely on the land;
‘SpiceJet’ – ‘seating’ – sorry;
Mistakenly spelt – ‘cheating’;
‘Checking in’ – you are checked out;
Baggage – gaming in numbers;
‘Free meal’ – Damn it you paid for it;
‘Bag out first’ – Pay up first;
‘Enjoy extra leg space’; keep your legs short;
Long legs? Choose the first two rows;
Just it costs you only five hundred bucks!!
‘Smiles’ Miles apart for, they are spicy;
Crew, Arrogance is their virtue;
‘Convenience’ – a dream;
‘Comfort’ – whose is it any way?
Merry ride? Nay, a dreary ride;
SpiceJet  joining the Sourjet league!
Any way the stocks are fully subscribed.

 * SG 1042 27.11.2015 - Tirupati to Hyderabad 




Banks have no time for customer


What you get instead are hidden costs for supposedly myriad services, most of which don’t seem to exist.

One leading new generation private bank does not disburse cash other than through ATM/debit card withdrawals. Yet it charges Rs.1,000 annually for issue of the debit card, on top of keeping the minimum average balance of Rs.10,000 for a basic savings bank account for a customer.

Why choose such a bank? Because other banks, though with lower minimum balance requirements, are worse when it comes to customer service.

I credited a couple of cheques to my pension account with the SBI drawn on another local PSB branch on November 6. While one of the instruments for Rs.10,000 got credited on the same day, the other for Rs.70,000 was credited only six days later after relentless pursuit. A complaint email gets the standard response: “This is a system generated response. Your complaint takes 48 hours to respond. Please do not reply.”