Social banker series

What every Board Member should know about Social Media  

Let’s face it: there is a lot of hype out there about social media. Some would have you believe that it will revolutionize the banking industry and virtually eliminate the branch network. Others purport that social media will bring about unacceptable levels of risk and, ultimately, spell the destruction of the industry itself.

There is actually a modicum of truth to each. Social media probably will revolutionize the banking industry, in particular the customer relationship. It will also bring about new levels of risk. The challenge facing boards at retail banks is how to balance the two so as to achieve competitive advantage.

Losing control but gaining a voice

Likely the biggest concern for most board members is that social media takes control of the conversation away from the banks and places it in the hands of the consumer. As a result, customer complaints are often amplified and – if improperly managed – could quickly snowball into a public relations nightmare. Many board members are also concerned about the potential risk of employees acting inappropriately or otherwise damaging the brand in a public forum.


The simple truth is that – like it or not – boards can no longer expect to control conversations about their brand in the public arena. And since conversations regarding poor service are happening on social networks anyway, participation may be the only way that boards can effectively influence them. Indeed, the risk of not participating may represent a much more significant danger to the bank’s reputation than the potential of an employee mistake or inappropriate comment.


Social media will revolutionize the banking industry, in particular the customer relationship. It will also bring about new levels of risk.

Measuring the value of fans

Another challenge facing board members relates to measurement. Social media can be a notoriously difficult strategy to quantify, particularly with regards to ROI, which creates a number of barriers for board members. Part of the problem relates to the metrics themselves. Most executives now understand the relationship between increased website traffic and higher sales, increased brand presence and reach. But when ROI is articulated in ‘followers’, ‘likes’ or ‘retweets’, most senior executives tend to become disenfranchised.


As a result, measuring social media strategy in terms of ROI is rather complex and time consuming. It requires organizations to first establish a base line, create a timeline of activity, and monitor existing sentiment and activity on a specific set of sites. From here, it should be possible to correlate this information against key business indicators (such as number of transactions and customers, market share increases, loyalty metrics, number of enquiries and so on) to arrive at a quantifiable metric that the board can understand and track.

Applying leadership

Social media is also a strategy that must be owned by the board. In part, this is because social media touches almost every division and function within a bank and requires strategic coordination across the enterprise. It is not unusual for a social media task force to include representatives from marketing, legal, risk, compliance, customer service, regulatory and corporate affairs; addressing the needs and objectives of each internal audience will require leadership at the highest level.


The adoption of social media also tends to involve a somewhat transformative culture change within the organization. For this, leadership from senior executives will be key, not only to ensure that the changes align to the future direction of the organization, but also to provide a visible champion to drive employee utilization and compliance.


The bottom line is that social media is already driving dramatic change in the way customers interact with their banks; those that recognize the change in the market and apply senior leadership to responding will ultimately succeed in the long-run. Those that don’t will find themselves falling further and further behind.


Now it is up to bank’s board members to take the lead in embracing social media and shepherding the organization into the new arena in a way that benefits both the bank and its customers.


By James Scott and Sharat Potukuchi, KPMG in Australia


James McKeogh James McKeogh (KPMG in China): Board leadership and ownership of the social media strategy is critical, not only for the reasons mentioned in the article, but also because social media represents a potentially massive risk for the organization. Boards cannot lose sight of their risk management responsibilities by ‘downloading’ accountability for social media to divisional heads or IT leaders.



Gareth Jones Gareth Jones (KPMG in the UK): Boards will also need to ensure that their crisis management systems reflect new media threats and how this type of communication will be managed in a crisis, both inbound and outbound. Pace is also a key consideration as the speed of new media often outpaces the ability of most banks to develop a response strategy. For boards, this will require significant work to develop internal agreements to plan, coordinate and share the understanding of the new medium.


Sanjaya Krishna Sanjaya Krishna (KPMG in the US): In addition, we have seen a marked increase in companies looking for help related to social media governance. Specific areas include governance over how they externally engage in social media and how their workforce uses social media within the walls of the organization. We are also seeing clients thinking more about enterprise collaboration tools and how the governance story relates to that.



Andrew Dickinson Andrew Dickinson (KPMG in Australia): Customers are deciding what communications channels they prefer and, as a result, we are seeing the old ways or ‘traditional’ forms of communication becoming less relevant to an increasing number of customers. With the mass adoption of social media, board members need to understand that while traditional channels of communication are becoming increasingly fragmented, social media is becoming an obvious channel to reach a larger audience.



Glenn Tjon Glenn Tjon (KPMG in Panama): As we are moving towards having more informed and empowered customers, bank executives will need to listen to their customers, learn from experts and lead this business transformation. A fundamental part of leading this transformation for boards is communicating consistently, effectively and frequently to its all stakeholders; employees, clients, shareholders, media & analysts and regulators.


The views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views and opinions of KPMG International or any KPMG member firm.

Share this

Share this

Follow us

follow us on Twitter

Tell us what you think

We value your opinions, and want your suggestions.

Sign up now

Subscribe to receive email alerts when new content is available for viewing on our banking site.


Already a member? Login


Not a member? Register