The Financial Services Environment
The Financial Services Environment
The Financial Services Environment
Learning outcomes
Lecture structure
Environmental scanning
• Sound marketing
strategies result from understanding company
environment
• Achieved through environmental scanning.
o to scan in a systematic way the environment in
which they operate, such as PEST (Kotler et al.
2008) or STEP (Brassington and Pettitt 2006)
o which are acronyms covering similar elements:
political/regulatory, economic, social/cultural and
technological (see Figure 2.1).
• Financial services operate in a global marketplace
with transactions take place across continents all the
time, banks provide funds to each other to lend on and
large companies operate across the world and need the
financial infrastructure to support their activities.
• A systematic framework is needed that serves to
remind financial service companies of the world in
which they operate, encouraging them to look outside
their immediate environment, which might prompt a
more objective evaluation of their business situation.
Macro-environment
financial institution
Stakeholder environment
Stakeholder model
Financial institution
employees
management
competitors
suppliers
intermediaries
customers
strategic partners
shareholders
Stakeholders
• Competitors
• Brokers and intermediaries
• Suppliers
• Employees
• Management
• Strategic partners
• Customers
• Shareholders/members
Type of environment
Environmental variables
Examples
Macro-environment
political/regulatory
Financial service regulators, international agreements
economic
socio-cultural
technology
Stakeholder environment
competitors
brokers
Independent advisors
suppliers
IT suppliers, consultants
employees
managers
strategic partners
customers
new/existing
Summary