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Retail banks face a loyalty crunch as card experience leaves customers underwhelmed

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Capgemini SE
Capgemini SE

Press contact:
Fahd Pasha
Tel.: + 1 647 860 3777
E-mail: Fahd.Pasha@capgemini.com

Retail banks face a loyalty crunch as card experience leaves
customers underwhelmed

  • Only 26% of customers are satisfied with their cards experience

  • Nearly one-in-two prospective customers abandon onboarding due to a poor experience

  • 86% of executives plan to prioritize omnichannel experiences over the next 12 months to improve customer experience and build loyalty



Paris, March 11, 2025 – The Capgemini Research Institute’s World Retail Banking Report 2025, published today, reveals a critical shortcoming in how retail banks appeal to the demands of digital-native, urban clients between the ages of 18-45. According to the report, while 73% of these credit card customers are motivated primarily by access to exclusive experiences, rewards and cashback offers, three-quarters (74%) are currently indifferent or outright dissatisfied with their card experience.

Cardholders seek personalized experiences, but banks struggle to differentiate
The banking landscape is undergoing significant disruption driven by the rise of contactless and remote payment options. Seamless and instant account-to-account (A2A) payments are at the forefront of this shift, with payment executives suggesting they could offset 15-25% of future card transaction volume growth1.

Today, cards are a full-fledged financial companion and often the only physical piece of the bank that consumers carry. In the report, most industry executives (88%) across the globe rank an expanding reward ecosystem as the most effective way of boosting customer engagement and essential for delighting customers.

However, the research shows that not all rewards programs are translating into satisfied and loyal customers. Only 26% of cardholders are currently satisfied with their cards, 50% are indifferent, and 24% are outright dissatisfied. These results indicate that customer loyalty to their bank is likely to be low, and 74% of card customers are therefore a flight risk, with retail banks struggling to differentiate, despite access to extensive and robust data sources.

Banks’ marketing teams cite intense competition from new-age banks and other card providers (83%), ineffective messaging and value propositions (72%), insufficient customer insights (66%) and a complicated application process (34%) as their biggest challenges.

At a time where convenience and personalization dictate customer expectations, our research highlights the fragile state of cardholder satisfaction. Appealing to experience-driven urban consumers requires a culture reset that prioritizes customer centricity at every stage of the card journey – from awareness to onboarding to rewards,” said Gareth Wilson, Global Banking Industry Leader at Capgemini. “Contact centers represent the front line of engagement, shaping brand perceptions, yet they remain the industry’s Achilles' heel. Banks have an opportunity to transform contact centers into intelligent engagement-focused hubs that “wow” customers.