Some building societies may be failing online trust signals, research reveals

Guidance based on Google’s EEAT guidelines and the FCA’s Consumer Duty aren’t being followed, especially by building societies, according to analysis by Balance.

Building societies were the worst performing sector in the financial industry, scoring less than half at 5.3 out of 12, primarily due to poor scores in the experience category.

Meanwhile, price comparison websites, which dominate the buying behaviour in some categories, seem to rack in the highest scores, with an average score of 9.4 thanks to their high performance in trust and authority.

The agency analysed 50 household-known websites across the main sectors of financial services and gave each website a score across the four areas of Google’s EEAT recommendations:

Out of 50 websites analysed, 49 failed to achieve top marks across all of the areas.

The one site with a perfect score belonged in the price comparison sector.

One bank received zero points. Both the highest and lowest scorers are household brands used by millions of British consumers each year.

Alex Murphy, co-founder and CMO at Balance, said: “While many marketers are looking how to make their businesses perform better in Google, and many compliance teams have a keen eye on Consumer Duty, no one else appears to be noticing the gaps between the two.

“In this lies a huge opportunity for financial services companies, but more importantly, to join the dots to a better experience for customers.

“The results we found were troubling, especially with Consumer Duty and an economic downturn meaning businesses are fighting to survive and correct financial choices are more important than ever for consumers.

“Financial services needs a new way of thinking in order to support their customers.”

Murphy added: “Consumer Duty asks financial services brands to improve their online communications.

“The finding that stood out to me the most is, while the FCA is asking brands to “increase trust in the sector” a huge 84% of the websites we audited are not ticking all the trust boxes, with over a third scoring very low or not even scoring at all.”

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