Robots


By Emma Kinery/ Bloomberg Bank branches still have greeters, coffee and sometimes fresh-baked cookies. At HSBC, there’s also Pepper, the finance robot. About 4 feet tall, Pepper is shiny white with a lemon-shaped head, large eyes that light up blue, and a tablet attached to its chest.

Pepper might seem like HSBC Holdings Plc’s vision for a not-so-distant future without tellers, but that’s not so, according to Pablo Sanchez, the firm’s head of U.S. retail banking and wealth management. The robot’s job is to lure pedestrians into HSBC’s flagship on Manhattan’s Fifth Avenue, then pose for selfies, field basic questions and direct customers who need real help to the right human.

When Goldman Sachs Group Inc. launched its digital consumer bank, it conducted a survey on customer attitudes. It turns out people want to find answers without assistance -- until they can’t and immediately want help from a qualified banker. There’s high tolerance for self-service until it fails, and then there’s no tolerance. As banks across the country reassess branches, those findings keep getting validated.

It’s one reason why many bank tellers are getting raises this year. Conventional wisdom is that the job -- held by almost a half-million Americans -- is entering a sharp decline. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects banks will eliminate more than 40,000 positions in the decade through 2026. That would likely suppress teller wages, which hovered around a median $13.50 an hour last year.

Yet, in interviews and anecdotally, a more nuanced picture emerges. After banks received generous tax cuts in December, several of the nation’s largest -- including Wells Fargo & Co., PNC Financial Services Group Inc. and Fifth Third Bancorp -- said they’re raising their minimum wage to $15 an hour.

Branches and tellers aren’t going away entirely. Instead, as customers turn to mobile phones for routine financial services, tellers are being upgraded, taught to pitch loans, guide local entrepreneurs and offer technical support. The result is that at many lenders, a job widely seen as endangered by automation is starting to pay more.

“Years ago tellers just had to give you an account balance or find out if you wanted fives or tens,” said Christopher Maher, chief executive officer of OceanFirst Financial Corp., New Jersey’s fourth-largest lender. “Now they have to solve problems like my PayPal doesn’t work, or my Venmo doesn’t work, or why doesn’t Uber accept my card?’’

OceanFirst created a nine-week “certified digital banker’’ course, training staff on a variety of banking and payment platforms. The company said it aims to have 500 graduates by year-end. BBVA Compass Bancshares Inc. is helping tellers earn certifications and licenses to help customers with more complex financial decisions.

The strategy is to increase the number of universal tellers who can answer all questions. To reflect those skills, OceanFirst bumped its minimum wage to $15.

Sometimes there isn’t a need for an in-person teller. When a retirement home asked OceanFirst to open a mini-branch in its complex, the bank couldn’t justify the cost. Competitors were experimenting with video tellers, so it tried that.

Video teller machines look like ATMs -- but with the option of pushing a button and connecting to a human. One teller can support 10 machines, performing almost any service available at a normal branch. Every branch OceanFirst has built since then is equipped with the machines, allowing them to stay open longer.

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