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Parting the dark clouds that have surrounded the British banking sector since the beginning of this recession is not an easy thing for those trying to market them.
Cutting through the mistrust that surrounds them requires personal relationships with customers something that many of the bigger banks had lost interest in.
Not an easy job but one that UK internet and telephone bank First Direct is trying to tackle head-on. The bank a subsidiary of HSBC has no branches yet consistently proves a consumer favourite.

Harnessing the excellent word of mouth reputation that the brand enjoys First Direct has decided to let the world know what its customers think of it – be that good or bad. The bank’s new microsite offers a level of transparency that has never been seen before in the industry. Scraping social media feeds blogs and forums (much like Squidoo’s heavily criticised Brands in Public site) for mentions and allowing customers to comment on the site.
Natalie Cowen marketing communications manager for First Direct explained it thus:-
“The new microsite is a very open and transparent way of projecting the voice of our customers.”
“Pssst- this is any company’s best marketing collateral”
Word of mouth is one of the most powerful and well-trusted marketing tools out there but amplifying its effect outside of your community of customers and their friends family and colleagues has always been difficult.
That is until now. First Direct has not only recognised that customer testimonials are their strongest marketing resource but also that they could do something completely different to other banks by letting good comments sit alongside bad comments and compete for share of voice using crude real-time social media graphs and keyword clouds.
The really clever bit is that the bank has then taken a mixed selection of comments and is using them as part of a wider print digital out of home and online campaign. Not only are these comments amplified online but also offline in the wider media.
First Direct has tried this approach before through a series of TV ads that featured customers talking about their affection for the brand.

They didn’t have the same resonance because they lacked authenticity
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