Gaining Customer Trust
In a new era of digital identities, data breaches are growing and here to stay
- By Christina Luttrell
- Aug 01, 2019
Recent years have confirmed that data breaches are
here to stay. Breaches are growing both in intensity
and frequency. According to the Identity Theft Resource
Center, more than 5.9 million records have
been breached in 2019 and we aren’t even halfway
through the year.
The effects of these breaches are still unfolding as consumers
and businesses cope with an environment of cyber insecurity where
personal information from chronic breaches filtrates the dark web,
phishing attacks are common and fraud is a constant. From both a
business and consumer perspective, concerns about identity as well as
trust are heightened.
IDology’s Sixth Annual Fraud Report revealed that nine of 10
businesses believe recent large-scale data breaches have directly impacted
fraud in their industries over the last twelve months, resulting
in more synthetic identity fraud and customer friction, as well as an
increase in compliance and regulation requirements.
Consumers, as expected, are also worried about security, with 84
percent expressing they are highly to moderately concerned about
their personal information being at risk due to data breaches, according
to IDology’s Second Annual Consumer Digital Identity Study.
Some of the key trends we’re observing across industries, as well
as consumer segments, are:
Unprepared for the
Increase in Mobile Fraud
Mobile devices have become the preferred way for many consumers
to manage their lives and conduct business. With this shift to mobile
first, fraudsters are increasingly turning their focus to exploit the
channel’s vulnerabilities, evidenced by a 117 percent increase in mobile
fraud in 2018 compared to the previous year.1
In the last 12 months, consumers opened more new accounts on
mobile devices than on computers, according to IDology’s Second
Annual Consumer Digital Identity Study. As mobile preference as
well as fraud increase, it’s unsurprising that many companies feel
unprepared. In fact, 32 percent of companies stated they don’t feel
prepared to detect and prevent mobile fraud.
Companies that are embracing mobile to capture more business
will positively provide consumers the type of experiences they
require, but need to also respond to the ever-changing fraud trends
by securing those channels to deter fraud without hindering the
consumer experience.
Security is Crucial
Another key finding from the Second Annual
Consumer Digital Identity Study is that
consumer’s value security over speed during
account sign-up. Eighty-eight percent of
online consumers said they highly valued a
secure account opening process compared
to 57 percent who valued a quick process.
However, when asked how they felt about
additional verification and security checks
that slowed down an account sign-up or
high-risk transaction, 75 percent stated they
were “strongly” or “very” opposed to the
interruption.
As a result, businesses struggle to consolidate
two prevailing but conflicting mindsets:
keeping fraud out by making verification
harder and bringing in more customers by
making transactions seamless.
Who is Responsible?
IDology’s Second Annual Consumer Digital
Identity Study also found that the perception
of who is responsible for protecting consumer
data is also changing, and perhaps for the
better. Seventy-eight percent of consumers
strongly believe it is a company’s responsibility
to protect their personal information,
increasing from 67 percent last year, while
68 percent of consumers strongly believed
it is their responsibility, increasing from 59
percent last year. This translates to both
consumers and businesses having a deeper
sense of responsibility related to taking actions
to protect their own and their customers’
information. For example, Two-Factor
Authentication (2FA) is becoming more the
standard for high-risk transactions and account
openings: In the last 12 months, more
than half (53 percent) of consumers have
been required to provide further proof of
their identity when opening a new account
or using an existing online account.
A recent poll conducted by IBM/Harris
reported that 75 percent of U.S. consumers
won’t do business with companies they
don’t trust to protect their data. The IDology
Consumer study echoes this trend, with
more than two-thirds of consumers surveyed
(71 percent) reporting that knowing more advanced
identity verification methods were being
used would positively affect their decision
to do business with a financial institution.
This is a dramatic 27 percent increase over
last year, when only 56 percent of Americans
felt the same way, and shows that companies
need to prioritize protection efforts related to
customer data—not only for increased loyalty,
engagement and trust, but also to decrease
the risk and costs related to fraud.
A New Approach to
Identity Verification
Thinking about identity verification in a different
way, not just as a compliance check
but as a strategic differentiator, is key to preventing
fraud and friction. Businesses also
should consider:
Increasing trust and addressing consumer
concerns help drive new business. The importance
of trust has top-line implications,
particularly in financial services, as identity
verification becomes much more of a competitive
differentiator and moves from the
back office to the front lines.
To build trust, more secure data exchange
is needed. By verifying identities using a
multi-layered identity verification platform
that accesses and correlates different sources
of data—mobile, email and location attributes,
to name a few—companies can shift to
a more secure process, ensuring agile verification
and a frictionless experience while also
deterring fraud. Using dynamic, rather than
static, data and correlating layers of identity
attributes to create a holistic and accurate
picture of a person’s identity deliver a more
reliable predictor of risk and higher locate
rates when verifying an identity.
Friction and prevention don’t have to be
mutually exclusive. Instead of a balancing
act, think about verification on a per-customer
basis: What is the right amount of
friction for this specific person and when
is the right time to introduce it? A multilayered
identity verification solution that
examines an assortment of attributes and
can dynamically make decisions based on a
variety of parameters is the most effective
way to maintain strong security while also
ensuring customers only experience friction
when necessary. It also prepares organizations
for tomorrow’s consumer, economy
and fraud trends.
Take advantage of collaboration to decrease
fraud and risk. By accessing a collaborative
consortium fraud network across
multiple industries, supported by machine
learning and a team of fraud analysts, businesses
can gain timely alerts and actionable
insights to detect and deter fraud.
Keep a step ahead. Staying on top of trends,
advances in technology and the dynamic ways
that systems are being compromised by fraudsters
will again help to ensure trust.
These considerations along with a shift
in thinking about identity verification as a
strategic differentiator can help businesses
bolster consumer trust in a new era of digital
identities and prevent fraud and friction and
drive revenue.
This article originally appeared in the July/August 2019 issue of Security Today.