Why Banks Talk to Women Differently

July 9, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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When it comes to reaching women, personal finance companies are rethinking their pickup lines.

A new study from Allianz Life Insurance Co. finds that most women want to learn about retirement planning and investing, but many don't know where to begin. It also suggests that women get their most useful financial information from other people, as opposed to the Internet. Those findings are inspiring Allianz to emphasize educational efforts through human contact, such as small seminars that focus on real-life success stories, in order to reach women, who will control 60 percent of the wealth in the United States by 2010.

"[Women] are telling us that materials out there are difficult to understand and that they find them boring. Some even compared them to reading a foreign language," says Sherri DuMond, vice president of marketing solutions for Allianz. She says the company is developing materials that focus on retirement and investment planning that financial professionals will use in groups of around a dozen women.

Small groups also encourage women to ask questions they might hesitate to bring up in mixed crowds, says Arika Larson, owner of Women Be Wise, a financial planning company based in San Jose, Calif. Larson says she noticed women weren't asking questions in front of men, even their own husbands. When she started hosting seminars just for women, "hands started going up," she says.

All-women's groups also allow Larson herself to be more candid. Women often think of themselves as one step away from living on the street, while men tend not to relate to that fear, Larson explains. (One reason for that difference may be that women are, indeed, more likely to end up in poverty.) To help women understand how to navigate the financial world, Larson employs an arsenal of female-friendly metaphors. Updating your 401(k) every six months, for instance, is like putting your winter clothes away in the summer, she says, and making stable investment choices is like purchasing your first black and blue suit.

Larson is also developing materials that focus on life events, because that is when she says women are most likely to want to learn more about their financial options. "Women only think about money when it intersects the stories of their lives—when they're about to get married...have a baby...funding their kids' education, when they're about to go through a divorce, and then they're widowed," Larson says.

Larson says she's also found that women are particularly interested in "safety oriented" financial products such as life insurance and annuities, an observation confirmed by a second recent study, commissioned by Northwestern Mutual, which found that women value financial security more than men do. The study also reports that women who say they are taking control of their finances are more likely to be healthier and happier than those who don't.

If clothing metaphors and segregating seminars sound like a dumbing down of the discussion for women, they're actually an attempt to do the reverse. Previous studies have suggested that women feel that the personal finance industry often speaks condescendingly to them or ignores them altogether, a problem that companies like Allianz and Women Be Wise are trying to fix. One 2007 Oxygen survey found that two thirds of women think they are more financially savvy than they're given credit for, and 44 percent of respondents said financial professionals didn't give women enough respect. One in four said financial ads speak down to women.

To help women take the first steps toward financial empowerment, Northwestern Mutual and the health experts network LLuminari outline the "seven financial habits of healthy and happy people," which include establishing long- and short-term goals and taking steps to protect one's family from financial bad luck—messages that apply to both men and women equally.

Tags:
financial literacy,
gender bias,
personal finance

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Oh, that commenter was harsh. NO BODY thinks about financially planning unless & when their lives are touched by money: not having enough, finding a windfall, adding to their family, losing a loved one. I've been in retail financial services for 30 years... way before the Internet.

Of course women and men prefer to talk with someone about their financial goals. Money is emotional. Humans prefer the back & forth, give & take of conversation. No one reads anymore - just ask the newspapers. Putting educational information & planning tools on the web aren't utilized much. People need a trusted advisor who is devoted to their needs, not to meeting sales goals or earning commissions. That's why America has 8000 credit unions: to help people find their best fit in an organization that has no reason to sell them anything they do not need.

Use the Internet to find a credit union and financial planning assistance that fits your needs and comfort level. Go to www.CUNA.coop or www.ncua.gov.

Carolyn Warden

Certified Credit Union Executive and Business Consultant

Carolyn Warden, CCUE of IL 4:42PM July 21, 2008

What rock has Larsen been sleeping under for the last 50 years? I have seldom read a statement as condescending as "Women only think about money when it intersects the stories of their lives." If that is the assumption from which financial companies start from, no wonder their campaigns to women have been less than successful.

As a marketing strategist and writer, I would suggest that the banks and investment houses take an unbiased look at the printed and online materials they spew out ad nauseum. Almost without exception, these are stodgily written, clogged with jargon and illustrated with stereotyped photos right out of the clip-art archives (businesswoman with navy suit and briefcase striding through corporate halls; smiling gray-haired couple at Golden Pond; happy at-home mom in kitchen with toddlers).I don't have stats, but I strongly suspect that most men find this stuff equally yawn-producing.

If the financial companies want to attract women as customers, it would make sense for them to examine what women's lives are really about today, instead of assuming a straight line from school to job to marriage to retirement. And it would make even more sense for them to address real-life needs rather than old-world assumptions about women.

Barbara Bonn, New York, NY of NY 2:35PM July 21, 2008

I was widowed in April of 2007, but fortunately in nearly 35 years of marriage my husband gave me a wealth of financial information. Both of us were college graduates, and he had always been in business for himself (the College of Hard Knocks). Hubby trusted me and after two years of marriage put everything in my name. Some experts would call this choice unwise, but he kept educating me about financial matters all through our many years together. He had, by the way, marrried me with two small toddlers in tow. He told me that he knew that he had to take the whole package to get me.

His favorite expression: "Cash talks. Bullshiit walks, and my name is Cash!"

The other comment that I often remember: "Use your head instead of a hat rack! Translation: "You are a smart women. Use your brain, Girl!" Consequently, I now have a beautiful piece of property with a great view of Mt. Jefferson--plus my own PERS pension (I taught high school English for many years.) I would, however, rather have him beside me. He had a wicked sense of humor, and we discussed all manner of things.

Sue of OR 2:03PM July 21, 2008

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