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BankAmeriDeals, BofA's New Online Discount Program To Begin Testing

Bank Of America

First Posted: 01/24/2012 2:36 pm Updated: 01/24/2012 7:15 pm


* Offering retailer discounts through online banking site

* Program to be tested first on BofA's own employees

* Service aimed at helping to keep and attract customers

By Rick Rothacker

Jan 24 (Reuters) - Bank of America Corp is wading into the fast-growing business of offering consumers targeted online discounts.

The second-largest U.S. bank on Wednesday will start testing a new service that will allow customers to rack up savings from retailers based on their previous spending patterns.

Customers will receive offers through the bank's online banking website. The discounts will be awarded in the form of cash payments once a month. Customers need not sign up for emailed coupons or check a separate web site, as bargain hunters do with offerings from Groupon Inc and others.

The new service, called BankAmeriDeals, comes as banks are looking for ways to build revenue lost to new regulations that curb debit card swipe fees. Bank of America faced a major consumer backlash last fall when it disclosed plans for a $5-per-month debit card fee. The plan was dropped.

With BankAmeriDeals, the bank will not receive payments from customers or merchants but hopes to deepen relationships with existing customers and attract new ones, said David Godsman, the bank's online and mobile solutions executive.

"This is an opportunity for us," he said.

The service is likely to draw more account activity and card use for the bank, said Beth Robertson, director of payments research at consulting firm Javelin Strategy & Research. Customers may favor the service because the rewards are tied to stores where they already shop, instead of products "they might be interested in," she said.

Bank of America will begin testing the service this week with its own employees in North Carolina, South Carolina and Nevada. It will roll out the program to the rest of its workforce in February.

No timeframe has been determined for when the program will be available to other customers, Godsman said.

To provide the service, Bank of America is working with a company called Cardlytics. Other banks offer similar services, but Bank of America said it is the biggest to enter the fray.

As part of the service, the bank will not share customer data with third parties, including retailers, Godsman said. The service will highlight the bank's ability to track consumer spending, he acknowledged, but he said the bank hopes the relevance of the deals outweighs any customer concerns.

Here's how the service works: When customers log in to Bank of America's online banking site, they will see discount offers -- a percentage off the amount spent at a retailer -- embedded in their statement and under a separate tab. They can accept the offers they want to use.

When customers make their purchases, they pay full price, but at the beginning of the next month they receive cash back in their accounts. Customers can only use Bank of America debit or credit cards to trigger the savings.

The bank may end up holding money for a period of time in the settlement process, but making money off that float time is not part of the program's "core strategy," Godsman said.

Customers can choose to receive alerts about offers and how much money they have saved. They also can opt out of the service.

BankAmeriDeals differs from coupon services offered by other companies because the discounts are based on past spending habits at specific stores and do not require customers to print out coupons, Godsman said.

The bank is not disclosing participating retailers but said they include large discount department stores, fast food chains and local restaurants. (Reporting By Rick Rothacker; editing by John Wallace)

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* Offering retailer discounts through online banking site * Program to be tested first on BofA's own employees * Service aimed at helping to keep and attract customers ...
* Offering retailer discounts through online banking site * Program to be tested first on BofA's own employees * Service aimed at helping to keep and attract customers ...
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02:16 PM on 01/28/2012
Not again...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Madagain
antirepublicanism
05:10 AM on 01/26/2012
But I thought BofA said it didn't need those customers leaving in droves. I thought they were not making any profit from those little guys. Hey, Bof A, stuff it! I hope you loose millions for trying to stick it to your customers. By the way once they get a feel of a credit union, the likes of BofA will never see them again. Couldn't happen to a better set of greedy banksters.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rodger leMonde
I call them as I see them.
10:30 PM on 01/25/2012
This has to be an Onion article, right? I mean "Godsman" promoting discounts from BoA, that has to be a comedy writer. When you sign up does Allen Funt's ghost pop up and announce you're on Candid Camera.
Have they dropped the program of hanging out at the curb with a mattress on their backs..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ILoveGreatDanes
When the going gets tough, the tough take a nap.
06:48 AM on 01/25/2012
That sounds like a great way to screw the customer. First off, the customer can get spammed by all sorts of companies who want to sell them everything under the sun. Then, the customer gets inundated with ads, so it's Facebook for banks, then, B of A has an extremely complicated system in which customers have to track that their cash back payments they supposedly receive from the Bank (who is getting paid by the merchant; this is, of course, not philanthropic), are the right amount, plus these cash payments are subject to some indefinite hold. Yuck. I'm glad I have Chase.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
05:53 AM on 01/25/2012
Give a man a gun, and he can rob a bank

Give a man a bank, and he can rob the world
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henriette and hube
love just is; golden in it's simplicity
11:17 PM on 01/24/2012
I'm so glad I changed to a smaller bank a few years ago and everyone I know has done the same thing.
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LeFlaneur
does nuance.
11:13 PM on 01/24/2012
True story. Had a car loan through B of A. Set up an automatic payment online: same amount, same date every month. After two years of problem-free payments I suddenly started noticing that I was being charged late fees. Apparently the bank had arbitrarily decided to change my due date to a date before my automatic payment, and then charge me a penalty for it.
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loki
Better to die fighting, than live on knees
05:53 AM on 01/25/2012
Citi mortgage does the same tricks. They are all criminals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ILoveGreatDanes
When the going gets tough, the tough take a nap.
06:43 AM on 01/25/2012
That is one of the many reasons I never, ever, ever, ever do autopay, particularly if your bill isn't the same each month. The company has complete control over your bank account.
09:02 PM on 01/24/2012
Sorry Bank of America, I learned about you the hard way, over 15 years ago. Do not give this bank your money, do not use their credit cards, and do not buy their sales pitch. They will move your due dates without telling you, they will not credit your payments in a timely manner, they will charge you overdraft fees when you pay on time, they will robocall you incessantly saying your payment is late when it is not, they will not answer the phone when you call, and when you finally do get through to them, they will start the same crap again in a month or two. With today's atm networks, local banks, and especially credit unions, you are much better off.
07:35 PM on 01/24/2012
There goes more small banks...
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jflorish
07:21 PM on 01/24/2012
I do like this idea, this seems like a good thing for the consumer too.
lofttypeofaview
Glad I don't have Republican Stockholm Syndrome!
05:31 AM on 01/25/2012
Never ever use a banks rewards program because if you receive a reward for an item that your purchased but then returned, they take your reward from you and if you forget and don't have enough money in your account to cover the withdrawal, then you will be charged and overdraft. I use Ebates instead. It isn't attached to an account. They send a check about every three months and they only place a hold on rewards until the time period expires for your to return an item. That way you never have to pay back any rewards that you have that you shouldn't still have. They also will give you a $10.00 dollar Barnes and Noble, Home Depot, Target online gift card that you will recieve in your email or have $5.00 applied to your Ebates account to new customers after you make the required purchase using their system.