A recent survey reveals that 30 percent of travelers have experienced identity theft while traveling or know someone who has.
A recent study conducted by the Ponemon Institute found that a data breach is among the top three occurrences that affect brand reputation, along with poor customer service and an environmental incident.
By: Maria Moynihan Crime prevention and awareness techniques are changing and data, analytics and use of technology is making a difference. While law enforcement departments continue to face issues related to data - ranging from working with outdated information, inability to share data across departments, and difficulty in collapsing data for analysis - a new trend is emerging where agencies are leveraging outside data sources and analytic expertise to better report on crimes, collapse information, predict patterns of behavior and ultimately locate criminals. One best practice being implemented by law enforcement agencies is to skip trace an individual much like a debt collector would. Techniques involve using historic address information and individual connections to better track to a person’s current location. See the full write up from CollectionsandCreditRisk.com to see how this works. Another great example of effective use of data in investigations can be seen in this video, where one Experian client, Intellaegis of El Dorado Hills, CA, recently worked with local law enforcement to follow the digital data footprints of a particular suspect, finding her in in just five minutes of searching. p> And, yet another representation of improved data gathering, handling and sharing of information for crime prevention and awareness can be found on a site I was just made aware of by one of my neighbors - www.crimemapping.com. Information is collapsed across departments for greater insight into the crimes that are happening within a neighborhood, offering a more comprehensive option for the general public to turn to on local area crime activity. Clearly, data, analytics and technology are making a positive impact to law enforcement processes and investigations. What is your public safety organization doing to evolve and better protect and serve the public?
The growing cost and number of data breaches has spurred more interest in cyber insurance. While companies often increase investments in technology and training programs to reduce the likelihood of a breach, a recent Ponemon Institute survey of risk-management professionals found that 31 percent of companies surveyed have cyber insurance and 39 percent plan to purchase cyber insurance in the future. Learn how to outline your response plan with our data breach response guide. Source: Managing Cyber Security as a Business Risk: Cyber Insurance in the Digital Age
By: Maria Moynihan Government organizations that handle debt collection have similar business challenges regardless of agency focus and mission. Let’s face it, debtors can be elusive. They are often hard to find and even more difficult to collect from when information and processes are lacking. To accelerate debt recovery, governments must focus on optimization--particularly, streamlining how resources get used in the debt collection process. While the perception may be that it’s difficult to implement change given limited budgets, staffing constraints or archaic systems, minimal investment in improved data, tools and technology can make a big difference. Governments most often express the below as their top concerns in debt collection: Difficulty in finding debtors to collect on late tax submissions, fines or fees. Prioritizing collection activities--outbound letters, phone calls, and added steps in decisioning. Difficulty in incorporating new tools or technology to reduce backlogs or accelerate current processes. By simply utilizing right party contact data and tools for improved decisioning, agencies can immediately expose areas of greater possible ROI over others. Credit and demographic data elements like address, income models, assets, and past payment behavior can all be brought together to create a holistic view of an individual or business at a point in time or over time. Collections tools for improved monitoring, segmentation and scoring could be incorporated into current systems to improve resource allotment. Staffing can then be better allocated to not only focus on which accounts to pursue by size, but by likelihood to make contact and payment. Find additional best practices to optimize debt recovery in this guide to Maximizing Revenue Potential in the Public Sector. Be sure to check out our other blog posts on debt collection.
A recent survey of government benefit agencies shows an increased need for fraud detection technology to prevent eligibility fraud. Only 26 percent of respondents currently use fraud detection technology, and 57 percent cite false income reporting as the leading cause of fraud. Insufficient resources and difficulty integrating multiple data sources were the greatest challenges in preventing eligibility fraud.
Contact information such as phone numbers and addresses are fundamental to being able to reach a debtor, but knowing when to reach out to the debtor is also a crucial factor impacting success or failure in getting payment. As referenced in the chart below, when a consumer enters the debtor life cycle, they often avoid talking with you about the debt because they do not have the ability to pay. When the debtor begins to recover financially, you want to be sure you are among the first to reach out to them so you can be the first to be paid. According to Don Taylor, President of Automated Collection Services, they have seen a lift of more than 12% of consumers with trigger hits entering repayment, and this on an aged portfolio that has already been actively worked by debt collection staff. Monitoring for a few key changes on the credit profiles of debtors provides the passive monitoring that is needed to tell you the optimal time to reach back to the consumer for payment. Experian compiled several recent collection studies and found that a debtor paying off an account that was previously past due provided a 710% increase in the average payment. Positive improvement on a consumers’ credit profile is one of those vital indicators that the consumer is beginning to recover financially and could have the will—and ability—to pay bad debts. The collection industry is not like the big warehouse stores—quantity and value do not always work hand in hand for the debt collection industry. Targeting the high value credit events that are proven to increase collection amounts is the key to value, and Experian has the expertise, analytics and data to help you collect in the most effective manner. Be sure to check out our other debt collection blog posts to learn how to recover debt more quickly and efficiently.
By: Maria Moynihan Reduced budgets, quickly evolving technologies, a weakened economy and resource constraints are clearly impacting the Public Sector, but it’s not all doom and gloom. Always with new challenges, come new opportunities. Government agencies must still effectively run programs, optimize processes and find growth in revenue streams. Below you will find the top 5 business challenges facing the Public Sector and municipal utilities today and ways to overcome them: 1. Difficulty finding debtors When asked to name the top challenge to their debt collection processes, governments most often indicate the difficulty in locating debtors whose whereabouts don’t in fact match information they have on hand. Skip tracing with right party contact data is key to finding people or businesses for collections and there are several cost effective ways to do this - either through industry leading tools or by tapping into available sources like voter registration information. 2. Difficulty in prioritizing debt collection efforts When resources are limited, it is critical to not only focus efforts by size, but by likelihood to make contact and access debtors with an ability to pay. Credit and demographic data elements like income, assets, past payment behavior, and age can all be brought together to better identify areas of greater ROI over others. 3. Lack of data available By simply incorporating third-party data and analytics into an established infrastructure, agencies can immediately gain improved insight for efficient decision making. Leverage on-hand data sources to improve understandings of individuals or businesses. 4. Difficulty of incorporating tools to improve debt recovery Governments too often attempt to reduce backlogs by simply trying to accelerate processes that are suboptimal to start with. This is both expensive and unlikely to produce the desired result. In the case of debt collection, success is driven by the tools and processes that allow for refined monitoring, segmentation and prioritization of accounts for improved decisioning. 5. Difficulty in determining to outsource or continue to internally collect While outsourcing to debt collection agencies is always an option, it may not be the most resourceful one, or in some cases, even necessary. Cost to value considerations per effort need to be made by agencies and often, the most effective strategy is to perform minimal efforts internally and to outsource older or skip accounts to third party agencies. What is your agency’s biggest business challenge? See what industry experts suggest as best practices for Public Sector collections or download Experian’s guide to Maximizing Revenue Potential in the Public Sector to learn more.
According to a recent Ponemon Institute study, 65 percent of study participants say their organization has had a data breach in the past two years involving consumer data outsourced to a third party. Most of these are preventable, as employee negligence accounts for 45 percent of data breaches and lost or stolen devices account for 40 percent.
All skip tracing data is the same, right? Not exactly. While there are many sources of consumer contact data available to debt collectors, the quality, freshness, depth and breadth can vary significantly. Just as importantly, what you ultimately do or don't do with the data depends on several factors such as: Whether or not the debt is worth your while to pursue How deep and fresh the data is What if no skip data is available, and, What happens if there is no new information available when you go to your skip-tracing vendor requesting new leads? So what's the best way for your company to locate debtors? What data sources are right for you? Check out my recent article in Collections and Credit Risk for some helpful advice, and be sure to check out our other debt collection industry blog posts for best practices, tips and tricks on ways to recover more debt, faster. What data sources do you find most beneficial to your business and why? Let us know by commenting below.
Six states are the top producers of turkeys: Minnesota at 46 million, North Carolina at 36 million, Arkansas at 29 million, Missouri at 17.5 million, Virginia at 17 million and Indiana at 16.5 million. This accounts for nearly two-thirds of turkeys produced in the United States as of September 2012. The average wholesale price for frozen whole turkey during fourth-quarter 2012 is projected to range from $1.10 to $1.14 per pound -- similar to the 2011 fourth-quarter average price of $1.11 per pound. The average retail price for whole frozen turkeys in September 2012 was $1.62, about 6 cents lower than the average retail price for whole frozen turkeys in September 2011. Source: National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), Agricultural Statistics Board and United States Department of Agriculture (USDA).
According to a recent Ponemon Institute study, 44 percent of consumers who were notified about a data breach believed the breached company was hiding something. When data breaches occur, it is extremely important to be there for customers and to address their concerns. When companies hide a data breach, impacted consumers begin to suspect the breach is actually much worse than the company claims, and trust in the organization begins to wane. Find out more by downloading the data breach case study of lessons learned from the field.
It comes as no surprise to anyone that cell phone usage continues to rise, while at the same time the usage of wire lines, or what used to be affectionately known as POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service), continues to decline. Some recent statistics, supplied by the CDC show that: 34% of all households are now wireless only 25 states have rates of primary wireless exceeding 50% Landline only households is now down to only 10.2% When you couple that with churn rates for cell phones that can exceed 40% a year, it becomes paramount to find a good source for cell numbers if you are trying to contact an existing customer or collect on an overdue bill. But where can debt collectors go to find reliable cell phone numbers? The cell phone providers won’t sell you a database, there is no such thing as 411 for cell phones, nor is it likely there will be one in the near future with the aforementioned 40%+ churn rates. Each cell phone service provider will continue to protect their customer base. There are a few large compilers of cell phone numbers; they mostly harvest these numbers from surveys and sources that capture the numbers as a part of an online service—think ringtones here! These numbers can be good, at least initially, if they came with an address which enables you to search for them. The challenge is that these numbers can grow stale relatively quickly. Companies that maintain recurring transactions with consumers have a better shot at having current cell numbers. Utilities and credit bureaus offer an opportunity to capture these self-reported numbers. At our company, over 40% of self-reported phones are cell phones. However, in most cases, you must have a defined purpose as governed by Gramm Leach Bliley (GLB) in order to access them. Of course, the defined purpose also goes hand in hand with the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), which restricts use of automatic dialers and prohibits unsolicited calls via a cell phone. Conclusion? If you are trying to find someone’s cell number for debt collection purposes, I recommend using a resource more likely to receive updates on the owner of a cell over that of compilers who are working with one time event data. In today’s world, obtaining an accurate good cell number is a challenge and will continue to be. What cell phone number resources have been most effective for you?
By: Kyle Aiman Let’s face it, debt collectors often get a bad rap. Sure, some of it is deserved, but the majority of the nation’s estimated 157,000 collectors strive to do their job in a way that will satisfy both their employer and the debtor. One way to improve collector/debtor interaction is for the collector to be trained in consumer credit and counseling. In a recent article published on Collectionsandcreditrisk.com, Trevor Carone, Vice President of Portfolio and Collection Solutions at Experian, explored the concept of using credit education to help debt collectors function more like advisors instead of accusers. If collectors gain a better understanding of consumer credit – how to read a credit report, how items may affect a credit score, how a credit score is compiled and what factors influence the score – perhaps they can offer suggestions for improvement. Will providing past-due consumers with a plan to help improve their credit increase payments? Read the article and let us know what you think!
By: Mike Horrocks It has been over a year that in Zuccotti Park the Occupy Wall Street crowd made their voices heard. At the anniversary point of that movement, there has been a lot of debate on if the protest has fizzled away or is still alive and planning its next step. Either way, it cannot be ignored that it did raise a voice in how consumers view their financial institutions and what actions they are willing to take i.e. “Bank Transfer Day”. In today’s market customer risk management must be balanced with retention strategies. For example, here at Experian we value the voice of our clients and prospects and I personally lead our win/loss analysis efforts. The feedback we get from our customers is priceless. In a recent American Banker article, some great examples were given on how tuning into the voice of the consumer can turn into new business and an expanded market footprint. Some consumers however will do their talking by looking at other financial institutions or by slowly (or maybe rapidly) using your institution’s services less and less. Technology Credit Union saw great results when they utilized retention triggers off of the credit data to get back out in front of their members with meaningful offers. Maximizing the impact of internal data and spotting the customer-focused trends that can help with retention is even a better approach, since that data is taken at the “account on-us” level and can help stop risks before the customer starts to walk out the door. Phillip Knight, the founder of Nike once said, “My job is to listen to ideas”. Your customers have some of the best ideas on how they can be retained and not lost to the competitors. So, think how you can listen to the voice and the actions of your customers better, before they leave and take a walk in the park.