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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.

By: Lloyd Parker There aren’t many things that energize me more than seeing our clients arrive for the Experian Vision 2013 Conference. Industry leaders from all over the world have joined us in Southern California to kick-off a full day of insightful topics. This year’s event sold out in record time and we have many first time attendees taking advantage of the opportunities to network and learn from industry peers. Today began with a welcome from Steve Wagner, President of Consumer Information Services followed by Victor Nichols, Chief Executive Officer, Experian North America and myself, Lloyd Parker, Group President Credit Services. We launched our key theme of Real Strategies, Real Growth, Real Opportunities, discussing the concept of “reality checks.” Reality check #1: Micro-targeting is required Identify market differences Understand your customer segments Adapt to specific needs of your empowered consumers Reality check #2: Managing risk Protect against risks that follow success Keep your door open for good business Focus on operational efficiencies Reality check #3: Optimizing engagement Utilize all the data of each customer Understand all of your customer touch points Manage customer strategies holistically A key theme of the day was the economic, regulatory and political changes impacting our economy and your customers. We had a conversation with Timothy F. Geithner, 75th U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, who shared his experiences as the principal architect of the President’s strategy to avert economic collapse and to reform the financial system. He also discussed international economic challenges and gave us his personal outlook on the economy. The afternoon featured many great speakers and industry experts across many topics that included hearing from many of our regulators on the topic of banking regulations; experts in the area of mobile payments and banking; along with many of our clients who shared their successful programs and experiences working across consumer and commercial portfolios and the customer lifecycle. Other highlights from the day Things overheard at the Roundtable Sessions: “You don’t need extensive touches for small loans, but let go of Excel,” Community bank topics “Loans are milk, deposits are steak,” Issues and opportunities within commercial risk management roles topic “Pent up demand will lead to overall positive auto market conditions near term,” Automotive hot topics “Keeping various systems in synch; Spend time early on implementation to define biz requirements,” Overcoming system operation challenges topic “Marketing to the underserved remains a challenge,” Issues and opportunities in consumer risk management roles topic “Using mobile to go paperless in commercial lending to improve convenience,” Mobile tools for business lending topic Top tweets: #vision2013 "Be relentlessly skeptical. Be humble about what you don't know." Former Secretary Timothy Geithner. — Martha Staten (@Sauconyandsuds) May 6, 2013 Experian CEO to Us bankers on current reg environment. "we have to get in compliance. We have to grow in compliance".#vision2013 — eric haller (@erichaller2) May 6, 2013 Great description of the current environment – "Economic Pinball" Victor Nichols #vision2013 #finserv — Patricia Hines (@PJHines) May 6, 2013 #vision2013.@experiancredit data lab is the "most unique initiative in the industry". The lab lets you #engage w/ untraditional data. — Mike Horrocks (@mikehorrocks) May 6, 2013 Only take risks you can understand, measure, and monitor. CRO round table. #vision2013 — alissa (@adh314) May 6, 2013 The phone is the new wallet. Apps are the new cards. #engage #vision2013 — Andrew Beddoes (@beddoesa712) May 6, 2013

A recent analysis by Experian Automotive found that, overall, consumers purchasing a hybrid have significantly higher credit scores than those purchasing another type of new vehicle. The average credit score for a loan on a new hybrid was 790, compared with the national average credit score of 755 for a loan on any new vehicle. Learn more on the profiles of hybrid owners. Source: Experian press release: Hybrid vehicle market share grew by 41 percent in 2012


