Retail Banking: Role within Bank Operations
(How Do Banks Organize Their Retail Banking? SBU vs Departmental vs Integrated)
Imagine 3 restaurants: One has a dedicated pizza chef (SBU), one has a general cook making everything (Departmental), and one is a small dhaba where the owner does everything (Integrated). Banks organize their retail banking the same way! This chapter reveals HOW.
Banky is Back — Confused by “Business Models” 🤯
Banky just learned that banks have different “models” for retail banking. He thought a model is someone who walks the ramp. 😂 His mentor is about to explain the 3 business models so simply that even a samosa-seller would get it!
Why Should You Read This Chapter?
Because understanding HOW your bank is organized changes how YOU work
Easy Exam Marks
2–3 questions guaranteed! What is SBU? Which approach do PSBs follow? Why did foreign banks exit? Direct questions, direct marks!
Know Your Bank
Is YOUR bank’s retail banking an SBU or department? This decides your targets, reporting structure, and career growth trajectory!
Strategic Thinking
Understanding business models makes you think like a manager, not just a clerk. This is how promotions happen!
How Will This Help You in Real Life?
A real scenario from the banking world
What Will You Learn in This Chapter?
The shortest trailer ever — 20 seconds!
Key Words Explained — Like Talking to a Friend
Every technical term made desi-simple
In the simplest words: Imagine a big family house. Instead of everyone sharing one kitchen, the family builds a separate kitchen just for making breakfast. It has its own chef, its own budget, its own targets. If breakfast doesn’t make money, they can shut down that kitchen without affecting the rest of the house.
That’s exactly what an SBU is! The bank creates a separate division just for retail banking. It has its own team, its own profit targets, its own strategies. It’s small enough to be flexible but large enough to control its own performance.
Who uses it? New generation private banks (HDFC, ICICI, Axis) set up SBUs from Day 1. Foreign banks also follow SBU. One of the top 5 PSBs (Mumbai-based) also follows this.
SBUs work on the Management by Objectives (MBO) process — clear targets, clear measurement. If the retail SBU doesn’t deliver, the bank can “knock down the module” (exit that segment).
In the simplest words: Instead of having a separate kitchen for breakfast (SBU), the family uses the SAME kitchen for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. The kitchen handles everything — but breakfast gets a specific timeslot and a specific helper.
In the Departmental Approach, the bank divides itself into functional departments — accounting, marketing, finance, loans, deposits, etc. Retail banking is just one function within this structure. It’s NOT a separate profit centre.
Who uses it? Public Sector Banks (PSBs) in India generally follow this approach. It means retail is NOT given the laser-focused attention that private banks give it. It’s one of many priorities, not THE priority.
Old generation private banks are even more conservative — retail banking is built as part of the overall business plan, not even a separate department. It’s like retail banking is “just another menu item.”
In the simplest words: A small dhaba where the owner cooks, serves, bills, and cleans — ALL BY HIMSELF. There are no separate departments. Everything is integrated.
Smaller banks and old-generation private banks sometimes follow this approach. They combine all business aspects and adopt a cohesive approach. The idea is: one unified business = less risk + more profitability through scale. No separate SBU, no separate department — just one business doing everything.
In the simplest words: A positioning platform is a bank’s answer to: “Who are we, and where do we want to stand among all banks?”
New private banks (HDFC, ICICI) have a very clear position: “We want to be in the TOP slot across ALL categories.” They use technology, aggressive strategies, and customer focus to achieve this.
Old private banks position themselves based on their size and scale — no wild ambitions, just steady growth.
Foreign banks are DIFFERENT! They DON’T use positioning. They use pure business objectives — profit targets, customer targets. If targets aren’t met, they EXIT. No emotions, no loyalty — pure numbers!
The textbook gives 3 iconic examples:
1. BNP Paribas (French bank) entered India’s retail space aggressively in the late 1990s with full-scale brand building. But they couldn’t generate enough business. Result? They exited. Just like that.
2. American Express Bank launched credit card products in India. After analyzing viability, they quit the credit card business.
3. Citibank — the biggest recent example — exited retail banking in India entirely as part of their global strategy. Their entire consumer business (including credit cards, retail loans, wealth management) was acquired by Axis Bank.
The Full Chapter — Explained So Simply Nobody Teaches Like This
The complete chapter in 3 simple stories
🎬 The Movie Plot: Three Banks, Three Strategies
Imagine 3 bank CEOs sitting in a boardroom deciding how to run their retail banking. Each picks a different strategy:
CEO #1 (New Private Bank — HDFC/ICICI style): “Let’s create a SEPARATE army just for retail banking! Give them their own generals, their own weapons, their own war room. If they win — great profits! If they lose — we shut down that army. No impact on the rest of the bank.”
➡️ This is the SBU Approach. The retail banking division is an autonomous profit centre. It lives and dies on its OWN performance. Every new private bank and foreign bank follows this.
CEO #2 (Public Sector Bank — SBI/PNB style): “Why create a separate army? Let’s just add a Retail Department to our existing structure — alongside the Deposit Department, Loan Department, IT Department, HR Department. Everyone works together under one roof.”
➡️ This is the Departmental Approach. Retail is ONE function among many. It doesn’t have independent decision-making power. PSBs follow this because their structure is large, bureaucratic, and built on functional hierarchy.
CEO #3 (Small Private Bank / Old Bank): “We’re too small for separate units or departments! Let’s just do EVERYTHING TOGETHER. One business, one team, one goal. Retail, corporate, treasury — all mixed into one unified business.”
➡️ This is the Integrated Approach. Small banks and old-generation private banks follow this. The upside? Less complexity, unified risk management. The downside? No specialized focus on retail.
🎯 The Positioning Game — Where Do You Want to Stand?
Once a bank chooses its model (SBU/Departmental/Integrated), the next question is: “Where do we want to be in the market?” This is the positioning platform.
New Private Banks: “We want to be NUMBER ONE. Top slot. Best across ALL categories.” They have the technology, the aggression, the talent to chase this dream. Even recent entrants set clear 2-3 year positioning targets.
Old Private Banks: “We know our size. Let’s position ourselves according to our scale.” No wild ambitions. Just steady, reliable banking. Like a neighbourhood uncle who doesn’t want to be Ambani — he just wants a peaceful, profitable life.
Foreign Banks: “We DON’T CARE about positioning! We care about PROFITS.” They set hard business targets. If targets are met — they stay and grow. If targets are NOT met — they EXIT. No second thoughts. BNP Paribas entered aggressively in the late 1990s, burned through brand-building budgets, didn’t get results… and LEFT. AmEx tried credit cards in India… and quit. Citibank — the biggest name in retail — sold their ENTIRE Indian retail business to Axis Bank.
📊 Comparison Table: SBU vs Departmental vs Integrated
| Feature | SBU Approach | Departmental Approach | Integrated Approach |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who follows? | New Pvt Banks + Foreign Banks | PSBs (mostly) | Small / Old Pvt Banks |
| Retail = ? | Independent Profit Centre | One department among many | Part of unified business |
| Focus Level | 🎯🎯🎯 Laser-focused | 🎯 Moderate | 🎯 Low / General |
| Flexibility | High — can exit segments | Low — bureaucratic | Medium — unified decisions |
| Analogy | 🍕 Food Court Counter | 🏥 Hospital Department | 🏪 Kirana Store |
| If retail fails? | Shut the unit. Move on. | Can’t shut easily. Restructure. | Affects entire business |
Exam Angle — Points That Will Come in Your Paper
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🎯 High-Priority Exam Facts
- 3 Business Models: (a) SBU Approach, (b) Departmental Approach, (c) Integrated Approach.
- SBU = autonomous divisions, profit centres focusing on product offering and market segment. Small enough for flexibility, large enough for control.
- SBU used by: New Gen Pvt Banks (from inception) + Foreign Banks + One Top-5 PSB (Mumbai-based).
- SBU follows MBO (Management by Objectives) process with provision to “knockdown the module” if targets aren’t met.
- Departmental Approach: Functional division — accounting, marketing, finance, etc. Retail is one function. PSBs mostly follow this.
- Integrated Approach: Combines all socio-economic aspects. Unified business = less risk + profitability through scale. Used by smaller / old banks.
- Positioning Platform: Banks structure retail models on positioning objectives — to be best/top 3 among peer group.
- Foreign banks DON’T follow positioning — they follow business objectives (profit/customer targets). They EXIT if not profitable.
- BNP Paribas: Entered Indian retail aggressively in late 1990s with brand building → Exited when not profitable.
- American Express Bank: Launched credit cards in India → Quit after viability assessment.
- Citibank: Exited retail banking in India (global strategy decision) → Acquired by Axis Bank.
- Business model choice depends on: Corporate strategy + Business objectives + Business mix + Future projections.
- Old Gen Private Banks: Conservative approach. Retail banking as part of overall business plan, not SBU or department.
📝 Past Exam / Practice Questions (Memory-Based)
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⚡ Chapter 2 Done! Everything in 7 Lines:
- 3 Models (SDI): SBU (separate profit centre) | Departmental (one function among many) | Integrated (all-in-one unified).
- SBU = New Pvt + Foreign + 1 Top PSB. Follows MBO. Can exit segments if not profitable (“knockdown the module”).
- Departmental = PSBs. Retail is one department alongside accounting, marketing, finance, etc. Not focused.
- Integrated = Small/Old Pvt Banks. Everything combined. Less risk through scale. Conservative approach.
- Positioning: New Pvt → “Be #1!” | Old Pvt → “As per our size” | Foreign → “No positioning, only profit targets. Exit if not met.”
- “BAC went BACK”: BNP Paribas (late 1990s exit), American Express (quit cards), Citibank (sold to Axis Bank).
- Model choice depends on: Corporate strategy + Business objectives + Business mix + Future projections = “All of the above!”
Banky says: “SDI card loaded! SBU = Food Court, Departmental = Hospital, Integrated = Kirana. BAC went BACK! Indians POSE, Foreigners PROFIT. This chapter is SHORT but SWEET — like my attention span!” 😂🏦
You now understand HOW banks organize their retail banking — the 3 models, who uses which, and why foreign banks exit when profits don’t come. Next stop: Chapter 3 — Applicability of Retail Banking Concepts & Distinction between Retail and Corporate Banking! 💪