Chapter 1 Profile of Sbi and Its Customer Satisfaction

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CHAPTER 1

PROFILE OF SBI AND ITS


CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

Contents
1.1

History

1.2

Current Scenario

1.3

Products and Services

1.4

Structure & Organization

1.5

SBI Mobile Banking

CHAPTER 5

PROFILE OF SBI AND ITS


CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

1.1 HISTORY
The evolution of State Bank of India can be traced back to the first decade
of the 19th century. It began with the establishment of the Bank of Calcutta in
Calcutta, on 2 June 1806. The bank was redesigned as the Bank of Bengal, three
years later, on 2 January 1809. It was the first ever joint-stock bank of the British
India, established under the sponsorship of the Government of Bengal.
Subsequently, the Bank of Bombay (established on 15 April 1840) and the Bank
of Madras (established on 1 July 1843) followed the Bank of Bengal. These three
banks dominated the modern banking scenario in India, until when they were
amalgamated to form the Imperial Bank of India, on 27 January1921.
An important turning point in the history of State Bank of India is the
launch of the first Five Year Plan of independent India, in 1951. The Plan aimed at
serving the Indian economy in general and the rural sector of the country, in
particular. Until the Plan, the commercial banks of the country, including the
Imperial Bank of India, confined their services to the urban sector. Moreover, they
were not equipped to respond to the growing needs of the economic revival taking
shape in the rural areas of the country. Therefore, in order to serve the economy as
a whole and rural sector in particular, the All India Rural Credit Survey
Committee recommended the formation of a state-partnered and state-sponsored
bank.
The All India Rural Credit Survey Committee proposed the take over of the
Imperial Bank of India, and integrating with it, the former state-owned or state-

associate banks. Subsequently, an Act was passed in the Parliament of India in


May 1955. As a result, the State Bank of India (SBI) was established on 1 July
1955. This resulted in making the State Bank of India more powerful, because as
much as a quarter of the resources of the Indian banking system were controlled
directly by the State. Later on, the State Bank of India (Subsidiary Banks) Act was
passed in 1959. The Act enabled the State Bank of India to make the eight former
State-associated banks as its subsidiaries.
The State Bank of India emerged as a pacesetter, with its operations carried
out by the 480 offices comprising branches, sub offices and three Local Head
Offices, inherited from the Imperial Bank. Instead of serving as mere repositories
of the community's savings and lending to creditworthy parties, the State Bank of
India catered to the needs of the customers, by banking purposefully. The bank
served the heterogeneous financial needs of the planned economic development.

1.2 CURRENTSCENARIO
Branches
The corporate center of SBI is located in Mumbai. In order to cater to
different functions, there are several other establishments in and outside Mumbai,
apart from the corporate center. The bank boasts of having as many as 14 local
head offices and 57 Zonal Offices, located at major cities throughout India. It is
recorded that SBI has about 10000 branches, well networked to cater to its
customers throughout India.
ATM Services
SBI provides easy access to money to its customers through more than
8500 ATMs in India. The Bank also facilitates the free transaction of money at the
ATMs of State Bank Group, which includes the ATMs of State Bank of India as
well as the Associate Banks State Bank of Bikaner & Jaipur, State Bank of
Hyderabad, State Bank of Indore, etc. You may also transact money through SBI

Commercial and International Bank Ltd by using the State Bank ATM-cum-Debit
(Cash Plus) card.
Subsidiaries
The State Bank Group includes a network of eight banking subsidiaries and
several non-banking subsidiaries. Through the establishments, it offers various
services including merchant banking services, fund management, factoring
services, primary dealership in government securities, credit cards and insurance.
The eight banking subsidiaries are:
State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur (SBBJ)
State Bank of Hyderabad (SBH)
State Bank of India (SBI)
State Bank of Indore (SBIR)
State Bank of Mysore (SBM)
State Bank of Patiala (SBP)
State Bank of Saurashtra (SBS)
State Bank of Travancore (SBT)
1.3 PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
Personal Banking
SBI Term Deposits SBI Loan For Pensioners
SBI Recurring Deposits Loan Against Mortgage Of Property
SBI Housing Loan Loan Against Shares & Debentures
SBI Car Loan Rent Plus Scheme
SBI Educational Loan Medi-Plus Scheme
Other Services

Agriculture/Rural Banking
NRI Services

ATM Services
Demat Services
Corporate Banking
Internet Banking
Mobile Banking
International Banking
Safe Deposit Locker
RBIEFT
E-Pay
E-Rail
SBI Vishwa Yatra Foreign Travel Card
Broking Services
Gift Cheques
The State Bank of India provides a wide range of accounts which are easy to open
and use. The bank also allows online operation of the accounts. Any body who
desires to have SBI account can easily open an account. SBI accounts are now
available for all like senior citizens, employed people, students, in short for each
and every citizen of India.
Opening an SBI account requires following the below mentioned simple steps:
For Indian Residents:

If opening in person then collection of an application form and properly filling


the form is required.
If opening online downloading the form, filling the form and sending it back to
the bank authorities is required.
Identity proofs like photocopies of passport, pan

card, driving license, voter

ID card.
As residence proofs photocopies of the above mentioned documents.
Two photographs of the customer.

For Non Resident Indians:


The application form properly filled and signed by

the SBI official or the

consulate of the Indian embassy.


Photocopies of passport, visa and work permit of the country.
Details of other bank accounts if any.
Photographs of the person himself / herself.

SBI allows different types of bank account each with their respective features,
some are given below:
SBI savings account Safe deposits of savings, earning interest on the
deposits.
SBI salary account Managing the salary, quick and easy credit of the amount.
SBI NRI account Transactions and savings, transfer of currencies.
SBI business account Easy transfer of money, outstation usable cheque
facilities.
SBI internet banking Fast and easiest method of money transfer and
transaction.
SBI no frills account Zero balance account, low service charges.
SBI current account easy transfer of money among different branches,
availability of ATM cum debit card.
State Bank of India (SBI) is the largest bank in India.

1.4 STRUCTURE AND ORGANIZATION


The Banks Corporate Office is located at Mumbai. Its domestic
operational area is divided into 14 Circles, each with one Local Head Office and
a few Zonal and Regional Offices. The Bank is present not just in the major
metropolises of India but has wide reach in the villages of India. The Bank's top

management consists of the Chairman, group executives for National Banking


Group, Corporate Banking Group, International Banking Group and Associates
& Subsidiaries, and four staff functionaries in charge of finance, credit, human
resources & technology management and inspection & audit.
Three Strategic Business Units (SBUs) under the Corporate Banking
Group have been set up by SBI to pay attention to big corporate customers.
Distinguishing features of the SBUs are assimilation of operational planning
with operations within each SBU, an alert delivery system with suitable
specialist inputs and focused attention on profitability.
The staff and functionaries at various levels have been delegated higher
financial powers to ensure quicker decision making in credit areas and disposal
of a large number of credit proposals at operating units' level. A committee
approach has been adopted, both at the apex and circle levels, for sanction of
large advances and loans. Keeping this in mind Central Office Credit Committee
and Circle Credit Committees have been set up to ultimately ensure faster
delivery. Credit and systemic risk processes have thus accordingly been
restructured. Simplified and concise credit appraisal formats have been designed
to ensure improvement in the quality of credit decisions, better quality of assets
and reduction of Non Performing Assets or NPAs.
Transformation in SBI
The SBI has undergone major transformation in the recent years. The
bank has ventured into new areas of business like Pension Funds, General
Insurance, Custodial Services, Private Equity, Mobile Banking, Point Of Sale,
Merchant Acquisition, Advisory Services, and Structured Products etc. The bank
foresees tremendous growth potential in all these areas.

The bank has made forays into the rural banking with state of the art
technology. The bank has outlaid an ambitious plan to expand rural banking to
100,000 villages in the next few years.
The bank has ambitious plans to focus on the high end market to support
India's increasing mid/large Corporate with a wide range of products and
services. The bank is consolidating its global treasury operations and
diversifying into structured products and derivative instruments. At present SBI
provides the largest amount of infrastructure debt and the bank is the largest
provider of commercial borrowings in the country. SBI is a Fortune 500
company.
The Bank is in the process of expanding its base overseas. Currently it
has 82 offices abroad spread over 32 countries. The seven subsidiaries of SBI
are SBI Capital Markets, SBICAP Securities, SBI DFHI, SBI Factors, SBI Life
and SBI Cards.

1.5 SBI Mobile Banking


State Bank Freedom Your Mobile Your Bank
Away from home, bills can be paid or money sent to the loved ones or balance
enquiries done anytime 24x7!!! That is what State Bank Freedom offers convenience, simple, secure, anytime and anywhere banking.
Mobile Banking Service over Application/ Wireless Application
Protocol
(WAP)
The service is available on java-enabled mobile phones over SMS/ GPRS
where the user is required to download the application on to the mobile handset.
The service can also be availed via WAP on both java and non-java phones with
GPRS connection.
The following functionalities are available in the application-based service/ WAP:
Funds transfer (within and outside the bank using NEFT)

Enquiry services (Balance enquiry/ Mini statement)


cheque book request
Demat Enquiry Service( (Portfolio value,Request for DIS booklet, Value of
holdings, statement of charges, Transaction status etc.)
Bill Payment (Utility bills, credit cards, Insurance premium payments)
Donations, Subscriptions
M Commerce (Mobile Top Up, Top up of Tatasky, BigTV, SunDirect,
DishTV connections and receive recharge pins for DigitalTV/Videocon d2h,
Merchant payment, SBI life insurance premium)
Business Rules governing Mobile Banking Service over Application / WAP.
The Mobile Banking Service will be available to all the customers having
Current/ Savings Bank Account(Personal segment). The customers will have
to register for the services.
Daily transaction limits for fund transfer/ bill/ merchant payment is
Rs.50,000/- per customer with an overall calendar month limit of
Rs.2,50,000.00
The service will be carrier-agnostic i.e. all customers can avail the mobile
banking service with the Bank irrespective of the service provider for their
mobiles.
The service is free of charge. However, the cost of SMS / GPRS connectivity
will have to be borne by the customer.

Mobile Banking Service over USSD (Unstructured Supplementary Service


Data)
Mobile Banking Service is now available on non java mobiles without GPRS
connection also.

The service is currently available with Aircel, Idea, MTNL (Delhi) Vodafone
and Tata Docomo connections.
The service is session based and requires a response from the user within a
reasonable time.
The Daily Transaction limit is Rs1000/- per customer with an overall
calendar monthly limit of Rs5000/-.

The following functionalities are available in USSD based Service:


Funds transfer (within the bank)
Enquiry services (Balance enquiry/ Mini statement)
Mobile Top up
Download Mobile Banking Application
Guide to using Bluetooth / datacable
Registration Process
Terms & Conditions of Mobile Banking Services
User-Manual for MBS over Application
User-Manual for MBS over USSD.
FAQs on MBS over Application & WAP
FAQs on MBS over USSD.
State wise List of Billers
Use Mobile Banking to Pay for Goods Purchased over Internet

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