FAIR CREDIT REPORTING ACT
FCRA Reauthorization - Why It Matters to All Direct Marketers
Introduction: Who Will Be Affected?
If your firm markets directly to consumers using a catalog, the telephone,
direct mail, the Internet, or any combination of these media, then your
firm will be impacted.
If your firm services any segment of the direct marketing industry -
whether as a printer, mail delivery service, list broker or list manager,
information aggregator - then your firm will be impacted.
1. FCRA Reauthorization - Just the Facts
What is the FCRA? The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) defines
consumer reporting agencies (known as credit bureaus), consumer reports
(also known as credit reports) and their permissible purposes. It also
establishes a federal regime for how certain types of financial information
may be shared by affiliated financial service providers, and -- in conjunction
with the Gramm Leach Bliley Act (GLBA) -- unaffiliated third parties.
This legal "ceiling" prevents states from enacting a patchwork of rules
transcending FCRA.
How Do Direct Marketers Use Consumer Reports? Consumer reports
- due to their accuracy and usefulness -- are applied across a broad range
of industries. They are used widely for purposes of authentication, verification,
employment screening, pre-screening, and risk management decisions for
credit and insurance.
Nonprofits & Charities -- While the FCRA prevents firms from using
consumer reports for target marketing, nonprofits and charitable organizations
that directly solicit contributions are heavy consumers of commercial
information about consumers derived from financial service providers.
An prospective donor's basic contact information, their relationship with
a financial service institution, and "transaction" and experience" data
are all used by information aggregators to create fundraising databases.
List Brokers - Firms in this industry serve a vital "brokerage"
role between credit bureaus and financial service providers. Specifically,
among other things, these firms sell lists to financial service institutions
for offers of credit or invitations to apply for credit. Often times,
revenue generated from the sales of pre-screen lists accounts for a significant
portion of a list broker's total annual earnings. Such prescreen lists
are then used in either direct mail or telemarketing campaigns, or some
combination of both. Should FCRA lapse, list brokers could lose a significant
source of revenue. In addition, direct marketers would also lose much
of their prescreen business.
The harms to consumers could be significant as well: a patchwork of egregious
state regulations would diminish the accuracy of pre-screen lists, and
the decreased predictive capabilities of such lists would increase the
number of mismatched offers to consumers. In turn, this would lead to
reduced consumer choice and greater consumer annoyance.
Utilities as Direct Marketers - Americans register more than 40
million changes of address each year with the U.S. Postal Service. With
each move, the new resident must establish a relationship with new utility
providers. Utility companies depend on information from consumer reporting
agencies to verify a new customer's identity, assess risk of non-payment
and to help establish appropriate security deposits or other service charges
to mitigate losses due to non-payment. Given a scenario where the pre-emption
provisions of FCRA lapse, and were access to such information about consumers
reduced, utilities would face increased costs, which in turn would be
passed on to consumers. Moreover, less risky consumers would be forced
to subsidize more risky consumers as utility companies faced greater obstacles
establishing the level of risk appropriate to a particular customer.
Financial Service Providers As Direct Marketers - The largest
consumers of United States Postal Service product are credit card companies.
Furthermore, according to an Information Policy Institute study, 5% of
the goods and services sold using outbound telemarketing are credit cards
or financial services product. The FCRA currently permits financial service
providers to use consumer reports in order to "prescreen" potential customers
for a financial service offering, as long as the solicitation includes
a "firm" offer of credit. Were the pre-emption provisions bearing on "prescreening"
permitted to lapse, financial service providers would have decreased ability
to accurately target solicitations. The increased costs of marketing new
offers of credit would be passed along to consumers; consumers would enjoy
diminished access to credit, and consumer annoyance would increase.
Retailers as Credit Issuers - Many large and medium-sized retailers
are creditors, as they extend lines of credit directly to consumers. As
a result, they stand to be impacted by modifications to the FCRA, in the
same manner as credit card companies, banks, mortgage issuers, and credit
unions. Similarly for those retailers that offer lines of credit through
third party credit lenders such as Household or GE Capital.
Retailers also stand to be affected by modifications to the FCRA, or
its expiration, in the context of affiliate data sharing. Many retailers
routinely share credit information to process credit charges, and share
transactional data among affiliated companies for purposes of joint-marketing
and the extension of promotional offers.
E-tailers Processing Credit Payments - Online retailers depend
on secure credit card verification and authentication systems in order
to process online payment. In the absence of uniform national standards
for credit reporting, e-tailers will find their ability to identify fraud
diminished and may face increased compliance costs processing payments.
Check cashing services - During 2001, nearly 50 billion checks
were written for a total of almost $50 trillion. Nearly 1.2 million bad
checks are written every day.4
Check cashing services depend on information from consumer reporting agencies
to help prevent fraud and to ensure the checks they cash don't bounce.
Automobile Dealers as Direct Marketers - Auto dealers play a vital
role in the automobile financing environment by making temporary loans
that are sold within a few days to financial institutions. Auto dealers
rely heavily on consumer reporting agencies to make risk decisions on
"instant loans," allowing Americans to purchase an automobile within hours.
Information Service Providers - Because of the nature of their
business, firms in this industry will be most directly impacted by potential
changes in the FCRA. Information service providers collect non-public
personal information (NPPI) on the customers of financial service providers
for use in their marketing databases. Direct marketers, in turn, rely
on these databases for accuracy - up to date name and address information
- and for their fraud prevention and authentication systems. These rich
and robust databases provide direct marketers with a high degree of confidence
that their lists are accurate, and ensure that their customers are receiving
their orders. Comprehensive marketing databases driven by NPPI from financial
service providers also enable direct marketers to better understand their
customers, and to optimally meet their needs by having a global view of
individual customers.
Information service providers need access to NPPI from financial service
providers now more than ever. With the continued growth of interactive
marketing, and the reliance of all direct marketers on their database
products, expiration of the FCRA coupled with the passing of restrictive
legislation in the states could severely impact the quality of data available
to information service providers.
2. Nightmare Scenarios for Direct Marketers
Despite the fact that nearly two-thirds of American consumers take advantage
of direct and interactive marketing opportunities each year - it is a
near certainty that state lawmakers will attempt to restrict information
flows from financial institutions if the FCRA's state preemption provisions
lapse, or if they are substantially modified. Here's how it could happen:
Scenario 1: Balkanization - FCRA expires, states pass a patchwork
of restrictions on third-party and affiliate data sharing. Database marketing
becomes more costly, CRM impeded.
Scenario 2: Horse-trading - Financial service providers, desperate
to preserve affiliate data sharing, agree to "sacrifice" third-party data
sharing in the form of a federal "opt-in" law.
Scenario 3: Slippery Slope - Congress modifies the FCRA to require
an "opt-in" for affiliate data sharing of financial information. States,
empowered by a weak GLBA, follow suit and pass opt-in requirements for
third-party data sharing (e.g. California). Direct marketing becomes the
target of endless legislative and regulatory "privacy" reforms.
3. Endnotes
1 Commercial information is comprised of data about
individual customers of financial service providers that is not contained
in a consumer report. This information is collected by information service
providers from financial institutions and is used in the creation of marketing
databases and other information services.
2 Turner, Michael A. "The Impact of Data Restrictions
On Consumer Distance Shopping," Conducted for The Privacy Leadership Initiative
and the Information Services Executive Council. March, 2001. Available
at http://www.bbbonline.org/UnderstandingPrivacy/library/whitepapers.asp
or www.infopolicy.org
3 Turner, Michael A. "The Impact of Data Restrictions
on Fundraising for Charitable Organizations and Nonprofits," Conducted
for The Privacy Leadership Initiative and the Information Services Executive
Council. November, 2001. Available at www.infopolicy.org.
4 Federal Reserve, cited in AP story, Nov. 15, 2001.
Source: The DMA - http://www.the-dma.org/government/fcra.shtml
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