Cherry to campaign for providers to ‘listen and change’

Published on

The cherryplc.co.uk forum has responded to user requests by creating a space where brokers and advisers can cite their frustrations and suggestions so that lenders and other providers can be informed and encouraged to listen and change.

Cherry’s forum now has a dedicated thread for advisers to suggest how providers – and specifically not just lenders – could help intermediaries more.

Donna Hopton, director at cherry, said: “It will be clear to anyone who has read the Cherry broker forum over the past two years that communication between brokers and providers needs improving. It’s important to stress that this extends beyond just lenders: it covers the whole gamut of providers including IFA product providers as well as networks, IT providers and many more.

“At Cherry we’re increasingly finding that advisers want us to channel their feedback through to providers as they seems hugely frustrated by what may possibly be viewed as collective deafness across the provider community to intermediary concerns.

“This new thread on Cherry is accessible only by ‘advisers’ so they need to rely on us to communicate their messages to lenders and providers. Advisers simply wish to help to guide providers towards a much better understanding of what works well and what needs fixing.

“Crucially, in addition to listening and acting upon feedback from this thread, it is essential that all industry providers start to make use of their own provider forum areas on Cherry. Many providers have already taken up this opportunity and are posting regularly in their own company dedicated forums, but many more need to come on board so that the industry and communicate both horizontally and vertically, thus speeding up the ongoing improvement process.

“Through Cherry, the entire mortgage and financial services arenas now have opportunities for engagement that have not existed in the past. We want everyone’s lives to be made easier and at the same time our aim is to achieve improvements in both consumer perception and actual satisfaction.”

An example of a point raised is that advisers would prefer lenders to refrain from notifying the client, by text, when a mortgage offer is issued, at the same time as they email the broker with the news. They explained: “The happy moment of telling a client that their offer has been issued is a nice positive and some lenders even steal that from us now. They do not tell clients when a case is declined so they also should not do instant notifications about offers.”

Further examples include issues relating to pointless queries by underwriters, use of the phone rather than writing, product withdrawal timeframes, honesty re timescales, use of pre-valuation services, and having common terms for criteria.

COMMENT ON MORTGAGE SOUP

We want to hear from you!
Leave a comment and get the conversation started.
You need to register to post, so please login or sign up below.

Latest articles

Ampla Finance adds three hires to support introducers

Ampla Finance has appointed three staff across marketing and growth roles as it looks...

FCA to review whether APRs help borrowers compare credit costs

The Financial Conduct Authority is seeking views on whether annual percentage rates remain the...

Beyond the walk: Mortgage leaders talk mental health

The Mortgage Industry Mental Health Charter (MIMHC) is hosting its third annual 144-mile Walk...

First-time buyer markets slow as rates bite in London

First-time buyer markets in London and the South East are showing the clearest signs...

Vernon partners with FintechOS on mortgage platform upgrade

Vernon Building Society has partnered with FintechOS to support investment in a unified mortgage...

Latest publication

Other news

Ampla Finance adds three hires to support introducers

Ampla Finance has appointed three staff across marketing and growth roles as it looks...

FCA to review whether APRs help borrowers compare credit costs

The Financial Conduct Authority is seeking views on whether annual percentage rates remain the...

Beyond the walk: Mortgage leaders talk mental health

The Mortgage Industry Mental Health Charter (MIMHC) is hosting its third annual 144-mile Walk...