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MARTINS BANK AT YOUR SERVICE –
BUSINESS BANKING |
It takes decades for many of the UK’s clearing
banks to package products specifically aimed at businesses, large and
small. Dedicated face to face staff
are first made available to PERSONAL
CUSTOMERS by
Barclays from the late 1970s, but it takes longer for a business or corporate
equivalent to emerge. In the case of banks who, like Martins and Barclays
operate a decentralised
service - with district or local head offices – the trends in local
business are picked up and dealt with according to local need.
Decentralisation is a source of pride for decades, as top down decisions are
by-passed by a team of people who know the local area and its business
needs. Until banking becomes more and
more streamlined, and the idea takes hold that wherever you are as a customer
you should be treated in the same
way as everyone else, there is no definable pattern of service or
products available to business customers.
We must look to Martins’ own business advertising for clues, where we
find that foreign trade is a pre-occupation for many years… |
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Images © 1939 Barclays (Left) and 1945 © Martins Bank Archive Collections (Above and below) |
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The Second World War is over, and Martins raises patriotic good cheer with these fabulous 1945
newspaper advertisements. Western Approaches shows the Mersey filled with
boats busy importing or exporting the goods that will make Britain great
again. Encouranging enterprise with these neat little adverts, Martins
reminds everyone that Britain might be in bits, but it is still very much
“open for business”. From here on,
the importance of exporting goods will never be far from the minds of
governments, businesses and the banking sector. Whether through adverts like these, initiatives
such as National Productivity year, or the “I’m Backing Britain” campaign of
the late 1960s, the need to trade with the World is always being pushed, and
pushed hard. “The World is your
Market” was another of Martins Bank’s indispensible guides for business that
was available to customers and non-customers for a number of years. See also AGRICULTURAL
BANKING. |
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The World is Your Market becomes an important annual publication |
The 1960s brings a new urgency to exporting with “National Productivity Year” (1963) |
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Images © Martins Bank Archive
Collections National Productivity Year and beyond… 1963 is an exciting year
for Martins Bank and its Staff. Not only does the Bank celebrate 400 years of
banking activity in Lombard Street, it opens a number of new branches, and
continues to demonstrate its commitment to the automation of Branch accounting. The British Economy is flagging a little
in 1963, and the Government conjures up “National Productivity Year”, an
initiative that sounds as if it would be more at home in Soviet Russia than
in a major Western capitalist economy.
We should remember that at this time there are many more nationalised
concerns than we have in the twenty-first century, electricity, gas, car
production, telephone services and rail travel are all “provided” by the
British Government. National Productivity Year is therefore something of a
novelty, as entrepreneurs big and small are encouraged to establish trade at
home and abroad and thereby boost Britain’s financial standing. Martins Bank seizes the opportunity to sell
its services to business, and this is nowhere more apparent than in its
newspaper advertising. The Bank never
quite shakes off the preferred image it has for someone setting up a business
– a MAN (of course) in a suit and tie (naturally), and sporting a bowler hat
(this was a time when most men wore hats in the street to define their social
status). Martins policy is not
intentionally misogynistic, and former Member of Parliament, the lateTeresa
Gorman (30/09/1931-28/08/2015) recalls in her autobiography that it was a
1966 Martins advertisement (below) depicting a man wearing a bowler hat and
climbing a ladder, that attracted her to the Bank, where she successfully
raised the funds she needed to set up her own business. 1965 onwards: Starting or building a business |
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Images © Martins Bank Archive
Collections |
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The introduction by the eleven
clearing Banks of the Credit Clearing system in 1962 paves the way for
smoother business transactions, and the ability to pay employees directly
into their own Bank Accounts. Martins Bank’s Advertising is based around the
success of its Information Department, whose perhaps unrivalled collective
knowledge produces literature that is of practical help to those already in
business and those who are just starting up.
The bank can also take pride in its decentralised structure, with
local head offices around the country able to make important decisions
without keeping the customer waiting. Image © Martins Bank Archive
Collections Image © Martins Bank Archive
Collections |
Image © Martins Bank Archive
Collections Image © Barclays Ref 0025-0658-0005 |
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As the swinging
sixties progress, EXPORTS are key both to
the success of business AND banking. The World Is Your Market, becomes another success
story for Martins Bank’s Information Department. It is an ambitious
publication, which sets out to provide every possible detail to help any
British Business owner understand the potential of overseas trade, and the
ease with which it can be conducted with Martins at your side. So profound is it all, that in the
advertisement above, the businessman seems perhaps to have removed his
glasses for a moment of deep reflection!!!
The front cover
of The World is Your Market even features in the pages of Martins Bank’s
Annual Report and Accounts for 1960, which shows the commitment the Bank has
made to helping businesses succeed at home and abroad. Backed by the
expertise of Martins Overseas Branches at Liverpool Manchester and London,
The World is Your Market continues to be a successful publication right up to
the merger with Barclays… So much for
small to medium business – Martins Bank also looks after the banking needs of
some VERY large business concerns, and we look in detail at this, and at how
it leads to the merger with Barclays in our CORPORATE
BANKING feature. We also examine Barclays’ own proposals for a
merger with Martins AND Lloyds Bank, and also at what might have been if
Martins Bank had survived into the twenty-first Century. M |
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