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THE INTRODUCTION OF CREDIT
TRANSFERS |
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WHY NOT ALSO VISIT |
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Making life easier for everybody! The Spring of 1962 sees a new revolution – the creation of
a service jointly, by all
eleven clearing banks to make the job of paying money into accounts much
easier. Initially the new Credit
Transfer service will be of specific benefit to businesses with invoices to
pay, but is soon adapted and used to pay wages to employees, and also for
customers of one bank to pay money directly (“directly” here means three
working days but is nevertheless a huge leap forward!) into the accounts of
customers of another. At this time,
the eleven United Kingdom clearing banks are: Barclays Coutts & Co District Bank Glyn
Mills & Co Lloyds Bank Martins Bank Midland Bank National Bank National
Provincial Bank Westminster Bank and Williams Deacon's Bank. You can take a look at the history and 1960s syle of these banks in
our supplementary feature THE
1960s CLEARING BANKS. Publicity for the new service is a two-pronged attack, consisting of
leaflets and other generic advertising copy produced for customers by each individual bank. The two separate full
page newspaper advertisements are
designed to show how all eleven clearing banks consider Credit Transfers
should be taken seriously as a useful and very important new banking service. The first, with eye-catching cartoons is
aimed at personal customers, explaining that when paying several bills at
once by credit transfer, it is not necessary to have a bank account – it is
however cheaper, as a fee of sixpence per transfer is made in the absence of
an account! The second advertisement is aimed at business customers,
who arguably have the most to benefit from the new system - There is now available at every branch
of the eleven Clearing Banks an extension of a banking service that will help
every organisation which has invoices to send. It is called the Credit Transfer service and it greatly simplifies the handling of accounts. In operation, the Creditor Company sends with the bill, either as a detachable part of it or separately enclosed with it, a standard slip naming
the bank and branch at which the Company's account
is kept. The customer, if he has no bank account,
takes as many slips as he has, with cash to the
total amount involved, and hands the money
over the counter at any branch of any of the banks mentioned below.
If the customer has a bank account he can, of course, use a single cheque and conduct his business
by post. The advantages of the Credit Transfer service
are considerable, both for those who supply goods and services and those who
pay for them. The supplier is saved the trouble of dealing with a multitude
of individual payments, for they go straight to his bank, from whom
notification and the relevant slips will be received at regular intervals.
The buyer is also saved both time and trouble; whether he has one bill to pay
or twenty, a single payment at any bank pays them all. Full steam ahead… It is
1964, and the mighty PEGASUS COMPUTER is put to work on behalf one of Martins Bank’s largest
customers – The Cunard steam Ship Company Limited - to make the new credit
transfer payments. This is one of the
earliest uses of the Bank’s pioneering computer equipment – one payment is
recorded against the customer’s account, and individual credit transfers
adding up to the total payment are produced on the Friden Flexowriter
printers at LIVERPOOL
COMPUTER CENTRE to be sent into the new credit
clearing system. New stationery is soon produced both in Liverpool and London
to meet the needs of the new system and the customers who will use it... |
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A concerted campaign So determined are the eleven clearing banks to make the new
system of Credit Transfers work, readers of newspapers and magazines in every
part of the UK are bombarded with an advertising campaign showing the many
advantages to everyone from housewife to businessman and all stops
in-between… |
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Images – Martins
Bank Archive Collections M |
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