MarketingPsyche

Marketing Psyche

Product Tier Down: AutoPay for the Kiwi Yes Bank Credit Card

I am someone who genuinely appreciates good product design. A clean, intuitive user experience makes me happy. That is one of the reasons I continue using the Kiwi Yes Bank Credit Card. The product delivers real value through cashback on UPI transactions, which makes it one of the most rewarding ways to pay in India today.

Product Marketing Use Case

But there is one part of the experience that feels surprisingly frustrating: paying the credit card bill. And it made me realize something important.

A great rewards program can attract users, but a poor experience at a critical touchpoint can slowly push them away.

The Problem

Every month, when it’s time to pay my Kiwi credit card bill, the experience feels far more complicated than it should.

Instead of a seamless payment journey, users are required to manually go through multiple steps:

  • Enter credit card details again
  • Enter payment amount
  • Switch between banking and payment apps
  • Repeat the same process every billing cycle

None of these steps are individually difficult.

The problem is the cumulative friction.

The user has already chosen Kiwi. They have already linked their accounts. They have already built a spending habit around the card.

Yet every month, they are forced to repeat actions the system should already remember.

Why This Matters

Most product teams focus heavily on acquisition, engagement, marketing and sales-led growth. The reason why product led growth models always wins, is essentially also because they try to create experiences that are seamless and smooth. But retention is often won or lost during repetitive experiences.

Monthly bill payment is one of those moments.Every additional step increases the likelihood of:

  • Payment delays
  • Missed due dates
  • User frustration
  • Reduced product affinity

Ironically, the users most affected are often the loyal ones who use the card consistently.

The experience creates a subtle feeling of resistance every month.

And over time, resistance compounds.

The Feature Opportunity: AutoPay Integration

A simple AutoPay feature could eliminate most of this friction.

The concept is straightforward:

  1. User links a preferred bank account once.
  2. User authorizes recurring bill payments.
  3. On the due date, Kiwi automatically deducts either:
    • Total outstanding amount
    • Minimum due amount
    • User-defined fixed amount

The user receives notifications before and after payment execution.

  • No repeated card entry.
  • No app switching.
  • No manual payment process every month.

User Benefits

Reduced Cognitive Load : Users don’t need to remember due dates or payment processes.

Faster Payment Experience : A setup completed once replaces a monthly recurring task.

Lower Risk of Missed Payments : Automatic deduction reduces the chances of late fees and credit score impact.

Improved Trust : When a financial product handles routine tasks reliably, users develop stronger confidence in the platform.

 

Business Benefits for Kiwi

The value extends beyond user convenience.

An AutoPay feature could help Kiwi:

  • Increase customer retention
  • Reduce payment-related support queries
  • Improve bill payment completion rates
  • Strengthen customer loyalty
  • Create a more premium user experience

Most importantly, it removes friction from a moment that every active customer experiences.

The Bigger Product Lesson

The most important feature is not always the one that drives acquisition. Sometimes the highest-impact feature is the one that removes a recurring annoyanceKiwi has already built a compelling rewards proposition through UPI cashback. The next opportunity may not be adding another reward category or promotional campaign. It may simply be making the monthly bill payment experience disappear.

Because the best payment experience is the one users never have to think about.

#MarketingJournal

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