AUTOMATED
TELLER
MACHINES
G'day folks,
Welcome to some background on the ATM.
The automated teller machine, or ATM, is such a complicated
piece of technology that it does not have a single inventor. Instead, the ATMs
we use today are an amalgam of several different inventions. Some of these
proto-ATMs dispensed cash but did not accept deposits, for example, while
others accepted deposits but did not dispense cash. Today’s ATMs are
sophisticated computers that can do almost anything a human bank teller can,
and have ushered in a new era of self-service in banking.
The Early Days of Automated Banking
Many
experts believe that the first automated banking machine was the creation of an
American inventor and businessman named Luther Simjian. Simjian held patents on
all kinds of things–including an army flight simulator, a color x-ray machine,
a self-focusing camera, an exercise bicycle and a teleprompter–but he was best
known for his work on the Bankograph, a machine that could accept cash or check
deposits at any hour of the day or night.
In 1960, Simjian
managed to persuade a New York City bank to take a few of his
automatic-deposit machines. So that customers could trust that they would see
their money again, there was a microfilm camera inside the Bankograph that took
a snapshot of every deposit. Customers received a copy of the photo as their
receipt. Still, the Bankograph did not catch on. “The only people using the
machines were prostitutes and gamblers who didn’t want to deal with tellers
face to face,” Simjian explained, and there were not enough of them to make the
machines a worthwhile investment.
The Advent of the ATM
By the
end of the 1960s, however, times were changing, and a broader segment of the
population–more comfortable with the idea of self-service and more willing to
trust unfamiliar technologies–was willing to give automated banking a try.
In 1967,
a Scottish inventor named John Shepherd-Barron was sitting in the bathtub when
he had a flash of genius: If vending machines could dispense chocolate bars,
why couldn’t they dispense cash? Barclays, a London bank, loved the idea, and
Shepherd-Barron’s first ATM was installed in a branch on Enfield High Street
not long afterward. Unlike modern ATMs, Shepherd-Barron’s did not use plastic
cards. Instead, it used paper vouchers printed with radioactive ink so that the
machine could read them. The customer entered an identification code and took
her cash–a maximum of £10 at a time.
The first automated banking machine in the U.S. was devised
by a Dallas engineer and former professional baseball player named Donald
Wetzel. Wetzel’s machine used plastic cards like the ones we use today.
(Instead of radioactive ink, the cards stored account information in magnetic
strips.) In September 1969, a Chemical Bank branch on Long Island installed the
first of Wetzel’s machines.
The Spread of ATMs
By 1970,
dozens of U.S. banks had jumped on the ATM bandwagon. To introduce this new
machine to consumers, banks used all kinds of advertising tricks. For example,
to get the attention of female customers, a bank in Columbus, Ohio,
sponsored a six-hour Paul Newman movie marathon on a local television channel.
Every 25 minutes during the movies, commercials for the bank touted the
advantages of its new cash-dispensing machine.
However,
it took a corporate gamble and a blizzard for the ATM to win the confidence of
American consumers. In 1977, the chairman of Citibank took a huge risk,
spending more than $100 million to install ATMs all over New York City. That
investment paid off the following January when a huge blizzard hit New York,
dumping 17 inches of snow on the city. Banks were closed for days; meanwhile,
ATM use increased by 20 percent. Within days, Citibank had launched its
by-now-familiar “The Citi Never Sleeps” ad campaign. Posters and billboards
showed customers trudging through snow to get to Citibank ATMs.
ATMs Today
Today,
there are almost 2 million ATMs around the globe. Although use of the machines
has declined in recent years, likely because more people make purchases using
credit and debit cards instead of cash, the ATM continues to have a place in
modern culture. Today’s machines sell everything from airline tickets to movie
tickets to medicine.
Clancy's comment: Another item that has overtaken the world - and people. These things are fine, but they did replace people who had jobs. You know, you walk into a bank, chat, get your money and leave. However, like laptops and telephones, they are fine until the power goes off ... Or, the machine runs out of money - put there by humans.
I'm ...
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