Mumbai: Housing finance major HDFC Ltd on Sunday said it has localised its website in six Indian languages, in addition to English, to help homebuyers get home loan related information more effectively.
The website content is now also available in Hindi, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam and Kannada, even as English continues to be a widely used language on digital platforms in India, HDFC said.
HDFC Ltd is the only corporate in the financial sector to offer content on its website in six Indian languages, it added.
The growing use of internet and smartphones and rising base of regional language users, particularly in smaller towns, has made it important to focus on building digital properties and content where relevant information is available in local language as well, it said.
Speaking on this initiative, HDFC Ltd Managing Director Renu Sud Karnad said, "We are happy to share that we are among the few brands in the BFSI space to implement the 'language localisation technology'.
"This is in line with Government's Digital India initiative to let customers access the digital content in the language they are comfortable with. HDFC's website in regional languages will help us tremendously to reach deeper across India to the untapped audience," she said.
HDFC was awarded by Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the best performing primary lending institution in the EWS (economically weaker section) and LIG (low-income group) and second-best in the MIG (middle income group) category in June 2018.
Besides, in March 2019, HDFC was awarded as the 'Best Private Sector Financial Institution' for PMAY-CLSS at PMAY Empowering India Awards 2019.
Karnad said the new language localisation initiative will further facilitate HDFC to promote the government's flagship scheme Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY) to the EWS and LIG customers, particularly in the tier-II, tier-III cities and smaller towns with a vast non-English speaking segment.
"While we are live with our website in six regional languages, we also intend to incorporate many more languages going forward to cater to as many regional users as possible, since consumers prefer to consume content in their preferred language," she added.