4 Secret Strategies of The Most Successful Banks in America
#1. Culture trumps strategy. Hundreds of studies now show that culture is the leading predictor of future growth and profitability. The Gallup Organization found the...
Most bank executives assume merger success depends on due diligence, legal documents, and a well-written strategic plan. The evidence tells a different story.
Research shows that 70–90% of mergers fail to deliver their intended value—not because the financial analysis was wrong, but because leadership underestimated the importance of culture, alignment, and execution.
If your teams aren’t operating from a shared vision with clear accountability, even the best merger strategy can quickly unravel.
In this week’s video, discover why traditional strategic planning often falls short during mergers and acquisitions—and what high-performing community banks do differently to protect profitability while creating a stronger organization.
You’ll discover:
Whether your bank is preparing for an acquisition, evaluating future opportunities, or simply strengthening strategic execution, these principles can help you avoid costly mistakes and create lasting value.
Watch the video to discover how the highest-performing banks turn disruption into competitive advantage.
This week, we’re talking about what really determines the success or failure of bank mergers, and it’s not what your lawyers are telling you.
Most banks enter mergers armed with due diligence reports and legal documents, but completely unarmed when it comes to cultural alignment and performance execution—the whole reason you’re doing this. The research is sobering.
Seventy to ninety percent of mergers fail to deliver their intended value. Why? Most banks try to bolt a new organization onto a broken culture and hope for the best.
When I was in graduate school for strategic planning, I asked my professor a pointed question: “Have you ever seen this traditional strategic planning process we’re working on actually work?”
He paused and finally said, “Not really.”
That was the moment I knew we had to invent something different—something that actually drove results during disruption.
We created a strategic planning system built for high-performing banks—not project lists, but true alignment of people, purpose, and profit.
And it works.
We’ve seen clients avoid costly integration failures and emerge from mergers and acquisitions stronger, more profitable, and even more cohesive than ever before.
And you can too.
#1. Culture trumps strategy. Hundreds of studies now show that culture is the leading predictor of future growth and profitability. The Gallup Organization found the...
Most banks are screaming for loan growth. But they’re not going to get it.
They think the only way to achieve that growth is to do traditional sales training.
Never, in the history of time has that ever worked. No really…never.
Can you give them what they need to succeed? Not unless you’ve created a franchisable system to help them duplicate your success.
Here are the seven crucial elements of building a franchisable system in your own bank:
The coming bank consolidation isn’t a surprise. It’s been predicted for years. In fact, the next 18 months are destined to be a major “shake out” period when weak banks will be acquired or closed—and banks that are in a position to capture the best customers in town will become stronger and more profitable.
Culture asks, “Will your people leap over tall buildings in a single bound to make sure your client is successful in their business or personal financial goals?” “Will you go beyond bank “product” to create Unique Selling Propositions that rock their world and cause hundreds of thousands of dollars of impact for them? And will your people have fun doing it so that your system is sustainable?
Ready to stop wasting your marketing dollars and grow your profits and safety with a predictable model of organic growth of top and bottom lines?
Thousands of bank executives are waking up to 2013 saying, “SALES training! Of course! It’s SALES training we need.”
Yeah, well sometimes the first thing that pops into our heads isn’t a keeper. Sales training is fine, but it’s NOT what you need to solve your problem and create a sustainable solution.
So you’ve decided to acquire another bank. For nearly 25 years, I’ve been giving the same advice about acquisitions: DON’T DO IT. I’ve had good reason to give that...
Growing a bank isn’t some mysterious process that involves tea leaves and oracles. It’s more like building a house or tuning up a car’s engine, with a power tool for every step and a hand tool for every part you need to work on. Effective builders have a “franchise system”—the proven best way to do things that minimizes mistakes and maximizes results per hour spent.
The process begins with one crucial step: Find out what matters to your best customers, then build hundreds of Unique Selling Propositions (USPs) around those components and list them explicitly in your marketing materials.