Welcome to the Top 5 Percenter™ Blog

Most banks aren’t struggling with performance—they’re stuck in a culture of pretending. Pretending expectations are unclear. Pretending deadlines weren’t seen. Pretending accountability belongs to someone else.

And that silent drift is killing execution.

Nationwide data reveals a hard truth: 87% of employees believe their coworkers avoid ownership. That’s not a people problem—it’s a system failure. Without clear standards, consistent follow-through, and real measurement, even great teams default to excuses over results.

The highest-performing banks don’t rely on pressure or pep talks. They install accountability systems that make ownership visible, measurable, and expected.

Here’s what changes when you get it right:

  • Cross-sales increase because expectations are clear and tracked
  • Deposits grow as teams execute consistently, not occasionally
  • Profitability rises because performance becomes the norm—not the exception

The difference isn’t talent. It’s discipline. It’s structure. It’s a culture where people know how to win—and choose to.

If your bank is building that kind of performance culture, it’s time to be recognized.

Apply for the Banky Awards™ and prove your culture performs.

Watch now. 

Let me say something uncomfortable but true. Most bank teams don’t have a performance problem. They have a pretending problem—people pretending not to know what excellence looks like.

Pretending they didn’t see the standard. Pretending they didn’t hear the deadline. And when pretending becomes the culture, accountability dies. We’ve conducted the largest nationwide accountability culture survey.

And here’s what we found: eighty-seven percent of employees believe their coworkers pretend not to know what’s expected of them.

Let that sink in. That means that almost nine out of ten people think their teammates are willfully avoiding ownership.

And in that kind of culture, you don’t get execution—you get excuses.

Now, don’t get me wrong. Most people don’t mean to undermine accountability.

They’re good people.

They’re just part of a system that tolerates fuzzy expectations, no follow-through, and vague coaching like, “Let’s just do our best.”

What they really need? Clarity, structure, measurement, feedback, and celebration.

That’s what a performance culture delivers. When accountability becomes your cultural standard, cross-sells rise, deposits grow, morale improves, profits soar—because suddenly everyone knows, “Oh, this is how we play here, and we play to win.”

It’s not about pressure. It’s about purposeful pursuit of performance.

The best banks aren’t the ones who demand results with a stick.

They’re the ones who install systems that create self-led teams where people take ownership—and actually like it.

Because people want to win. They just need a scoreboard and a coach who believes they can.

But let me be clear: this isn’t going to happen with another staff meeting, or a memo, or my personal favorite—a new poster in the break room about excellence.

Accountability isn’t a slogan. It’s a system.

And when the system is installed correctly—stage-appropriate—it changes everything.

Incidentally, you’ll never guess what the one trait every bank award winner has in common.

It’s not a logo. It’s not a branch count. It’s not a flashy website.

It’s accountability.

They have cultures where execution happens because the system demands it—and the people embrace it.

That’s why they’ve been named one of the best banks in America.

And if you’ve built a culture like that—or you’re on your way—you should apply for the Banky Award at bankyawards.com because culture like that deserves to be seen.

So if you’re tired of nudging people, “We should already know…”

If you’re done tiptoeing around performance…

And if you’re ready to build a culture of accountability that drives results without drama…

Get your Banky Award application in at bankyawards.com.

And let the world know—you don’t just have a culture, you have a performance culture.

That’s what changes everything.

And it starts now.

More From The Blog

Is It Over Yet?

s there anything worse than a bad meeting? Anything? Fine, yes, world hunger, soul-crushing poverty, and violence in the Middle East. But in the midst of a truly bad meeting, it’s easy to convince yourself that all of those problems will be distant memories before the meeting EVER ENDS.

The #1 Reason Bank Acquisitions Fail

 Think you’re ready for an acquisition? Think you’ve got a bullet-proof plan? Imagine if you take a “bring-it-on-and-make-it-happen-no-matter-what” bank culture where...

So What’s Your Story?

“Homework? Ah, yes, I did my homework, but it didn’t quite make it here. Why? Well, my dog ate the homework. We took him to the vet to get the homework back, but the...

Get Paid the Premium Pricing You’re Worth with Critical Drivers that WORK

If you ask commercial lenders how they’re doing, most would say they’re performing strongly. But performance for them too often means sitting in the bank, waiting for B and C credits to walk in, interviewing them, getting their data, sending it to the credit committee—then trying to sell the committee on how to make that loan work, even though it has risks.

Acquisitions That WORK: The Bomb-Proof Management System That’s Ready to Roll

A lot of bad things happen around acquisitions. If you’re being acquired, it’s rarely pretty. And if you’re the one acquiring, the Wharton School of Business says your chance of failure is greater than 83 percent. And even if you don’t go down in flames in the opening round, the real heartaches continue for two years after the acquisition as two dark forces are inevitably unleashed: