What’s the One Best Predictor of Organic Growth?
Fred Reichheld, author of the 1996 bestseller, The Loyalty Effect, revealed that a “5% improvement in retention can boost profits by up to 100%.” These numbers confirm...
Most banks think differentiation comes from what they say. The truth? It comes from what others say about you.
If your positioning relies on claims like “great service” or “relationship banking,” you’re invisible. In this video, Roxanne Emmerich breaks down a simple but powerful shift: credibility-based positioning that instantly elevates trust, pricing power, and conversion.
Here’s what high-performing banks understand:
This is not about marketing polish. It’s about market position.
Because when your bank is recognized as best-in-class, prospects stop comparing—and start choosing.
Ready to move from “just another option” to the obvious choice?
Discover how to use credibility to dominate your market.
Watch now.
Last week, I mentioned how important it was to have a unique selling proposition to differentiate you so you can get the premium pricing.
Okay, easier said than done, but let’s talk about one pretty easy way to create some differentiation in a way that is believable. So if someone says to you, “Listen, my sister’s really nice,” you’re gonna go, yeah, okay. But if somebody says, “My sister won the Miss Arkansas, Miss America, Miss Congeniality Award,” you’re gonna go, oh, she must be really nice.
Now why did you say that? Because there was a credible organization that substantiated this, and so therefore, it is now believable. Well, that’s one of the secrets of a unique selling proposition. Not the only one, but it is one: what outside source says that you are worthy?
Where do you get your credit from? Where is that credibility coming from anyway? For many of you, you have the Banky Award offered by the Institute for Extraordinary Banking™. If you don’t, please get in the game this year.
Because the Banky Award has helped many banks achieve what they call the “Banky bump,” that dramatic increase in their revenue and the amount of business that they do because everyone starts talking about, “Well, you’re the bank that won that Banky.” Just like a Grammy and an Emmy, a Banky says best of the best. We stand out. Now, how do you use the Banky in your sales process, you ask?
Ah, let me share with you how you do that. You simply ask questions such as: How important is it to you to work with the bank that has won a Banky for the last three or four years in a row so that you know you’re working with a bank that has legitimately surveyed and effective customer service strategies, that has been ranked on culture so you know you’re dealing with good people who are alive and passionate about making a difference for you, and that is making a great community outreach approach to make a difference in the community along with running a really great bank?
By simply asking that question, in their mind they’re now thinking, oh, I hadn’t thought about that with other banks. I don’t know what their customer service approach is and whether it’s credible or if it was just a one-time good experience. I don’t know if their people are happy or if they’re all going to leave, leaving me hanging, wondering who’s going to service my account. I don’t know if they’re a well-run bank, and I don’t know that they’re up to making a big impact in their community.
All I know is they had a nice person who opened my account, but here I’m looking at a different option.
Having a differentiator such as a Banky is a clear distinction that, when used in the sales process, when used properly on your website, on business cards, is a way for you to stand out because everyone recognizes the feel of the words Grammy and Emmy, and they understand a Banky is a big deal. It’s not just a big deal for them—it’s a big deal for you and your people because, as I’ve heard from so many bank CEOs, it built the confidence in our people we never had before because now they get—we’re special.
Ah, the power of a unique selling proposition—not just for your outside customers, also for your team members. That’s the power of a great unique selling proposition.
Fred Reichheld, author of the 1996 bestseller, The Loyalty Effect, revealed that a “5% improvement in retention can boost profits by up to 100%.” These numbers confirm...
Who are my ideal clients? What individuals and businesses? Be specific. “Small business” is NOT a target market. “Entrepreneurial-minded medical industry practices” is...
Determine what advantages you have over each of your main competitors. Then ask questions to encourage prospects to actually tell you your competitors' weaknesses: "How...
Roxanne Emmerich share’s three of the biggest challenges she sees banks dealing with today and the processes top-performing banks are using to fix them. Let us know what you think!
Someone’s late for a meeting. Nobody calls the person on it. Next week, three people are late. That’s no coincidence. Eventually, there won’t be a meeting in the entire...
It happens every day, all day in almost every bank. The phone rings. A well-meaning staff person answers politely. The inquirer asks, "What are your mortgage rates?" to...
Here is a short three-minute video that presents an example of creating a movement. It's not about the leader, it's about the first follower. The first follower enrolls...
In a survey conducted by Chief Marketing Officer Council, only 10 percent of respondents said they thought their marketing people are "highly influential and...
Passion is the driving force behind motivation. Your job as a leader is to exude that passion for your team. Stay in the spirit of celebration. Be as if. To inspire and...
"Did you hear what Joe said?" And so it circles around the office. Substitute "Joe," and this phrase is uttered every day in workplaces across the country. Joe said, or...