Seven Secrets to Employee Engagement
Any company that thinks you have to pour money on employees to get them engaged will write off employee engagement efforts during tough economic times. In fact, you...
Most bank leaders say culture matters. Very few understand how directly it impacts profitability.
In this week’s video, Roxanne Emmerich shares the story of a community bank that had strong service scores, happy customers, and a great reputation—yet profits were slipping. The problem wasn’t strategy. It wasn’t the market. It wasn’t the competition.
It was culture.
More specifically, a culture that avoided accountability, tolerated underperformance, and confused being “nice” with driving results.
In this video, you’ll discover:
The highest-performing banks don’t manage people better. They build systems that connect daily behaviors to financial outcomes. When culture becomes a performance system, profitability follows.
Want to discover how top-performing banks engineer cultures that consistently drive growth, deposits, and profitability? Join our free upcoming masterclass, “Culture Is Not a Feeling—It’s a Performance System,” on June 11 at 1:00 PM CT.
Watch now.
You’ve probably heard the phrase, “Culture eats strategy for breakfast.” Well, mediocre culture doesn’t just eat strategy—it chews up your margins too.
Let me give you a behind-the-scenes example. One community bank had impeccable service scores and a reputation in their region for being friendly and reliable.
But behind the scenes, the numbers told a different story. They were bleeding profits, and it wasn’t because their customers weren’t happy. It was because their employees were trapped in a culture of avoidance. Managers hesitated to hold people accountable.
Performance reviews were vague. Everyone smiled in meetings, but nothing changed. And when we asked about their culture, they said, “It’s nice here.” But nice doesn’t pay the bills.
They had tried to fix it before by adding an employee recognition program, bringing in a motivational speaker, and even upgrading the break room. Not one of these things addressed the real problem: the absence of a culture that rewards performance and tells the truth about what isn’t working.
We helped them rebuild.
Understanding that performance comes after an extreme discovery experience where people understand practical ways to be more helpful to customers that never feel like sales. Only after they’re winning do we start bringing in performance metrics because, hey, listen, don’t get ahead of your skis. If someone has to be accountable to something they can’t hit, that’s a problem.
What happened?
Twelve months later, profits doubled. Voluntary turnover dropped 40 percent, and engagement scores rose. But this time, people were winning.
They were making great things happen, and they knew it.
And that’s the game worth playing.
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