Reversing the Risk
We’ve all been there. The car salesman slides the paperwork across the desk at you, pointing at the signature line. Just this one last step, he says, and there’ll be no way out.
For decades, community bankers have blamed their markets for shrinking margins, rising deposit costs, and the need to match competitors’ rates. But what if the market isn’t the real problem?
This week’s video will reveal why the highest-performing banks refuse to accept commodity pricing—and why believing your market dictates your pricing may be the most expensive story your leadership team ever tells itself.
You’ll discover:
The banking industry isn’t consolidating because every bank is the same. It’s consolidating because too many banks believe they are.
If your institution wants to protect its independence, improve profitability, and escape the race to the bottom, it starts by changing the story your leadership team believes.
Watch the full video to discover why premium pricing is a leadership decision—not a market condition.
Every time I meet a new bank CEO, they say something very similar to what the three thousand-plus conversations I’ve had with bank CEOs sounded like. And what they say to me is this: “Roxanne, it’s different here.”
Here, we have to match rates. Here, we have competition for pricing. That’s just how it is here.
Now, I gotta tell you, I met two gentlemen years ago when they picked me up in their SUV. They were the CEO and the president of the bank, and we were about to do their kickoff.
The one said to me, “Roxanne, everybody complains that their deposit costs are high, but I can prove to you that we have the highest deposit cost in the nation.”
At which point, I stuck my fingers in my ears like a grown-up and I said, “I’m not listening. I’m not listening. I’m not listening.”
And I had a smile on my face. I was nice about it. They said, “Why are you doing that?”
And I said, “Because if your story becomes my story, I can’t help you.”
Markets do not dictate interest rates.
Let me say it again. The market doesn’t dictate the interest rates that you charge.
You dictate those through your differentiation and your ability to sell that differentiation.
If that were not the case, then every restaurant that has something other than the Golden Arches in front of it would be charging the same price as a McDonald’s hamburger.
It just isn’t that way, and yet in banking, we believe we’re the one great commodity that no one can break through.
Here’s the really sad part. Every time I hear a CFO or a chief lending officer say that to me, I should have always shorted the stock because I know that bank will lose its independence.
They’re right.
It is a commodity until you make it not a commodity.
So yes, in fact, they’re right. And there’s a whole other mountain of evidence, and you better get on that other mountain. You better get there fast because when you look at how we’ve moved from twenty thousand banks down to four thousand banks, we know where this is going.
The only banks that will be left will be the boutique banks that can command extreme premium pricing because they are worth it.
That’s the only game in town, and it’s a game you better master—and fast.
We’ve all been there. The car salesman slides the paperwork across the desk at you, pointing at the signature line. Just this one last step, he says, and there’ll be no way out.
You’ve decided to create and implement a killer strategy. So where do you look for ideas?
There are hundreds of tried and true strategies out there. Some have taken companies from just marking time to the big time in no time. But which ones should you consider?
one company does something different and effective, then everyone imitates it. Then you’ve got yourself a field of purple cows. That’s when it’s time to go white. Or brown. Or zebra-striped. If they zig, you zag.
Here are three of the seven most effective secrets to finding and catching the hungriest fish—the customers who will add to your bottom line instead of nibbling from it:
Are you playing the wrong game?
Are you playing the wrong game?
Are you as good as you think you are? Whether the economy gets better or not is out of your control. But YOU getting better—that’s entirely in your control, and it’s non-negotiable.
You’re doing the old “Mission Statement, SWOT, and Goals” thing. That’s fine. I’m SURE you don’t think that’s the same thing as strategic planning.
You’ve heard it before – the bankers who are STILL calling on clients asking hideously inept questions such as, “What kind of things are you looking for in a bank?” or “Tell me about your business,” or “What kind of things are keeping you up at night?” UGH.
Is your strategic plan the right plan—and one that can and will get completed?
If you’re like most bankers, you probably pulled your strategic plan together eight or nine months ago. But is everyone in the bank on a weekly process to make sure they all hit the outcomes?
You are hearing everywhere that those who run their banks like they ran them five years ago won’t make it in the not-so-distant future. Heck, based on the news reports over the past year, they may no longer be in business.