What the Top 1% of Banks Do That the Other 99% Still Don’t Get
In this video, I discuss how the top 1% of community banks are not working harder than their competitors—they’re working smarter. By leveraging a high-performance...
I believe people love to have positive attention lavished on them.
In this episode, I’m going to show you how to take your already good customer experience and turn it into an experience your customers can’t help but talk about.
If you’re the kind of leader who is frustrated by the lack of consistently “over-the-top” customer service in your bank…where most of your customer encounters are fairly good but not all of them AND you’re not hearing “wows” pouring in daily, you’re going to love to discover how you can transform it quickly and permanently.
IF you are thrilled by your service culture already, you’ll love this because we’ll explore the next level—there’s ALWAYS a next level…
And, if you’re the kind of leader who is exasperated when your people miss deadlines, don’t “wow” the rate shopper into a buyer on the phone, or fail to notice the little things that you know customers see, you’ll love finding a path to consistent WOW service.
Brick Wall #1: Fewer and fewer of the youngest generation are aware of some of the “how to be” social graces. From opening doors for clients, to proper greetings, or even walking with a customer to introduce them to someone else in the bank instead of pointing them in the general direction.
Brick Wall #2: Nobody thinks creating the WOW experience is their responsibility. The executive team is too busy with big-picture things to execute. The head of retail says it’s “not my circus.” The head of commercial—well, we don’t even need to go there…that isn’t happening. The head of marketing doesn’t quite equate it as their role—even though it’s probably more closely aligned with that position than any other. The point is…nobody’s stepping up.
Brick Wall #3: Nobody really knows how to choreograph those “you won’t believe what they did for me at the bank today” experiences. I once heard of a bank bringing in a speaker from the “happiest place on earth.”
Good stuff I’m sure, but the speaker left after the one-and-done seminar and the staff went back to delivering the same ho-hum experience they delivered the day before. Knowledge, without a system for behavior change is a waste of time (and money).
EVERY bank has this problem and, as a result, their people have “parts disease”—customers are coming in looking at hair parts because everyone’s looking down at their desks, instead of laser focused on the only people in the bank that matter—the customers.
Step 1: You can’t teach a banker to WOW a customer at a seminar
UNLIKE so many “customer service transformation attempts” that involve training and maybe a little mystery shopping to follow, you need to do it right the first time. You need ongoing training (growth), that’s tied to ongoing measurement (accountability), and ongoing celebration (reinforcement), that’s designed and proven to create behavior change that leads to results.
If you don’t do all three parts, you’ll never create permanent change.
Most of the time when banks attempt to improve customer service, the stuff they’re trying to improve isn’t really valuable to customers. GREAT customer service isn’t just about how you answer the phones and how you greet customers in the branch. It IS all about how you dig into every customer’s situation to understand how you can bring wildly more value to them.
When you elevate the customer service game to that level, you’ll see instant improvement in sales, referrals, and profit.
In contrast to “hope this works” attempts made in hundreds of banks every month, when you move the first needle up, it must go ALL the way up. Remember this from your childhood? “Young woman, when I ask you a question I deserve an _________. “ That’s right. Answer. Well, that’s what you need to expect when you roll out any customer service “moment of truth.” You need to put the systems and coaching in place to absolutely, undeniably double and triple that needle in a few weeks.
As opposed to the “let’s bring in a training company—that will do it” approach or even the “let’s hire a trainer to do this” approach, customer service roll outs, and the systems, coaching, measurements, celebrations, and visibility needs to be an “all-out effort” where a team who knows exactly what to do is aligned with the strategies of your executive team.
Three things—blended learning, with a measurement system combined with the coaching and celebration that truly moves the needle will blow away progress that is immediate. Follow that with a sustain-and-advance process so you don’t ever hear those ugly little words that KILL your profits—“this too shall pass.”
By doing this, you get the satisfaction of knowing that you don’t have “good” customer service—you have
“Talk about it all over town” service that grows your bank and grows your community’s pride in you.
To your continued success,
Roxanne Emmerich
Please watch the video above and share it with your exec team and board.
In this video, I discuss how the top 1% of community banks are not working harder than their competitors—they’re working smarter. By leveraging a high-performance...
Net interest margin is under pressure—and if your bank is still waiting on rate changes to save your profitability, you’re already behind. In this sharp, no-fluff...
Bankers, let me ask you a brutal but necessary question:Why are you still playing checkers while the top-performing banks are playing 4D chess with deposit growth? If...
Do you agree that high quality customers love high quality attention? Let's explore how you can transform your safety and profitability by creating the kind of...
What if you can use extreme differentiation to get 150 basis points or more on the loan side and improve your deposit pricing at the same time? If you're the kind of...
You deserve to get paid more. Rate matching is the most destructive force in community banking today. And because of it, as a community bank, you are underpaid for the...
Does every team member on your team know how they tie to profit? I mean really know? When a study published in Businessweek revealed they had asked 6,000 employees, "Do...
Everyone has patterns of disbelief. Some people believe that in politics, there is one side or the other, and they're unwilling to look at the alternative. Still others...
I hear the same thing everywhere I go—"We need to build an accountability culture!" Great idea, right? But here’s the problem: we’ve been saying this for decades, and...
I have a book that I love—a book I read a couple of times last year and still reference often. It’s called Intelligent Thinking—which, let’s be honest, sounds like a...