What Boards Miss That Can Tank a Bank
Your boardroom may be your biggest blind spot. Discover how elite banks fix strategy at the Breakthrough Banking Blueprint™ Bootcamp.
1. Not analyzing and breaking down your numbers
Do you know how many leads you are getting, the rates of conversion of leads and referrals per salesperson, or referrals per teller? Do you know how many cross-sales per new account per personal banker, number of aces in the sale funnel, or profit per account? What about your top 100 most profitable accounts, the number of sales by product, the average sale, and the rank of your most profitable products? No?
If you aren’t tracking and keeping the results visible, you aren’t making progress, and you’re well on your way into the tank.
2. Staying Stuck: Continuing to do what isn’t working
Are you stuck in the 1980s? Most banks continue to send out ineffective direct mail such as marketing via billboards, radio, and cable ads. They hire people based on personality and have no accountability plans tied to results and profit. They market to the masses, have no marketing linked to the sales process, and the list goes on.
It doesn’t work, so if it’s the tank you’re after, keep it up.
3. Matching rates, EVER
There is NEVER a good time to match rates. Never. It simply shows that your people have no idea what they’re doing. You may as well turn in the keys if you’re not eradicating rate-matching. If you have even ONE rate-matcher on your team, you have a profitability issue.
Address it or don’t, depending on the destination you want.
4. Wrong strategies
Yes, you need to have hundreds of strategies. Strategies for how you convert leads. Strategies for how to fully bond with a new client. Strategies for warming leads to turn them into clients. Strategies for getting centers of influence to refer you.
Unfortunately, most banks have only one strategy right now—cost containment. I will go on record now and guarantee that 95 percent of the banks in that camp will not be around in five years. You cannot use a short-term strategy to address a long-term problem.
It’s time to get out of the fearful crouch and grasp the reality that those who are merely slashing their budgets now will never catch up with those who are using brilliant and effective strategies to pull ahead.
5. Not prioritizing culture
Culture is the leading predictor of future growth and profitability. NOTHING is more important. If it’s not fun and people aren’t on fire, your profits are hemorrhaging while your head is deep in the sand, thinking that reworking the budget just ONE MORE TIME will fix everything.
Hey, good luck with that. You’re going to need it.
Your boardroom may be your biggest blind spot. Discover how elite banks fix strategy at the Breakthrough Banking Blueprint™ Bootcamp.
Most boards are left out of execution—and it’s destroying performance. Here’s how top 5% banks fix it.
Forget templates. Roxanne Emmerich reveals how top banks burn the rulebook and build execution systems that deliver relentless results.
Hope doesn’t scale. Systems do. Find out how elite banks drive results with engineered behaviors and real-time accountability.
Roxanne Emmerich reveals how top 5% banks grow $100M+ in core deposits and triple cross-sales—without matching rates or chasing gimmicks.
Cross-selling isn’t a script—it’s a system. Discover how top-performing banks engineer daily discipline that triples products per customer and locks in loyalty.
One bank ditched fake smiles and vague reviews—and doubled profits in 12 months. Here’s how they built a culture that actually works.
Top execs are done with old sales playbooks. Discover what’s replacing them—and why one COO hasn’t missed a quarter in six years.
Most board meetings are packed with data—but starved of strategic clarity. Discover how the top 5% of banks engineer boardrooms that drive performance, challenge respectfully, and align with breakthrough plans. This week’s episode reveals what high-performing CEOs do differently—and how you can bring that same power to your board.
Top banks play to win. Discover what they do differently—and why it starts with culture and strategy.