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article
knowing: it's a 'magical view'
Recently, a friend
gave my family a debut CD of a local singer, and our enjoyment of
the music prompted us to attend her performance. I offered to buy
the CD for our children in advance of the concert—our daughter
accepted but our son said he wanted to experience the music “fresh.”
We all have a
different view of life experiences. My bias is to know as much as I
can in advance. Maybe that is why I was fascinated by Billy Pilgrim
in the Kurt Vonnegut novel Slaughterhouse-Five. Those of you
who have read this book might remember that Billy was disconnected
from his life, popping up randomly at different points and out of
sequence. One of the concepts presented in the novel is that life is
permanent and can be viewed in its entirety; similar to looking down
a path from atop the Rocky Mountains—seeing the beginning, end, and
all points in between. Knowing what laid ahead gave Billy a ‘magical
view,’ making him more at ease with each of his experiences as they
played out.
At the 2009 BAI
Retail Delivery Conference was a CEO’s roundtable called “Changing
the Dialogue.” During that session, opinions were given on where the
industry came from, where it is now, where it is probably going, and
what leaders will need to do to change the current course. What was
striking is that bank leaders know from history that sometime in the
next ten years there will be another economic downturn. We can also
expect new regulatory requirements that will limit the flexibility
of banks to be innovative and meet varied customer needs—there will
be banks that acquire and those that fade into memory.
The question is: what
is the path through the Rocky Mountains of your bank look like? Can
you see the twists and turns and anticipate how you will survive
them? Have you gathered enough information regarding your customers’
changing needs, the ways your competitors are addressing them, the
technology that will be required in meeting them, the additional
resources that will be necessary, and how well each of your
lines-of-business will be able to perform in your marketplace? A
good place to start is with the Nolan Annual Bank Performance Study.
Knowing as much as
you can and acting on that knowledge to position your bank or credit
union for success seems elementary, but there may be some who just
like to experience it “fresh.”
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