By
Frederick C. Militello, Jr.
Senior Thought Leader
Future Change Management LLC
www.futurechangemanagement.com.
fmilitello@futurechangemanagement.com.
Tel: +1 518.634.7003
GAME CHANGING: SETTING THE STAGE
The banking industry is beginning to rethink and reshape itself.
Newly articulated commercial/corporate, investment and retail banking re-
   organizations are beginning to emerge.
The quest for a renewed sense of innovation and business differentiation is in the air.
The verdict on the future of achievable and sustainable differentiation for members of
    the banking industry is still out.
Moreover, it is far too premature to begin conjecturing as to whom the winners and
   losers will be.
But clearly, regulatory reform, bank performance and public opinion have changed
    the game of banking.
Accordingly, it is time to offer—and consider—game changing ideas that will reshape
   our industry for some time to come.
This is the spirit of this presentation…to inspire conversation about such game
    changing ideas and practices.




                                      COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC         2
Change the focus of decision-making—put
more trust in experience and intuition



      COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   3
BEYOND COGNITION
When it comes to leadership, banks that go beyond cognitive decision-
  making will trump those who fear the human element of their business
  decisions.
A game changer of the future is to re-examine—and change the focus of
   decision-making processes (both those accepted and rewarded) of the
   organization.
Cognitive decision-making—as embodied in decision-trees, trade-off models,
   etc.,—may seemingly bring objectivity and simplicity to the table but they
   leave out the importance of experience and resulting intuition.
Accountability for one’s decisions can only come about through a
   recognition and reconnection to our emotive selves.
In almost every profession, except banking, decision-makers readily admit
    that their most difficult (and rewarding) decisions are based upon
    experience, intuition and emotions.




                                 COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC    4
EXPERIENCE TRUMPS
This reliance on objectivity over experience (and its implied links to intuition
    and emotions) is reflected in a growing imbalance of experience/skill
    diversity in the banking profession.
Put another way, emotional intelligence (comprising such competencies as
   trust, teamwork, communications, and self-awareness/discipline) has
   increasingly been sacrificed for a bias toward cognitive thinking and skill
   acumen.
In fact, experience has been more than sacrificed—it has been intimidated
    out of existence or relevance. For example, rogue traders have no heroes
    accept themselves—experience and respect for such matters little.




                                   COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC     5
CHANGE THE GAME
Here is a real game changer for you.
Bring experience and intuition back into your organization.
Celebrate your heroes—both those with skills and experience and
   especially those that seek to bridge and/or nurture the two.
There is a hidden workforce out there—a workforce of experience
   that has much to offer in terms of helping to create organizations
   with greater emotional intelligence and experiential grounding.
   God only knows—we need more of that!




                              COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   6
Become a demand-obsessed
financial organization

    COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   7
BEYOND SUPPLY
A real game changer of the future will be found not in supply efficiencies—
    and lower prices—but instead in capturing preferred segments of
    customer demand; customers which promise to become even more
    scarce and discriminating as to who they choose to do business with.
In the future, differentiation will not be driven by what we internally choose
    to supply but instead in how well we respond to the external realities of
    what our customers demand.
The obsession with demand (expressed by and through the customer’s
   value chain) must become integral to the customer relationship, product
   development and sales strategy of financial organizations.




                                  COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC    8
VALUE TRUMPS
We will earn economic returns from customer relationships when we
  understand how we create value for our customers—and that’s
  about their business circumstances—not ours.
“Forget” about your sales quotas and agendas. You will sell more
   products than you ever dreamed of when you stop selling
   products and become obsessed with customer demand—
   specifically, the customer’s value chain and the role your
   products, services or advice play in the customer’s value-creation
   process.




                              COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   9
CHANGE THE GAME
Regulations will make it more difficult for organizations
  to achieve differentiation through economies of scale.
Systemic risk will be mitigated through market and
  supply fragmentation.
These realities will lead to a new mantra of demand-
  driven differentiation—which is a function of building
  demand-driven organizational cultures that embrace
  both skills and behavioral competencies.




                         COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   10
Become more like your
customers—adopt their
“best practices”

COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   11
BEYOND CREATION
When it comes to products and services—and their risk-
  taking and reputational implications— banks that
  embrace the importance of product life cycles,
  product suitability and planned product obsolescence
  —relative to their obsession with customer demand—
  will trump those that continue to pursue diminishing
  profit-margin product lines.




                       COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   12
CHANGE TRUMPS
Bankers have a tendency to take great ideas and stretch the limits of those
   ideas to—and even beyond—the boundaries of non-greatness.
We are dealing with a culture that won’t allow us to let go of what we
   create—regardless of the damage that may result from our
   possessiveness.
Our “love” for our products has become totally unconditional—and blinded
   by such. For example, securitization was a real game changer—and for
   the better; but our inability to move on to something new (even while it
   continued to display success) is not part of our culture. This must
   change.




                                 COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   13
CHANGE THE GAME
When it comes to the development and/or sales of products and services,
  incentives must be changed.
Product life-cycles must be incorporated into investment/return analysis.
Segmentation analysis must take into account changing product life-cycle
   characteristics—appropriately addressing changing product lives and
   their economic returns—not by blind expansion into areas of increased
   opaqueness; but, instead by the increased transparency that comes
   from knowing our clients; and, the correlations that exist between risk
   appetite and the eventualities that come with product life-cycles.
The passing of our products should be met not with a sense of dismay—or
   worse yet financial crisis—but instead by celebratory achievement.




                                 COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   14
Make risk awareness
cultural—not
functional

COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   15
BEYOND MISTRUST
Knowing the client better than anyone else has a great deal to do with
   understanding customer circumstances and needs.
Rather than mandatory terminations of relationships or “tours of duty”—a
   practice of many banks fearful that bankers will get too close to their
   customers—we must encourage the opposite.
Banking is a personal business—taking people out of the equation—and
   failing to build organizational and personal trust—is a clear way to further
   commoditize the importance of business relationships.
Failure of trust—especially the mutuality of such—also leads to non-
    accountability and the dangers of isolationism.




                                  COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC     16
CLOSER TRUMPS
When it comes to risk management, banks that diffuse risk
   awareness throughout their organizations will trump those that
   continue to compartmentalize such—namely, viewing risk (skills
   and awareness) as a product area or special expertise; rather
   than part and parcel of organizational culture.
Bringing credit closer to the customer is not something to be feared.
   It should be embraced as part of the customer relationship
   process.
Externalizing/outsourcing credit decisions simply does not make for
   better customer relationships, credit decisions or a sounder
   financial system.




                              COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   17
CHANGE THE GAME
A game changer of the future is to take down the silos of risk and re-
   introduce risk awareness into the competencies and behaviors of all
   those who should be bankers first and salespeople second.
Relationship managers frequently receive more sales training today than
   they do credit training.
But the problem is we are selling risk-inherent solutions in everything we do;
   and, not fully understanding this is why we can’t sell value—and, equally
   important, get paid for it.
We must learn how to sell risk solutions by understanding how our products
   relate to the risk sensitivities of the client.
This is a game changer—namely, sales and the sales process is not separate
    from risk awareness. Knowing when to sell flexibility—or not—is key to
    both increasing risk awareness and increased sales.




                                 COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC     18
Embrace the
   competitive benefits
   of the blue waters of
   regulation
COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   19
BEYOND DEREGULATION
If there is anything the financial crisis of 2007/2008 has taught us
    it is this; banks do not do well with de-regulation—or markets of
    open space.
When it comes to strategy, banks seem to do much better
  positioning—differentiating—themselves in regulated rather than
  deregulated markets.
In de-regulated markets, banks tend to follow each other—over the
    cliff if need be.
This is a key cause of systemic risk—it is based in psychological
   behavior as much as market dynamics.




                              COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   20
REGULATION TRUMPS
Ideologically, like it or not, regulatory positioning will largely
   determine bank differentiation—namely, which spaces or arenas
   banks operate and compete in.
Moreover, it is within those spaces banks face the requisite
  challenge of shifting from supply-mindedness to a world of
  demand scarcity and discrimination.
Not all will succeed; however, differentiation will surface and
   systemic risk will be deterred through regulatory “inspired”
   differentiation.




                              COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   21
CHANGE THE GAME
Regulatory-driven differentiation is in our future.
A game changer is not to primarily focus on regulatory arbitrage;
   but, instead in embracing those regulations that best allow you to
   practice and demonstrate your core competency—the areas
   where you can best employ your capital, for the longest period of
   time, without the threat of competition.
Moreover, make sure your practices support the reasoning behind
  such regulations—as sustainable differentiation is helped—not
  hindered—by regulatory intervention.




                               COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   22
GAME CHANGERS
1. Change the focus of decision-making—put more trust
in experience and intuition
2. Become a demand-obsessed financial organization
3. Become more like your customers—adopt their “best
practices”
4.Become more like your customers—adopt their “best
practices”
5. Embrace the competitive benefits of the blue waters
of regulation




                       COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC   23

More Related Content

PDF
3whentohold
DOC
INTEND2PAY.co.uk - more details
PDF
Why simply the best isn’t always right
 
PDF
Tns - Why simply the best isn't always right
PDF
Insights on How to Run a Credit Union: Blending new technologies with traditi...
PDF
Future of Loyalty Insights from Discussions Building on an Initial Perspecti...
PDF
JGW Business Overview Credit Suisse Financial Services Forum
3whentohold
INTEND2PAY.co.uk - more details
Why simply the best isn’t always right
 
Tns - Why simply the best isn't always right
Insights on How to Run a Credit Union: Blending new technologies with traditi...
Future of Loyalty Insights from Discussions Building on an Initial Perspecti...
JGW Business Overview Credit Suisse Financial Services Forum

What's hot (8)

PDF
Building the Customer Centric Enterprise
PPTX
Paradigm Shift: The Changing Face of Loyalty
PDF
HotelLoyalty_THL_2013
PDF
Analyst Note March
PDF
Trust Centered Selling
PDF
Pwc analysis: What’s driving customer loyalty for today’s hotel brands?
PDF
Disruptive vs. Top Down Change in US Payments in 2016
PDF
Customer Service032608
Building the Customer Centric Enterprise
Paradigm Shift: The Changing Face of Loyalty
HotelLoyalty_THL_2013
Analyst Note March
Trust Centered Selling
Pwc analysis: What’s driving customer loyalty for today’s hotel brands?
Disruptive vs. Top Down Change in US Payments in 2016
Customer Service032608
Ad

Viewers also liked (20)

PPTX
Innovative Banking Products for Underserved Markets
PPTX
EFMA Banking on innovation 2014: Rabobank building an innovative culture
PPT
Visible Banking - Social Media & Banking 2.0
PPSX
Business Process Re-engineering : ICICI
PDF
101 Ideas To Make Banking More Fun
PDF
Hr governance fheili
PPTX
Business Process Re-Engineering
PPTX
Business process re engineering in a bank
PDF
Banking innovation
PPTX
Innovation of Products & Services in Banking
PPTX
Bpr examples from indian corporate world
PPTX
New innovations in banking industry
PDF
BPR Mobile Banking
PPT
Business Process Reengineering
PPTX
Rabobank: Case Studies in Mobile Banking & Payments Development: November 201...
PPTX
New trends in indian banking system
PPT
Private Banking Business Models
PPT
Bpr Case Study
PPTX
Dfd examples
PPTX
Innovations in Banking - Recent Developments
Innovative Banking Products for Underserved Markets
EFMA Banking on innovation 2014: Rabobank building an innovative culture
Visible Banking - Social Media & Banking 2.0
Business Process Re-engineering : ICICI
101 Ideas To Make Banking More Fun
Hr governance fheili
Business Process Re-Engineering
Business process re engineering in a bank
Banking innovation
Innovation of Products & Services in Banking
Bpr examples from indian corporate world
New innovations in banking industry
BPR Mobile Banking
Business Process Reengineering
Rabobank: Case Studies in Mobile Banking & Payments Development: November 201...
New trends in indian banking system
Private Banking Business Models
Bpr Case Study
Dfd examples
Innovations in Banking - Recent Developments
Ad

Similar to Five Game Changing Ideas for Re-Shaping Banking Practices (20)

PDF
Innovate Vancouver: Data Driven Business Model
PDF
Customer Satisfaction Guaranteed
PDF
Is Your Customer-Centric Transformation Living Up to its Promise
PDF
The ultimate guide to loyalty and retention
PDF
Customer Experience and B2B Sales
PDF
Mc Insurance Industry White Paper Final
PPTX
Introduction To Gaming
PPTX
Introduction To Gaming
PDF
Inflection points: Seizing the Moments in Customer Loyalty
PDF
Think Think Again
PDF
Business Acumen
PDF
The differentiation challenge for professional services brands
PDF
Drive Revenue and Loyalty by Engaging Mobile and Social Consumers
PDF
Future of loyalty An initial perspective by Christopher Evans of the Collins...
PDF
The Indispensable Nexus: Consumer Perceived Image and Business Profitability.pdf
PPTX
Customer Relationship: Can you keep up ?
PDF
How Buyer Trends are Impacting the Future of Business Thinking
PDF
PDF
The Changing Nature of the Customer Relationship by North Highlandd
Innovate Vancouver: Data Driven Business Model
Customer Satisfaction Guaranteed
Is Your Customer-Centric Transformation Living Up to its Promise
The ultimate guide to loyalty and retention
Customer Experience and B2B Sales
Mc Insurance Industry White Paper Final
Introduction To Gaming
Introduction To Gaming
Inflection points: Seizing the Moments in Customer Loyalty
Think Think Again
Business Acumen
The differentiation challenge for professional services brands
Drive Revenue and Loyalty by Engaging Mobile and Social Consumers
Future of loyalty An initial perspective by Christopher Evans of the Collins...
The Indispensable Nexus: Consumer Perceived Image and Business Profitability.pdf
Customer Relationship: Can you keep up ?
How Buyer Trends are Impacting the Future of Business Thinking
The Changing Nature of the Customer Relationship by North Highlandd

Recently uploaded (20)

DOCX
FINALS-BSHhchcuvivicucucucucM-Centro.docx
PDF
Robin Fischer: A Visionary Leader Making a Difference in Healthcare, One Day ...
DOCX
Center Enamel Powering Innovation and Resilience in the Italian Chemical Indu...
PDF
Ron Thomas - Top Influential Business Leaders Shaping the Modern Industry – 2025
PPT
Lecture notes on Business Research Methods
PDF
NEW - FEES STRUCTURES (01-july-2024).pdf
DOCX
Hand book of Entrepreneurship 4 Chapters.docx
PDF
ANALYZING THE OPPORTUNITIES OF DIGITAL MARKETING IN BANGLADESH TO PROVIDE AN ...
PDF
Daniels 2024 Inclusive, Sustainable Development
DOCX
Center Enamel A Strategic Partner for the Modernization of Georgia's Chemical...
PPTX
2 - Self & Personality 587689213yiuedhwejbmansbeakjrk
PDF
Charisse Litchman: A Maverick Making Neurological Care More Accessible
PPTX
IITM - FINAL Option - 01 - 12.08.25.pptx
PDF
Booking.com The Global AI Sentiment Report 2025
DOCX
80 DE ÔN VÀO 10 NĂM 2023vhkkkjjhhhhjjjj
PPTX
BUSINESS CYCLE_INFLATION AND UNEMPLOYMENT.pptx
PDF
Family Law: The Role of Communication in Mediation (www.kiu.ac.ug)
PPTX
Astra-Investor- business Presentation (1).pptx
PPTX
TRAINNING, DEVELOPMENT AND APPRAISAL.pptx
DOCX
Handbook of Entrepreneurship- Chapter 5: Identifying business opportunity.docx
FINALS-BSHhchcuvivicucucucucM-Centro.docx
Robin Fischer: A Visionary Leader Making a Difference in Healthcare, One Day ...
Center Enamel Powering Innovation and Resilience in the Italian Chemical Indu...
Ron Thomas - Top Influential Business Leaders Shaping the Modern Industry – 2025
Lecture notes on Business Research Methods
NEW - FEES STRUCTURES (01-july-2024).pdf
Hand book of Entrepreneurship 4 Chapters.docx
ANALYZING THE OPPORTUNITIES OF DIGITAL MARKETING IN BANGLADESH TO PROVIDE AN ...
Daniels 2024 Inclusive, Sustainable Development
Center Enamel A Strategic Partner for the Modernization of Georgia's Chemical...
2 - Self & Personality 587689213yiuedhwejbmansbeakjrk
Charisse Litchman: A Maverick Making Neurological Care More Accessible
IITM - FINAL Option - 01 - 12.08.25.pptx
Booking.com The Global AI Sentiment Report 2025
80 DE ÔN VÀO 10 NĂM 2023vhkkkjjhhhhjjjj
BUSINESS CYCLE_INFLATION AND UNEMPLOYMENT.pptx
Family Law: The Role of Communication in Mediation (www.kiu.ac.ug)
Astra-Investor- business Presentation (1).pptx
TRAINNING, DEVELOPMENT AND APPRAISAL.pptx
Handbook of Entrepreneurship- Chapter 5: Identifying business opportunity.docx

Five Game Changing Ideas for Re-Shaping Banking Practices

  • 1. By Frederick C. Militello, Jr. Senior Thought Leader Future Change Management LLC www.futurechangemanagement.com. fmilitello@futurechangemanagement.com. Tel: +1 518.634.7003
  • 2. GAME CHANGING: SETTING THE STAGE The banking industry is beginning to rethink and reshape itself. Newly articulated commercial/corporate, investment and retail banking re- organizations are beginning to emerge. The quest for a renewed sense of innovation and business differentiation is in the air. The verdict on the future of achievable and sustainable differentiation for members of the banking industry is still out. Moreover, it is far too premature to begin conjecturing as to whom the winners and losers will be. But clearly, regulatory reform, bank performance and public opinion have changed the game of banking. Accordingly, it is time to offer—and consider—game changing ideas that will reshape our industry for some time to come. This is the spirit of this presentation…to inspire conversation about such game changing ideas and practices. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 2
  • 3. Change the focus of decision-making—put more trust in experience and intuition COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 3
  • 4. BEYOND COGNITION When it comes to leadership, banks that go beyond cognitive decision- making will trump those who fear the human element of their business decisions. A game changer of the future is to re-examine—and change the focus of decision-making processes (both those accepted and rewarded) of the organization. Cognitive decision-making—as embodied in decision-trees, trade-off models, etc.,—may seemingly bring objectivity and simplicity to the table but they leave out the importance of experience and resulting intuition. Accountability for one’s decisions can only come about through a recognition and reconnection to our emotive selves. In almost every profession, except banking, decision-makers readily admit that their most difficult (and rewarding) decisions are based upon experience, intuition and emotions. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 4
  • 5. EXPERIENCE TRUMPS This reliance on objectivity over experience (and its implied links to intuition and emotions) is reflected in a growing imbalance of experience/skill diversity in the banking profession. Put another way, emotional intelligence (comprising such competencies as trust, teamwork, communications, and self-awareness/discipline) has increasingly been sacrificed for a bias toward cognitive thinking and skill acumen. In fact, experience has been more than sacrificed—it has been intimidated out of existence or relevance. For example, rogue traders have no heroes accept themselves—experience and respect for such matters little. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 5
  • 6. CHANGE THE GAME Here is a real game changer for you. Bring experience and intuition back into your organization. Celebrate your heroes—both those with skills and experience and especially those that seek to bridge and/or nurture the two. There is a hidden workforce out there—a workforce of experience that has much to offer in terms of helping to create organizations with greater emotional intelligence and experiential grounding. God only knows—we need more of that! COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 6
  • 7. Become a demand-obsessed financial organization COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 7
  • 8. BEYOND SUPPLY A real game changer of the future will be found not in supply efficiencies— and lower prices—but instead in capturing preferred segments of customer demand; customers which promise to become even more scarce and discriminating as to who they choose to do business with. In the future, differentiation will not be driven by what we internally choose to supply but instead in how well we respond to the external realities of what our customers demand. The obsession with demand (expressed by and through the customer’s value chain) must become integral to the customer relationship, product development and sales strategy of financial organizations. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 8
  • 9. VALUE TRUMPS We will earn economic returns from customer relationships when we understand how we create value for our customers—and that’s about their business circumstances—not ours. “Forget” about your sales quotas and agendas. You will sell more products than you ever dreamed of when you stop selling products and become obsessed with customer demand— specifically, the customer’s value chain and the role your products, services or advice play in the customer’s value-creation process. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 9
  • 10. CHANGE THE GAME Regulations will make it more difficult for organizations to achieve differentiation through economies of scale. Systemic risk will be mitigated through market and supply fragmentation. These realities will lead to a new mantra of demand- driven differentiation—which is a function of building demand-driven organizational cultures that embrace both skills and behavioral competencies. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 10
  • 11. Become more like your customers—adopt their “best practices” COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 11
  • 12. BEYOND CREATION When it comes to products and services—and their risk- taking and reputational implications— banks that embrace the importance of product life cycles, product suitability and planned product obsolescence —relative to their obsession with customer demand— will trump those that continue to pursue diminishing profit-margin product lines. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 12
  • 13. CHANGE TRUMPS Bankers have a tendency to take great ideas and stretch the limits of those ideas to—and even beyond—the boundaries of non-greatness. We are dealing with a culture that won’t allow us to let go of what we create—regardless of the damage that may result from our possessiveness. Our “love” for our products has become totally unconditional—and blinded by such. For example, securitization was a real game changer—and for the better; but our inability to move on to something new (even while it continued to display success) is not part of our culture. This must change. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 13
  • 14. CHANGE THE GAME When it comes to the development and/or sales of products and services, incentives must be changed. Product life-cycles must be incorporated into investment/return analysis. Segmentation analysis must take into account changing product life-cycle characteristics—appropriately addressing changing product lives and their economic returns—not by blind expansion into areas of increased opaqueness; but, instead by the increased transparency that comes from knowing our clients; and, the correlations that exist between risk appetite and the eventualities that come with product life-cycles. The passing of our products should be met not with a sense of dismay—or worse yet financial crisis—but instead by celebratory achievement. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 14
  • 15. Make risk awareness cultural—not functional COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 15
  • 16. BEYOND MISTRUST Knowing the client better than anyone else has a great deal to do with understanding customer circumstances and needs. Rather than mandatory terminations of relationships or “tours of duty”—a practice of many banks fearful that bankers will get too close to their customers—we must encourage the opposite. Banking is a personal business—taking people out of the equation—and failing to build organizational and personal trust—is a clear way to further commoditize the importance of business relationships. Failure of trust—especially the mutuality of such—also leads to non- accountability and the dangers of isolationism. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 16
  • 17. CLOSER TRUMPS When it comes to risk management, banks that diffuse risk awareness throughout their organizations will trump those that continue to compartmentalize such—namely, viewing risk (skills and awareness) as a product area or special expertise; rather than part and parcel of organizational culture. Bringing credit closer to the customer is not something to be feared. It should be embraced as part of the customer relationship process. Externalizing/outsourcing credit decisions simply does not make for better customer relationships, credit decisions or a sounder financial system. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 17
  • 18. CHANGE THE GAME A game changer of the future is to take down the silos of risk and re- introduce risk awareness into the competencies and behaviors of all those who should be bankers first and salespeople second. Relationship managers frequently receive more sales training today than they do credit training. But the problem is we are selling risk-inherent solutions in everything we do; and, not fully understanding this is why we can’t sell value—and, equally important, get paid for it. We must learn how to sell risk solutions by understanding how our products relate to the risk sensitivities of the client. This is a game changer—namely, sales and the sales process is not separate from risk awareness. Knowing when to sell flexibility—or not—is key to both increasing risk awareness and increased sales. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 18
  • 19. Embrace the competitive benefits of the blue waters of regulation COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 19
  • 20. BEYOND DEREGULATION If there is anything the financial crisis of 2007/2008 has taught us it is this; banks do not do well with de-regulation—or markets of open space. When it comes to strategy, banks seem to do much better positioning—differentiating—themselves in regulated rather than deregulated markets. In de-regulated markets, banks tend to follow each other—over the cliff if need be. This is a key cause of systemic risk—it is based in psychological behavior as much as market dynamics. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 20
  • 21. REGULATION TRUMPS Ideologically, like it or not, regulatory positioning will largely determine bank differentiation—namely, which spaces or arenas banks operate and compete in. Moreover, it is within those spaces banks face the requisite challenge of shifting from supply-mindedness to a world of demand scarcity and discrimination. Not all will succeed; however, differentiation will surface and systemic risk will be deterred through regulatory “inspired” differentiation. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 21
  • 22. CHANGE THE GAME Regulatory-driven differentiation is in our future. A game changer is not to primarily focus on regulatory arbitrage; but, instead in embracing those regulations that best allow you to practice and demonstrate your core competency—the areas where you can best employ your capital, for the longest period of time, without the threat of competition. Moreover, make sure your practices support the reasoning behind such regulations—as sustainable differentiation is helped—not hindered—by regulatory intervention. COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 22
  • 23. GAME CHANGERS 1. Change the focus of decision-making—put more trust in experience and intuition 2. Become a demand-obsessed financial organization 3. Become more like your customers—adopt their “best practices” 4.Become more like your customers—adopt their “best practices” 5. Embrace the competitive benefits of the blue waters of regulation COPYRIGHT 2011 FUTURE CHANGE MANAGEMENT LLC 23