How-to-standardize-your-credit-unions-operations-for-scalable-growth.png

How to standardize your credit union’s operations for scalable growth

Published: June 22, 2021
Share: Facebook LinkedIn Twitter

For an established credit union, you know it’s challenging to go from status-quo to scale-up. As much as you want to set aside time to be more strategic and productive, emails keep coming into your inbox, and piles of documents keep stacking up on your desk. Before you know it, you’re back to doing things the same old way. 

But as you position your credit union for long-term growth, you must make strategic decisions that impact both your organizational structure and your operational processes. The decisions you make as you scale will be determined by your long-term goals of course. Moving your credit union from the status quo to scale-up is a journey in which you’ll touch nearly every aspect of your organization, from how you operate to the culture you want to establish.

What exactly is a “scale-up”?

When your credit union already has an established service offering that fits the market you’re targeting and you have a business model that is generating a return on your investment, you’re ready to scale up. On the journey to scaling your credit union, one of the first things to focus on is your business operations. What you want to achieve is standardization across your processes and key workflows.

What should I standardize?

Start by standardizing your processes in these three areas:

  • Your Revenue Model. You’ve established that you have a service that is valuable to the market but to ensure you can scale, it’s time to standardize on the processes used to drive revenue for your organization and its members.

A big part of this includes standardizing your pricing strategy so that your staff and clients easily understand the value/price equation, and more importantly, so you have a predictable revenue model to drive growth. You’ll be much more efficient if your revenue model is standardized and can easily be replicated from project to project.

  • Your Onboarding Process. Whether you are bringing on new staff, or new members, having a standardized process will save you time and ensure a productive start to your engagement. The way you interact early on with a member, or a new employee is also important, as it reflects your brand and your culture. Do you have clear communication? Are you setting the right expectations for the relationship? Does everyone understand the goals or what success looks like? Following a consistent process will ensure a great start to all your staff and client relationships.
  • Your Business Process. In your organization, you do things every day to support your business operations like pay bills, issue invoices, process payroll, manage projects, communicate with members, etc. 

The more standardized these routine tasks are, the more efficient and scalable your credit union becomes. We are fortunate that tech can now play a key role in helping to automate some of the lower value, routine tasks that support your overall business operations, which can make a big difference in efficiency and your ability to scale. 

But adopting tech too fast, without really knowing how it supports specific processes can be frustrating. Let’s look at a framework for helping you standardize these key areas of your organization.

How do I standardize?

  • Document: It doesn’t matter how standardized your operation is if only one person knows the process—a common problem for smaller organizations where there are fewer employees. Start by writing down the steps for delivering each service you provide, and for each of the processes your credit union runs frequently. This establishes your workflow for each of these business operations. Get these workflows as simple as possible. Just the act of writing the steps down will start to help you identify inefficiencies or redundancies in these workflows. Are you entering member information twice? Are you printing and mailing documents that could be shared electronically? Are you waiting on approvals before you can complete a task? As you start to identify inefficiencies, technology can potentially be a solution to streamline and automate. But it all starts when you have your processes documented. Once you’ve mapped your workflows it will be clear where you need a human—and where you don’t.

Now that you have your ideal workflow mapped out, you can start down the path of optimizing to further drive your ability to scale. Automation and integration both play key roles in optimizing and standardizing your workflows.

  • Automate: Wherever possible, automate your low-value, repetitive tasks. Once you have a standard workflow mapped out, it is much easier to identify exactly what you need from either process improvements or potentially a technology solution. You can use tech to automate routine tasks like collecting documents from clients, paying bills, scheduling appointments, taking payments, managing projects, sending reminder emails, etc. You will avoid app overload by starting with a clear workflow roadmap to help you evaluate tech solutions.
  • Integrate: Does the tech in your workflow integrate? Your workflow will be much better optimized if the answer is yes. This is the future of technology, moving away from the closed suites, and building tech stacks that include best of breed products that integrate. A framework to think about this in your own business is to consider the categories of data you are collecting. Most common are your customer data, your financial data, and supporting documents associated with each segment. The systems that support these segments become your single source of truth. And the best tech stacks deliver integration with these key customer, financial, and document repositories. So, consider the tech you are using now to store this information, and consider integration capabilities in your evaluation of technology solutions to support your business workflows.

And there you have it – Document. Automate. Integrate. Repeat. Once you have this down, you’ll be well on your way to standardizing key components of your credit union in support of long-term growth.

Originally posted on CUInsight.com