Customer Engagement

Inspire a Customer-Centric Culture from the Top Down

5 mins read
June 13, 2019
By
Total Expert

The strongest organizations keep people at the center of everything they do and value their trust highly.

Leading financial services organizations understand that money enables people to accomplish their dreams, and their role is to enable that journey. Building confidence and trust through strong customer relationships is foundational to keeping those customers in your flywheel.

So what does that look like day to day? It involves articulating clear values and investing in systems that make life easier for all stakeholders. Here are four things financial services leaders can do to inspire a customer-centric culture from the top down.

1. Articulate and Share Your Values

Lay out your organization’s principles. Take a hard look at the core values you’ve outlined and make sure your vision is aligned within the leadership team before assessing how you’re working as an organization.

Your company values are important: these are the principles that guide who you hire and how they’ll make decisions each day. If your customers aren’t already at the center of your vision and your mission, rewrite your mission statement and values so that they match your philosophy.

Why bother writing this out? If you don’t hold customer experience at the center of what you do in principle, there’s no way it’ll happen in practice.

2. Give Your Relationship Managers What They Need

It’s important to anticipate, educate and advise your customers to keep them in your marketing flywheel. The same can be said of your relationship managers. You should be able to anticipate what they’ll need, educate them on what’s available and advise them when the opportunities arise.

To anticipate the needs of your relationship managers, you need to have a clear picture of their motivations, which tend to be one of these:

  1. Time. Relationship managers crave efficiency.
  2. Money. Nothing is as motivating as a win since they generate revenue and commissions.

Understanding how your relationship managers approach their workday will help you give them the materials they need to succeed. Studies suggest that positivity and negativity are contagious, with the ability to impact an employee’s work and interactions with customers. In short, happy relationship managers make happy customers.

3. Incentivize and Recognize Employee Achievement

As a leader in a customer-centric organization, it’s your job to listen and to give advice. But you also need to motivate your team by incentivizing and recognizing their achievements.

Make listening and advising a regular part of your schedule. This may be wrapped into the monthly conference call that brings everyone up to speed on new collateral and technology.

These calls are also an opportunity to reinforce positive behaviors, connect with your employees and connect employees to each other.

Take this as a chance to:

  • Celebrate wins from top producers and invite them to share winning strategies.
  • Find out what’s generating actions or positive feedback from customers.
  • Learn what tools or support your relationship managers need.
  • Highlight those who are successfully building strong personal brands within the enterprise system.

Position your top producers as role models within the organization. Celebrate high achievers whose work you’d like to see the team emulate and always emphasize the importance of keeping customer relationships at the center of your work.

4. Understand Your Customer Experience Firsthand

At this point in the process of shaping a customer-centric organization, it’s time to test the system and adopt a new viewpoint. This process will provide you with surprising opportunities to build relationships and gain insight into your customers’ experience. And you should take the time to get to know the customer experience at all levels.

There are two easy ways to do this:

  1. Go for a ride-along. Sit alongside or observe relationship managers at work to observe their challenges and consider how the organization can support them. Trey Rigdon at Movement Mortgage encourages executives to have empathy. He says, “We’re in business because relationship managers have hard jobs.” Look for ways to serve your relationship managers that also make their jobs easier.
  2. Take your experience for a test drive. One of the best ways for leadership to understand where there’s room for improvement is to test-drive your organization’s experience. Apply for a loan or open a checking account through your own organization to get a sense of what it’s like for customers from A to Z.

From either side of the relationship manager’s desk, you should walk away with an answer to the question, “How hard is it to apply for or access our products and services?” Sure, you have marketing administrators and relationship managers working hard every day, but are you satisfied with the customer experience your team provides today?

Build Pride in Your Brand’s Commitment to Customers

Your goal is to build a brand that inspires loyalty and trust. In order to do that your financial brand must give customers a great experience.

At the end of this process, everyone from leadership on down should be able to articulate your company’s values and see how they’re being communicated internally and externally. Your RMs should feel empowered by the resources in their hands and know how customers are experiencing these values in action.

Putting words into practice is no small task, but with strong communication among the people at the center of this system, your team will excel and your customers will not only know your brand but also trust it.

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Forming authentic relationships has always been the competitive edge for smaller lenders. And as the FinServ world has become more tech-driven and digital-first, credit unions and community banks have only leaned further into this powerful differentiator. But we’re seeing an interesting trend among some of the most successful small- to mid-market lenders: They’re recognizing that tech-enabled engagement is no longer mutually exclusive to genuine human connections. They’ve created powerful data-driven strategies that make it easier for them to build good, old-fashioned personal relationships.

These forward-thinking lenders are realizing that their smaller size is actually an advantage in implementing “big data” tools and strategies. We’re seeing credit unions and community banks deploy Total Expert Customer Intelligence in a matter of weeks and start realizing value in as little as 90 days, building a loyalty- and revenue-generating engine that fuels itself.

But how are they doing it in a financial landscape where consumers have more choices and competitors aren’t just in the building across the street?

Even close borrower relationships are growing more complex

Small- to mid-market lenders have been historically hesitant to embrace tech-powered, data-driven strategies because there was a concern that it would dehumanize their connections with borrowers. Which is understandable as community banks and credit unions have built their brands and their reputations on their ability to forge honest, transparent relationships—getting to know their customers and members in ways bigger lenders could only dream of.

But even those 1:1 borrower connections are now digital-first, multi-channel relationships. Those increasingly complex relationships involve exponentially more data, information, preferences, and intent signals. A common concern we hear among smaller lenders runs along the lines of, “We don’t have enough data for a ‘Big Data’ strategy.” But the truth is that even the smallest credit unions and community banks are swimming (and sometimes drowning) in a pool of tremendously valuable data.

Borrowers expect to feel “known” across every channel; they want the same feeling of 1:1 personalization at every touchpoint. And it’s becoming a genuine challenge for smaller lenders to juggle all the information and orchestrate these hyper-personalized omnichannel experiences.

Using Customer Intelligence + marketing automation to enhance personal borrower relationships

More and more credit unions and community banks are turning to data-driven, tech-enabled strategies to complement—not replace—their personal relationships with borrowers. We’ve seen smaller lenders have tremendous success with Customer Intelligence and our dynamic, automated Journeys because they:

  • Surface intent signals in real time: Customer Intelligence surfaces critical intent signals as they happen, giving LOs the superpower of knowing what borrowers and homeowners need when they need it.
  • Highlight life events as critical engagement opportunities: Customer Intelligence helps smaller lenders go beyond traditional intent signals, recognizing key life events or milestones (graduating, getting married, starting a family, changing careers, retiring, etc.) that signal shifting financial goals and new borrowing needs. This gives your LOs natural opportunities to reach out with helpful, personalized guidance.
  • Enable personalized outreach at scale and speed: Credit unions and community banks are using Total Expert Journeys and other automation capabilities to help their LOs stay on top of all of these valuable Customer Intelligence signals. Built-in triggers and automated Journeys enable LOs to magically engage at just the right time—across their full roster of customers and prospects.

Smaller lenders are leveraging Total Expert’s digital toolset to help them show up for borrowers when it matters most—across every and all channels—to give them the feeling they want most: a trusted financial advisor who understands their financial needs and goals, providing proactive support and guidance to help deliver the best possible outcome.

Measuring time-to-value in weeks, not years

Another major misconception among credit unions and community banks is that they don’t have the resources to manage this kind of automated, Customer Intelligence-powered strategy.  

It’s true that smaller lenders likely don’t have large internal teams of data analysts (if any). But Total Expert has led the charge in democratizing access to leading-edge data analytics tools and capabilities. We’ve designed Customer Intelligence and Journeys to be easy to deploy and quick and intuitive to set up.

The smaller size of most credit unions and community banks works to their advantage here. We consistently see these customers go live and start seeing measurable value with Customer Intelligence in as little as eight weeks because they’re able to implement, build, test, and launch faster than larger lenders that have more layers of reviews and approvals.

Smaller lenders driving big value: Customer Intelligence case studies

Dart Bank

  • Customer Intelligence in action: Dart Bank uses Customer Intelligence to surface life events and intent signals in real time, enabling LOs to engage members with proactive, personalized support across channels.
  • Driving measurable value: In just six months, Dart Bank drove an additional $48 million in funded loans—all by connecting with borrowers at the right moments of opportunity.

Tucson Federal Credit Union (TFCU)

  • Customer Intelligence in action: TFCU adopted Total Expert Journeys + Customer Intelligence to automate workflows, unify member data, and personalize communications; reducing manual work (e.g., uploading data daily) and streamlining email campaigns.
  • Driving measurable value: Open rates now exceed industry benchmarks (25–26%), and click‐through rates have improved. Campaign build times dropped from weeks to minutes.

Family Savings Credit Union

  • Customer Intelligence in action: Family Savings Credit Union moved from generic, outsourced marketing to using Total Expert Journeys, personalized messaging across channels, and better data visibility internally (bringing together core banking data, email, etc.), enabling them to send more strategic and relevant communications.
  • Driving measurable value: By acting on these insights, Family Savings Credit Union has increased retention and preserved the strong member relationships that fuel long-term success.

Horicon Bank

  • Customer Intelligence in action: Horicon created a Data Insights department, deployed Total Expert for centralized CRM/marketing automation, enabling more intentional targeting and personalized communications, letting staff have visibility into customer behavior across branches and channels.
  • Driving measurable value: The bank is now orchestrating timely, personalized borrower outreach at scale—transforming digital signals into relationship-building opportunities that strengthen loyalty.

Tech- and data-driven strategies have proven over and over that they have the ability to help deepen personal relationships for smaller credit unions and community banks. Our customers are proving that size doesn’t have to be a barrier. It can be an advantage that allows organizations to move quickly, leverage powerful tools like Customer Intelligence, and deliver authentic, personalized experiences at scale.

Learn more about Customer Intelligence and how it can drive consistent growth by enhancing your member and customer relationships.

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Change is the one constant in financial services, but the way we respond to it separates the leaders from the pack. The newly signed Homebuyer Privacy Protection Act (HPPA)—taking effect in March 2026—is a shift in how lenders can access and use consumer credit data. However, while some may view this as another regulatory headache, the reality is far more encouraging: it’s an opportunity to raise the bar on trust, transparency, and customer experience.  It’s another validation of our “Customer for Life” strategy.

This isn’t about dodging restrictions. It’s about recognizing that the playbook for winning customers is evolving—and those who embrace that evolution will come out stronger.

What’s changing?

Under the HPPA, credit bureaus can no longer sell a consumer’s credit file unless the lender meets one of a few narrow conditions:

  • Originated the consumer's current mortgage
  • Service the consumer's current mortgage
  • Obtained clear, documented consent from the consumer
  • As a bank or credit union, maintain an active account for that consumer

There’s even a GAO study on the way, examining how trigger-lead solicitations via text messaging impact consumers—a clear sign regulators are watching the fine line between engagement and harassment.

For lenders who have long relied on trigger leads, this represents a fundamental shift. But for institutions that have invested in building relationships the right way, this is good news.

What this means for lenders

The HPPA shuts the door on spray-and-pray solicitation tactics. But it opens the door wider for lenders who want to compete on trust and relationship strength. Specifically, it creates new opportunities to:

  • Deepen existing customer relationships with proactive, personalized engagement.
  • Capture consent earlier in the journey, before borrowers get lost in a flood of noise.
  • Differentiate in a less crowded, more consumer-friendly marketplace where trust is a true competitive advantage.

The lenders who lean in here will win—not because they shouted the loudest, but because they earned the right to stay connected.

Why this isn’t just another regulatory headache

Consumers have been saying it for years: the barrage of calls, texts, and emails after a mortgage application is exhausting. Some borrowers receive 100+ solicitations within 24 hours. That doesn’t build confidence—it erodes it. And we know this is not how our TE customers run their business.

HPPA represents a rare alignment of regulators, consumer advocates, and lenders themselves. It clears away predatory noise, improves the homebuying experience, and rewards lenders who put relationships at the center of their strategy.

As our Founder & CEO Joe Welu often reminds us, “Trust is the currency of modern financial services.” This law is an accelerant for lenders who understand that principle.

How we're going to help you thrive in a post-HPPA world

We’re not sitting on the sidelines waiting to see how this plays out. Our platform was purpose-built to help lenders engage customers in a way that’s personal, compliant, and built to last. Here’s how we’re making sure you’re ready for March 2026:

  • Proactive guidance: Our mortgage and tech experts are already helping lenders adjust monitoring practices, so they stay compliant without losing momentum.
  • Expand Customer Intelligence: We’re finalizing new capabilities to drive increased awareness and enrichment of your relationships, including expanding CI to all three bureaus, and streamlining our credit improvement alert.
  • Investments in consent: Upgraded features coming soon to capture and respect consumer consent in clear, frictionless ways—including through our ecosystem partnerships.

This isn’t a band-aid or a reaction; it’s an evolution of how modern lenders build sustainable engagement to develop customers for life.

Bottom line: this isn’t a roadblock—it’s an opportunity

Every regulatory change comes with friction. But HPPA isn’t just about compliance—it’s about clarity. It’s about stripping away noise and giving lenders who prioritize relationships a stage to shine.

The lenders who thrive in this new environment won’t be the ones chasing trigger leads. They’ll be the ones investing in trusted, personalized engagement—from first touch through every financial milestone.

And that’s exactly what Total Expert was built to help you do: navigate the shifts, build lifelong trust, and continue winning customers for life.

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