Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Giving the Credit Union Direction

Strategic planning is a key tool for putting direction into the management of your credit union. While it is possible for a credit union to survive by focusing on operational excellence in areas like customer service and marketing, you will seldom see a credit union truly thrive without a clearly defined strategy. Strategic planning is a process that requires you to define the future direction of your organization. Without such a direction, you are likely to find your credit union drifting – staying afloat, possibly, but not really going anywhere. In strategic planning, we ask the question “Where do we want to go?”

We answer this big question by addressing the truly strategic issues in your business. Ultimately, these issues revolve around three more specific questions:

-What will we sell?

-To whom will we sell it?

-How do we beat (or better, avoid) competition?

At first blush, these questions may seem easy to answer. In reailty, many of the strategic issues you face as a credit union can be boiled down to one of these three, basic questions. For example, the easy answer to "what will we sell?" is "personal financial services". But how well does your credit union provide all of these services? Many credit unions will struggle to provide "one stop shopping" to their members - and then face escalating costs as they are required to add infrastructure which is only fractionally used. Perhaps there are some services we should provide - and others we should simply make available to our members through a strategic alliance with another organization? Which services should be self-performed - and which should be outsourced - is a truly strategic question for many credit unions.

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