Notice that Commerce is indeed a collection of 5's (best) and I's (worst). The bank was so successful because it had the wisdom to know the difference, to know where it should be winning and losing. Being worst in class on the things that were least important to its customers allowed it to be best in class at the things that were most important to them. That's the trick. You have to be bad in the service of great โ and you have to be very smart about which is which.
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Chapter One: Truth Number 1: You Canโt Be Good at Everything
โNotice what Commerce has done. It's worst in class on some service dimensions (rates and product mix) so that it can be best in class on others (hours and attitude). Bad in the service of great. It sounds simple, but the courage to choose low deposit rates and poor cross-sell performance seemed crazy alongside the desire to grow. These choices worked because being bad was not a missed opportunity, but rather was the fuel to create an exceptional service experience.
Notice that Commerce is indeed a collection of 5's (best) and I's (worst). The bank was so successful because it had the wisdom to know the difference, to know where it should be winning and losing. Being worst in class on the things that were least important to its customers allowed it to be best in class at the things that were most important to them. That's the trick. You have to be bad in the service of great โ and you have to be very smart about which is which.
How did Commerce handle selection? The bank literally needed fifteen seconds in an interview to know if someone would be a good fit. Within fifteen seconds, the Commerce interviewer could tell if prospective employees smiled in a resting state. Commerce Bank understood that most of us smile when provoked, but we spend most of our day with a more neutral or even negative expression on our face. A subset of human beings, however smiles as a default position. Since an eight-hour day at Commerce required eight hours of smiling, the company looked for people with this "smiley gene." Of course, first the bank had to get these happy people into the job interview. Commerce Bank decided to leverage its best asset for this task: a payroll already filled with happy people. Like any tribe, smilers are great at recognizing themselves in other people. And so Commerce distributed handfuls of laminated cards to new employees with a printed message inviting people to join the Commerce family. Itthen instructed new hires to hand out a card to anyone who gave them a great service experience. Literally anyone. Commerce told them โ whether it was a great toll booth operator or librarian or convenience store cashier. With one exception โ no one in the financial services industry, including another re- tail bank. The effort it took to deprogram these employees was too high, and they were likely to be too expensive, given the aptitude requirements of most banks and brokerages.
Chapter One: Truth Number 1: You Canโt Be Good at Everything
โNotice what Commerce has done. It's worst in class on some service dimensions (rates and product mix) so that it can be best in class on others (hours and attitude). Bad in the service of great. It sounds simple, but the courage to choose low deposit rates and poor cross-sell performance seemed crazy alongside the desire to grow. These choices worked because being bad was not a missed opportunity, but rather was the fuel to create an exceptional service experience.
How did Commerce handle selection? The bank literally needed fifteen seconds in an interview to know if someone would be a good fit. Within fifteen seconds, the Commerce interviewer could tell if prospective employees smiled in a resting state. Commerce Bank understood that most of us smile when provoked, but we spend most of our day with a more neutral or even negative expression on our face. A subset of human beings, however smiles as a default position. Since an eight-hour day at Commerce required eight hours of smiling, the company looked for people with this "smiley gene." Of course, first the bank had to get these happy people into the job interview. Commerce Bank decided to leverage its best asset for this task: a payroll already filled with happy people. Like any tribe, smilers are great at recognizing themselves in other people. And so Commerce distributed handfuls of laminated cards to new employees with a printed message inviting people to join the Commerce family. Itthen instructed new hires to hand out a card to anyone who gave them a great service experience. Literally anyone. Commerce told them โ whether it was a great toll booth operator or librarian or convenience store cashier. With one exception โ no one in the financial services industry, including another re- tail bank. The effort it took to deprogram these employees was too high, and they were likely to be too expensive, given the aptitude requirements of most banks and brokerages.