A CEO on Leadership and Legacy

I received the following from a credit union CEO  reacting to recent examples of mega-mergers.  The credit union’s market approach is clear:

From the Credit Union’s Website 

Why eat at a local restaurant? Why support your local non-profit? Why help out a neighbor? Simple: you care about your community, get better service from people you know, and want to feel good about the way you spend money. At our credit union, you’re a member, an owner, and a participant in a local, not-for-profit financial cooperative. Our cards look pretty awesome, too.

His Comments On Mergers

While I’m saddened by the loss of credit unions in number, I also believe each CU must do what’s right for them.  However, because the reasons given for these recent mega-mergers are fairly boilerplate no matter the size, I suspect that $20b won’t be “enough.”

As a CEO of a smaller shop, the thing I find scratchy is the tendency of some larger shops to take an imperialist posture combined with hubris. As they say in parts of the south: You ain’t all that.

During a multi credit union event hosted locally,  a rep from a larger shop told one of my star employees, “you know, credit unions your size are going away.

Size Is Not What Members Seek

The thing is, a credit union at $20b is still a smallish bank. In my market, I have BOA, Wells, Chase, etc… Who cares what size you are – just don’t be a jerk.

I think the big shops need to get over themselves and, quite frankly, some little guys need to quit complaining about how hard things are.

My immigrant grandfather opened a restaurant 75 years ago and it’s still going strong. Business has always been tough! When people use that excuse, I always think that the real problem is a leader who can’t rise to the challenge rather than the challenge is too great. Ego won’t allow a leader to admit they might be the problem.

A Legacy, Not a Payday

Obviously, merger has also become a retirement plan for many…and that stinks. My goal: when I retire, pass the baton to the next gen…I’d rather have a legacy than a fat payday.

 

 

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