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Scenario
1
“This
has always been an excellent business. There have been very few
changes in key personnel and yet long-term customers are telling
me that our service levels are dropping. What do I need to do to
respond? This is a service industry and the competitive challenges
are enormous!”
(Divisional Director, Investment Bank)
An Excellence Audit survey that included executives, relationship
managers and key back office professional staff showed a clear gulf
in perceptions about what needed to change between key population
groups.
The
results showed that all three groups surveyed shared the same strong
“Ambition” to develop and grow relationships with key
customers.
The
Relationship Managers took most of the heat from unhappy customers
and blamed the decline in service standards on a perceived lack
of commitment from their back office colleagues. They saw it as
a “Talent” problem in the Back Office.
As
a relatively small (in headcount terms) but highly profitable division
of a global bank, the Division was increasingly reliant on the bank’s
operating systems, which were less flexible than the local systems
they had historically run. The daily grind of trying to service
the customer accounts was dispiriting for the back office support
teams. Consequently, they saw it as a mix of “Architecture”
and “Talent” problems, but the “Talent”
problem was with the Relationship Managers whose expectations were
unrealistic!
The
management team used the Excellence Audit results to expose the
underlying issues and to establish an improvement agenda that would
ease the growing frustration and tension between the three groups
surveyed. Changes to the aspects of the case processing system and
sequencing that they did control were made, and the cross-functional
working now necessary has built stronger relationships across the
Division. Reward and recognition was also modified to incentivise
collaborative behaviour along the key customer value streams.
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