Defining and measuring performance is necessary for financial institutions. To meet its strategic objectives, a bank or credit union must decide what it wants to achieve and evaluate its progress toward these goals.
Key performance indicators (KPIs) offer financial institutions a way to measure the success of their business objectives.
Table of Contents
Why financial institutions need key performance indicators
How banks and credit unions use benchmarking to decide on KPIs
Benefits of technology in establishing KPIs
KPIs are the numbers that banks use to measure performance in meeting their strategic goals and objectives. Clearly defining KPIs allows financial institutions to assess performance, boost profit, remain compliant with laws and regulations, increase consumer satisfaction, and manage risk.
Key performance indicators include:
Revenue, expenses, and operating profit: Financial KPIs are mainly determined by the revenue banks and credit unions bring in, the costs incurred, and their profit. At its most basic, profit is determined by subtracting expenses from revenue.
Consumer satisfaction with a financial institution: Banks and credit unions should also measure consumer satisfaction through KPIs such as consumer acquisition rate, consumer churn rate, and cross-sell ratios.
Compliance with laws and regulations: Understanding the key areas of compliance financial institutions need to address plays a vital role in their success. Noncompliance puts profits at risk through regulatory actions and fines. Some of the key metrics used to measure a bank or credit union’s compliance efforts include the number of findings and the number of days it takes to remediate findings.
The performance of individual employees and branches: When banks and credit unions regularly evaluate the performance of individual employees and branches, they ensure that everyone is working together to accomplish defined strategic goals. KPIs that measure the performance of employees or branches might include the completion of training programs, the turnaround time for loan applications, and the total number of processed transactions within a given period.
Key performance indicators measure quantifiable goals for financial institutions. When banks and credit unions set strategic objectives, they should implement a plan to achieve them. KPIs show the progress of FIs in reaching their goals.
KPIs measure strategic goals, but banks and credit unions must ensure their measurements align with objectives. FIs need to document the reasons for their KPIs.
Related: What Are Key Risk Indicators (KRIs)?
KPIs shouldn’t be chosen at random. Just because something is measurable doesn’t mean it’s valuable. For instance, a community bank may aim to increase its social media footprint by adding 50 new Facebook followers each month.
The question they need to ask first is why this is a goal.
Maybe they want to increase brand awareness. But why choose 50 new Facebook followers as the goal? Does research demonstrate that 50 new Facebook followers boost brand awareness? How does this goal tie into other strategic objectives for a financial institution?
Once a financial institution decides on its strategic objectives, KPIs hold the institution and its personnel accountable. KPIs must be monitored. First, evaluate each KPI to understand its importance and value as an indicator. Then, decide how often it will be monitored, who will monitor it, and the thresholds that require reporting.
Read also: Key Risk Indicators for Banks, Credit Unions and Other Financial Institutions
Executing a solid strategy means breaking down objectives and specifying how they will be achieved. Financial institutions can better monitor and assess their KPIs if they are clear about their goals and reasons for pursuing them.
Strategic objectives must be attainable and offer specific actions banks and credit unions can take to drive results. KPIs measure the goals that financial institutions set out in their strategic plans.
A financial institution's strategic goals are intended to increase profitability and customer satisfaction or decrease risk and the likelihood of compliance-related issues.
Some examples of strategic goals with measurable KPIs a bank or credit union may pursue include:
Assuming the above goals are achievable, a bank or credit union can implement KPIs to track progress toward a particular goal. For example, if a financial institution wants to open 100 new accounts per month, this is easy to track.
Related: How to Build a Strategic Plan That Evolves with Your Institution
Key performance indicators give institutions the ability to hold employees accountable. Reports need to be delivered to someone who has the power to shift direction or make changes if necessary so banks and credit unions can meet the strategic goals they set for themselves.
KPIs have no value if there is not someone at a financial institution who can move the needle and push projects forward.
KPIs measure progress toward a goal for an individual FI. But determining a strategy means looking both inward and outward. Every financial institution should benchmark itself against its peers.
From rate shopping to the FDIC’s peer reports, banks and credit unions should set goals and KPIs by first looking next door. It isn’t about copying another FI’s success but about leveraging intelligent insights that can work toward an institution’s competitive advantage.
For instance, an institution may conduct benchmarking and a community needs assessment and discover that many of its consumers live paycheck to paycheck and rely on payday loans when they experience a financial emergency. Banks and credit unions can charge more reasonable interest rates for short-term, unsecured loans, making them an attractive source of increased revenue.
Lacking benchmarks for peer institutions, banks and credit unions wander around in the dark in setting strategic goals. Once financial institutions possess the intelligence to understand the needs of their consumers, they can set goals to measure with key performance indicators.
Effectively utilizing KPIs requires FIs to first leverage the knowledge of the areas where their competitors have failed or succeeded.
With the many strategic goals that an institution could set for itself, going through the process of manually conducting intelligence on peer institutions to establish KPIs can be a time-consuming task.
Nrisk is a great partner in discovering what peer institutions are doing. With its call report feature, CFOs and banking leaders can quickly examine call report data from several peer institutions to compare with their own KPIs.
This feature allows banks and credit unions to make more informed choices in setting financial goals, considering the risks involved in any strategic pursuit. While Nrisk enables FIs to proactively manage risk and protect assets, it doubles as a powerful intelligence tool for financial institutions to explore strategic options, fostering more enlightened decision-making in setting KPIs at the board level.
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