T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
271.1 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Aug 23 1991 10:59 | 8 |
| re .0:
Does Paymate actually cost DCU anything? Electronic transactions are cheaper
to process than paper ones. Does DCU pay Paymate or does Paymate pay DCU?
ATM transactions are cheaper than teller transactions. There was a fuss
at Citibank several years ago because they wanted to charge ordinary
customers for window transactions in order to encourage them to use ATMs.
|
271.2 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'M DCU and you're not. | Fri Aug 23 1991 11:08 | 12 |
|
RE: .1
Don't know who pays who. But if it isn't profitable to DCU it should
go. Also, it's what many would consider fairly low on the priority
list.
About the ATM cost, one would think they are cheaper. But I got the
distinct impression at the meeting Monday that may not be the case.
There are other costs associated with them. That's why I'd like DCU to
tell us the most cost efficient way of doing business with it.
|
271.3 | Cheques & statements | CALS::THACKERAY | | Fri Aug 23 1991 11:43 | 10 |
| I would like to get my cheques back. I'm sick and tired of trying to
remember what those cryptic entries are on the statement, if I can't
lay my hands instantly on my cheque stubs. If DCU are unwilling to send
cheques back, I want to see an extension on the statement for name of
payee and memos.
I dread having an audit, and having to *pay* DCU for copies of my own
bloody cheques.
Ray
|
271.4 | | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Aug 23 1991 11:50 | 5 |
| I don't see what all the fuss is about having to get the checks back.
In 7+ years with DCU and some time before that with other institutions
that didn't return the checks I have only been required to furnish a
cancelled check once. Copies of my carbons have proven sufficient for
the few other inquiries I've had.
|
271.5 | I Keep My Monthly Statements, Too! | CSC32::B_HARRISON | Bruce Harrison | Fri Aug 23 1991 14:29 | 5 |
|
I keep my monthly statements with my tax records. I haven't had to use
them, but I would think that having the carbons and the statements
would be fairly good proof that the checks had cleared.
|
271.6 | Carbon's aren't worth the paper they are printed on but you pay for them!!! | SSDEVO::RMCLEAN | | Fri Aug 23 1991 16:22 | 14 |
| > I keep my monthly statements with my tax records. I haven't had to use
> them, but I would think that having the carbons and the statements
> would be fairly good proof that the checks had cleared.
You gotta be kidding me!!! It may make you feel good but anyone wanting
to audit things wants to see the cancelled check! I can make out a check
make it payable to person B and the carbon can be made to show person A.
I had a case a few months ago where the oil company that received my check
did not imprint the correct amount on the bottom of the check. It cleared
for the wrong amount. I had to get a copy of the check to straighten out
the whole mess. No one wanted to believe the carbon (NOT even the DCU!!!).
|
271.7 | Rat Hole Alert! | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Fri Aug 23 1991 16:55 | 8 |
| Re .last few:
Okay, so cancelled checks are on your wish list. While I'm not as
insistent on having them each month, I agree that people sometimes need
to obtain them for a variety of reasons. DCU should work to make this
as easy for both the member and themselves as possible.
Let's move on to the next suggestion.
|
271.8 | Do you know _any_ CU which returns your drafts? | HELIX::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Mon Aug 26 1991 09:37 | 4 |
| With any credit union you CAN'T get your "drafts" back. Those are not
"checks", those are "drafts". There is a subtle difference.
- Vikas
|
271.9 | | JETSAM::WHEELER | Chickens have no bums | Tue Aug 27 1991 13:30 | 7 |
|
I'm a member of St. Mary's Credit Union in Marlboro Mass.
I get all my checks/drafts back...
/robinf
|
271.10 | Downsizing the DCU | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Tue Aug 27 1991 15:41 | 45 |
| We're in the '90s now, folks. The "good old days" are behind us.
DCU needs to adapt its methods of providing service to both the fiscal
realities (with or without the participation loan losses) and the
technology of the present. Here's how I see it:
� The VAST majority of transactions are deposits and withdrawls.
They could as easily be done through ATMs as at teller windows.
ATMs have the dual advantage of being available 24 hours a day
and nearly everywhere.
� A second large class of transactions are transfers from one
sub-account to another (e.g. RSVP to checking). To the extent
that DCU's Easy Touch is available, these can be done without
teller intervention.
� Many the remaining transactions (wire transfers, et al) could be
handled by a human teller at the end of a telephone. This could be
an additional Easy Touch option (after one has entered both the
account number and PID) during banking hours.
� The remaining transactions still require human interface, though
many could be handled by mail. (Submitting/returning paperwork,
for example -- my second auto loan with SAC FCU was handled
ENTIRELY by mail.)
Given the above, the excessive overhead of DCU's 30+ branches could be
reduced significantly. Here are my suggestions:
1. Consolidate branches to the point where there is one per existing
geography. I'd leave one each at MRO, MLO, & ZKO.
2. Either install a DCU ATM in place of each closed branch or get out
of the ATM business entirely. The savings from #1 should be able
to subsidize free (or at least cheaper) CIRRUS ATM transactions.
3. Get back into the "circuit rider" mode of operation, similar to
both MetPay and Petty Cash. DCU employees would have office hours
at each location (between one and three times a week, depending on
the need) at which they could perform paper-handling transactions.
Either a laptop computer or arranging a VT200 for connection to DCU
at each location would be helpful.
4. The mail still goes through. Use it! That puts all DCU members
on the same footing and is MUCH CHEAPER than branch overhead.
|
271.11 | Easy Touch hole... | POBOX::KAPLOW | Set the WAYBACK machine for 1982 | Tue Aug 27 1991 18:20 | 7 |
| re: .10
The one transaction I need to do most often, Easy Touch will not
handle: specifically transfering money from my account to my
wife's account. I have to call and ask a human to do this each
time it is necessary (too often, if you ask me :-(). Obviously,
the solution to this problem is to fix Easy Touch...
|
271.12 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Aug 28 1991 12:02 | 8 |
| re .10:
If you eliminate DCU branches *and* DCU ATMs, how are we supposed to deposit
checks? You can't make a DCU deposit at J. Random ATM, can you? Also, the
only reason I bank at DCU is the convenience of having it at work. If there
weren't even an ATM here, I'd bank elsewhere. I use human tellers when it's
faster (e.g. cashing checks when the line's short), but I could live with the
extra trouble of using an ATM all the time.
|
271.13 | | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Wed Aug 28 1991 12:18 | 23 |
| Re .12:
> If you eliminate DCU branches *and* DCU ATMs, how are we supposed to
> deposit checks? You can't make a DCU deposit at J. Random ATM, can
> you?
That depends... A number of smaller banks have hooked in to BayBank's
X-Press 24 system such that deposits can be made anywhere. DCU could
do likewise. DCU might have to cut special deals with financial
institutions in the other states in which it has members (or more
simply with CIRRUS and/or PLUS) to allow deposits and transfers in
addition to withdrawls and balance inquiries. I still believe it can
be done -- and for MUCH less money than keeping all 30+ branches open.
> Also, the only reason I bank at DCU is the convenience of having it at
> work. If there weren't even an ATM here, I'd bank elsewhere. I use
> human tellers when it's faster (e.g. cashing checks when the line's
> short), but I could live with the extra trouble of using an ATM all the
> time.
I *do* think that closed branches should be replaced by ATMs. If DCU
were to get out of the ATM business, then a local bank's ATM (such as
an X-Press 24 machine) should be installed and serviced.
|
271.14 | I wouldn't bank by mail | BROKE::LERNER | Cyndi Bliss NUO1-1/B09 264-0583 | Wed Aug 28 1991 13:06 | 30 |
| re .10
I wouldn't trust the US post office to actually deliver the mail
either.
When I was an undergraduate, I had a DCU account (complements of a
summer job), and I would do deposits by mail. I stopped when the
DCU deposited the money to the wrong account. They never mailed me
the receipt for the deposit (probably a keying error, and the
receipt would have been mailed to the owner of the account where the
money actually went). Two months after I had mailed the deposit,
I went to each of the people who had written me the checks that I had
deposited to find out if the checks had cleared. Only then did it
become apparent what had happened. After I got copies of the cancelled
checks the DCU credited my account. It was a real pain.
However the real reason I no longer use the post office for important
things stems from my experience trying to get a mortgage. Because my
husband had worked less than a year at the time, we had to have his
graduate school transcripts sent to the DCU. Boston University sent
them twice. The DCU never got them. At the time I was no sure whether
it was BU, US Mail, or the DCU that was having the problem. More
recently, I sent a letter to investor services (because to get an
official explanation of anything, you need an official letter). Again
the letter never got there. Same post office (Maynard), different PO
box. As a result of my experiences, I would say banking by mail for
transactions which require people and paper is not a reasonable option.
Just my $.02
-Cyndi
|
271.15 | US Mail - not the problem | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:26 | 21 |
| re .14
I do a lot of banking by mail, and have done for 25 years. I've never had
US mail transaction messed up or lost. (Yet. One shouldn't talk like that!)
I have, however, had a similar experience with sending documents to DCU.
When we applied for a mortgage a few years ago, DCU requested all kinds
of documents, including things like reports on student loans. Weeks and
weeks went by, and DCU kept saying out application couldn't be approved
because they didn't have the necessary information.
We finally gave up on them and went with a commercial mortgage provider
(which, incidentally, was FAR easier to deal with, and required far
fewer documents in the first place).
After we'd closed with the commercial outfit, DCU finally found the
documents -- it had been an internal screw-up at DCU, not the postal
service.
I believe your deposit might have gone to the wrong account. It's hard
to see why the US post office should take the blame, though.
|
271.16 | Standard excuse? | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'M DCU and you're not. | Wed Aug 28 1991 17:49 | 9 |
|
RE: post office
I agree with .15. Everytime something gets lost, people blame it on
the mail. It's easy right? While the mail occassionally does get
misdirected, probably 99.99% of it gets delivered correctly. It usually
gets lost in the shuffle at the receiving end. BTW, there are no
postal workers in my family... :-)
|
271.17 | | AURORA::MACDONALD | | Thu Aug 29 1991 10:08 | 10 |
|
Re: .16
Well I hope it is at least 99.99% because since the U.S. Postal
Service handles such a volume of mail that being 99.99% accurate
would mean that they would still lose 200 pieces of mail every
hour!
Steve
|
271.18 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | What time is it? QUITING TIME! | Thu Aug 29 1991 10:47 | 4 |
| The USPS advertises that it moves 500 Million items a day...
q
|
271.19 | Stirring the Pot... | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Wed Sep 04 1991 18:10 | 55 |
| In .10, I proposed a SERIOUS consolidation of branches (replacing them
with ATMs, METPAY-style "circuit riders", and improved EasyTouch and
bank-by-mail services). Here's a bit of "from the hip" analysis.
My gut feel (reinforced by the DCU's financial statement, which says
personnel costs ran about $6M last year) is that the typical small
branch has three employees and an annual budget around $150K. With 250
business days, that's $600/day divided by however many transactions
they perform (which is probably less than a hundred). That calculates
out to $6/transaction or MORE!
DCU has over 30 branches. I'd like to eliminate (over the course of a
year) 20 of them. If 1 person (from each 3-person branch to be closed)
is retained to provide for "circuit riders" and ATM servicers, then the
potential personnel savings would run about $2M per year (40 x $50K).
That would be offset by the cost of new ATMs at $25K each, plus upkeep.
Fees generated about $1M last year. The new fee structure is probably
intended to raise another $1M. Branch closings could save twice that.
Meanwhile, back at PKO5, SERIOUS improvement to DCU's ability to
provide telephone and mail service is needed. I'd suggest dedicating
people as bank-by-mail tellers (I suspect mail transactions are handled
in an ad-hoc fashion at the moment) and adopting a policy of providing
a postage-free business reply envelope with each receipt, so DCU bears
the cost of postage both ways. EasyTouch should be upgraded to allow
inter-account transfers (with some kind of verification to assure the
destination account is the one intended) and the option of speaking to
a human (during business hours) after establishing one's identity.
<Rat-hole Alert!>
As I was out for my evening constitutional, it struck me that what
REALLY needs to change at DCU (even more than reducing costs) is the
ATTITUDE of its middle management. Why should I put my hard-earned
money into a "credit union" (and I use the term loosely) that doesn't
give a damn whether I do business there?
How about providing some incentives to DCU's management to care? For
instance, how about docking each manager $50 (or 5%, whichever is
greater) for each active account that's closed. To be fair, such
incentives should be also provided on the new accounts/products side
(payable after the account has been active for a minimum period). I'll
bet THAT would get the attention of the often-nameless managers whose
labrynthine rules make dealing with the DCU so difficult.
Before the hate mail starts, I should say that I'm not picking on
managers in general (I *am* one). DCU has a SERIOUS attitude problem,
and it's not the tellers who are at fault. The BoD owns the problem,
but has taken no visible action toward fixing it. The new President is
an unknown entity, but at least he hasn't contributed to the problem.
That leaves DCU's middle managers to carry the ball. From what I've
seen over the past 4� years, DCU's middle management is as firmly
entrenched in the current mode of operation as the BoD.
THAT MUST CHANGE.
|
271.20 | | DECSIM::GILLETT | And you may ask yourself, 'How do I work this?' | Wed Sep 04 1991 19:51 | 26 |
| re: .19
closings -
I tend to agree with you on the branch closing issue, but how do
you choose which branches to hit (aside from the obvious
duplication)? You could have one of those "base closing"
attitudes to overcome...you can close any branch you want as long
as it's not mine. How would you proceed?
attitudes -
There it is folks - the number two issue making everybody run for
another bank. I get treated like crap from everybody from the
teller's that won't even say "howdy" and right up the line. The
"Bank of Digital" attitude that seems to make me a lesser person
than they has got to go. If the board had apologized for the
recent bad investments I feel that many people would be more
receptive to them. If the bank officials and employees treated
us all with a little common respect (something that is,
admittedly hard to find on the East Coast he writes using his
best midwestern born-in-ohio accent :-) ), people would be
staying. We might still be pretty miffed about stuff, but we
would certainly be more tolerant.
The fees were a bad idea. The attitude and "shop around if you
can't pay the rent"-style of dealing with MEMBERS (not CUSTOMERS,
get it yet guys?) has really got to change.
|
271.21 | | GUFFAW::GRANSEWICZ | I'M DCU and you're not. | Wed Sep 04 1991 21:07 | 24 |
|
RE: closings & costs
I'd have to see real figures before I'd touch that with a 10 foot pole.
When DCU puts a branch in a location they first determine whether that
branch will be profitable. So these branches should be a net GAIN for
DCU. DCU's crying about so many branches is baloney IMO. Sure, some
could go but 20 seems pretty high.
IMO, DCU cutbacks should be in the area of all these peripheral
"services" that do nothing but add departments at headquarters to
administer them. Get back to the BASICS and leave blender insurance
to somebody else.
RE: attitudes
I've witnessed both extremes. I've had DCU employees bend over
backwards to help and I've had a branch manager tell me to take my
business elsewhere when I wasn't allowed to do a transaction that I'd
done several times before. IMO attitudes start at the TOP. And the
top of this credit union isn't the middle management. Maybe DCU
employees are just as miffed with the current state of the credit
union? After all, they can join too.
|
271.22 | | OAXCEL::KAUFMANN | Bright at midnight, dark at noon | Thu Sep 05 1991 16:48 | 4 |
| I heard the PKO3 branch will close down on September 20. This branch
is located next to the cafeteria.
Bo
|
271.23 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Mon Sep 09 1991 13:02 | 13 |
| re .19
I suspect the branch in ZKO does quite a bit more than 100
transactions per day... But if there are branches which do
fewer, perhaps it would be better to either close them,
of have the staffs of two nearby branches operate one
in the morning, and then move to the other for the afternoon...
About attitudes: I have found the manager of the ZKO branch
to be most helpful and reasonable in the few times I had
to deal with her...
Tom_K
|