T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
739.1 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Tue Jan 18 1994 16:35 | 10 |
|
Re: .0
Well, it is CRYSTAL clear to me where my votes will go. The
basenote here is completely in line with my thinking: Profit
is important, but not before people.
Thank you!
Steve
|
739.2 | Some reasons why I'm running | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT, Unix a future page from history | Tue Jan 18 1994 18:22 | 39 |
| Re .1
Your note is appreciated.
For myself I decided I really had to run this year. Too many people
were saying to me things like:
"You know Dave this DCU is a joke. My wife is in xxx credit union.
We compared the rates for loans with the DCU. DCU's were mostly
higher. I no longer keep much money in the DCU either."
I've heard several variations on this. I believe that the above is
true because the credit union is being taken in totally the wrong
direction. The DCU management under the direction of the current board
seem to be steering the credit union towards a fee based institution
where you have to have a complex relationship with it.
It is my belief that most people don't want the above. What they want
is the ability to get loans at better rates than they can get elsewhere
and get a bit more on savings than they could get at a local bank.
This should be possible. The credit union, unlike a bank, does not pay
taxes. It is also fairly heavily indirectly subsidized by Digital
through the use of Digital real estate. With that sort of advantage,
and a membership that has an EXTREMELY low level of loan defaults the
credit union should be able to be very competitive. But it is not.
The focus is all on gaining short term profits and using the
"Relationship BANKING" (note the name) concept to artifically decide who
should and should not be members.
I'd like to see a direction change.
- Basic Services for Free
- Encouragement to use the credit union through offering rates and
services that are better than those obtainable elsewhere
- Listen to the membership. No complicated fee structure.
In this election there will be a choice.
Dave
|
739.3 | I want to make a difference... | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Jan 18 1994 20:39 | 4 |
| Yes, this will be a no-brainer for me too. I just hope I can get the
word out to enough people to make a difference.
Bob
|
739.4 | Ditto!! | POCUS::OHARA | Reverend Middleware | Tue Jan 18 1994 21:24 | 0 |
739.5 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Jan 19 1994 10:29 | 9 |
| �What they want
� is the ability to get loans at better rates than they can get elsewhere
� and get a bit more on savings than they could get at a local bank.
I want that too and am willing to put my money behind it. It seems to
me there are some people out there that want all the benefits yet who
only want to keep enough in the credit union to cash a check. This is
a co-operative. You have to put something in to get something out. In
my mind, $5 just doesn't cut it.
|
739.6 | Thanks for the statement | CADSYS::RITCHIE | Gotta love log homes | Wed Jan 19 1994 10:39 | 6 |
| to the authors of .0. Please post permission for this statement to be forwarded
to DCU membership.
Thanks.
Elaine
|
739.7 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Wed Jan 19 1994 11:01 | 23 |
|
Re: .5
> I want that too and am willing to put my money behind it. It seems to
> me there are some people out there that want all the benefits yet who
> only want to keep enough in the credit union to cash a check. This is
> a co-operative. You have to put something in to get something out. In
> my mind, $5 just doesn't cut it.
I would bet if we got our hands on the data we'd find that the number of
persons who do this is very small.
My suspicion is that for the most part the low balances are cases
where persons have only a few hundred or so in there, *because* they
don't have the income to support building up substantial savings. It is
just *because* this is a co-operative that I don't want to see them
hurt. The last thing people on the lower end of the income spectrum
need is another nickel or dime yanked out of their pocket. I trust
that as they get experience and skills and their income grows that
they'll be saving and contributing as well.
Steve
|
739.8 | Permission granted to forward .0 far and wide | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT, Unix a future page from history | Wed Jan 19 1994 11:20 | 25 |
|
Re:
>to the authors of .0. Please post permission for this statement to be forwarded
>to DCU membership.
Actually you don't need permission to extract notes and forward them.
But that said. We give full permission to anybody to extract and
forward .0. Please do so if you know of people who may be interested in
it.
Regarding people with $5 savings accounts and nothing else. It is my
contention that the reason these people don't have more savings or a
loan is because DCU isn't currently offering competitive services.
Instead it is more interested in driving members and their savings away
to decrease the asset line and hence improve the capital ratio. I think
this is plain wrong. If DCU offered services these $5 members wanted
they'd begin to use the credit union again. It is DCU's fault these
people have reduced their accounts to minimum, not the members fault.
Just maybe these $5 members are hanging on in the hope that they can
have an impact in the next election and help steer the credit union in
a direction that they'd like to see.
Dave
|
739.9 | | SPECXN::WITHERS | Bob Withers | Wed Jan 19 1994 11:51 | 43 |
| My point to Ms. Ross and Mssrs. Gransewicz and Kinzleman are that the DCU is
charging me (in auto deposit and exhorbitant minimum balances) what I can get
for (virtually) free at other financial institutions. If the DCU wants to
reward me for my relationship status, give me something better (such as a �%
bonus on savings or discount on loans.)
I joined the DCU for its very egalitarian nature (as with the other CUs I have
belonged to) undestanding that the multiple shares are for financial management
and that there would be people who use the CU as a check cashing service.
That's fine.
The BOD and President have changed the terms of our mutual financial
relationship without my consent and I will work for its reinstatementy -- or go
elsewhere.
I know who I'm voting for next time around.
BobW
>================================================================================
>Note 739.9 Joint Statement of BoD Candidates (see reply .8) 9 of 9
>SMAUG::GARROD "From VMS -> NT, Unix a future page from history" 25 lines 19-
>JAN-1994 11:20
>--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> -< Permission granted to forward .0 far and wide >-
>
> Regarding people with $5 savings accounts and nothing else. It is my
> contention that the reason these people don't have more savings or a
> loan is because DCU isn't currently offering competitive services.
> Instead it is more interested in driving members and their savings away
> to decrease the asset line and hence improve the capital ratio. I think
> this is plain wrong. If DCU offered services these $5 members wanted
> they'd begin to use the credit union again. It is DCU's fault these
> people have reduced their accounts to minimum, not the members fault.
>
> Just maybe these $5 members are hanging on in the hope that they can
> have an impact in the next election and help steer the credit union in
> a direction that they'd like to see.
>
> Dave
>
>
>
|
739.11 | DCU direction reflects ATTITUDE | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | | Wed Jan 19 1994 12:23 | 56 |
|
RE: $5 accounts
From where I sit, I see NO REASON that DCU should not be the FIRST and the
BEST choice for ALL current and eligible DCU members. The advantages
that DCU has are HUGE: no taxes, free facilities (branches = no rent,
HQ is owned), excellent sponsor support and a membership base that most
CUs dream of. With all these advantages, I must ask why do so many
members, and potential members, choose not to do their business with
DCU. I must come to the conclusion that the main problem does NOT lie with
the members, but with DCU itself. After all, people generally do what
is in their own financial best interest.
A major flaw is that we are comparing ourselves to banks, and thus
pricing ourselves like a bank. When members hear or shop around and
see that their credit union is roughly the same, they ask themselves
"Where is all the benefit of membership?". DCU is a credit union and
must act as a credit union, otherwise we loose a VERY important
differentiating factor.
I have watched being implemented (and tried to fight against) what I
consider a very dangerous approach to doing business: namely that you
can pick and choose your customers and treat some better than others.
This is not only an approach, but an attitude. I believe it is the
beginning of the road to an "upscale" credit union where the some
members are more equal than others. It leads to what I consider absurd
pricing decisions based on how much money you have, not whether the
credit union can offer a service or product to a member and they can
BOTH be better off in the end.
A prime example is this is our credit card offering. The profits to be
made in this area are huge. I would venture a guess and say that most
DCU members either have cards or qualify for them. Now, shouldn't the
credit union be working to make sure that EVERY DCU has a DCU card and
uses it? Breakeven for people who don't carry a balance is
around $2000 in charges a year. But with so many free cards out there,
as well as many cards now offering rebates, etc., our card is being
given free to those that are "relationship members" whether they use
them or not. So a potential gain for both the member and DCU is
treated as a giveaway goodie. The amount the credit union takes in in
annual fees is not that much. Is it worth all the lost business and
potential income (from balances and interchange income) to maintain it
as a goodie for those members that meet DCU's marketing profile??? The
result is that many DCU members take their credit card business
elsewhere, DCU loses, and every other member loses also, because lost
income hurts the entire cooperative.
I think Steve said it best, DCU must be about PEOPLE, not profits.
Offer the membership (the ENTIRE membership!) services like a credit
union and DCU won't have time to worry about petty checking account
fees. If I had to choose, I would choose a larger credit union that
served all of its members but made slightly less than we knew we could
over a credit union that tries to cull out the membership until only
"profitable" members remain who are squeezed for as much as can be gotten.
We need EVERYBODY to make this whole thing work as it was designed.
|
739.12 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Wed Jan 19 1994 12:38 | 19 |
|
Re: .11
> Offer the membership (the ENTIRE membership!) services like a credit
> union and DCU won't have time to worry about petty checking account
> fees. If I had to choose, I would choose a larger credit union that
> served all of its members but made slightly less than we knew we
> could...
Amen! With the advantages DCU has and a membership base of over
80,000 there is no reason why it shouldn't be doing so much business
that checking account balances are a nit. It's the old market share
issue. DCUs "market" is employees and family members of employees.
If the DCU went after the goal of being the primary financial
institution servings its members *instead of* measuring how much profit
they make per member they'd be so busy they wouldn't have time to...
Steve
|
739.13 | | CADSYS::RITCHIE | Gotta love log homes | Wed Jan 19 1994 12:42 | 4 |
| Re: .12
I wonder if we are still over 80,000 members. I asked several months ago, but
no one seems to know exactly how many members we currently have.
|
739.14 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Jan 19 1994 12:50 | 5 |
| �Perhaps its our culture that makes loand default so low.
Of course it's low. That's because there are very few people taking
out loans with DCU due to their uncompetitive rates. The only ones who
do have money to burn and don't care if they are paying more. ~/~
|
739.15 | What to do about $5 members | WRKSYS::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Wed Jan 19 1994 13:02 | 38 |
| Other than "protest accounts", I doubt there are that many $5 account
members. I also doubt that they cost the DCU very much. Note that the
Board has *never* stated any kind of breakeven point for members with
low amounts on deposit -- all they've ever said is how much less we're
making than we would if they had higher deposits.
The "protest accounts" will all be taken care of by the next election
(either they'll increase their deposits or leave entirely), but what
should we do about the remaining $5 account members? There are two
directions we can go:
1) Use fees as a stick to punish them into leaving, so that they no
longer burden the DCU. Don't expect many people (especially DECcies)
to respond to the fee stick by increasing their accounts -- expect
them to respond by leaving.
2) Use incentives to encourage them to use the DCU for more of their
financial business. All of the evidence that's been cited indicates
that the vast majority of low balances are due to people using other
institutions, rather than because they simply don't have any money.
That's the choice we've got to make in this election. Three of the
candidates line up firmly behind choice 2 and two of them have voted
for choice 1.
I believe that choice 2 is not just better for the DCU -- I believe
that it is better for ME as a (relationship) member. I'm also willing
to help my fellow DECcies, but I believe that I will lose NOTHING if
the DCU changes over to choice 2. On the contrary, I think the DCU
will be stronger and better able (and willing) to serve my needs.
So whether one is altruistic or self-directed, I think the smart choice
is for the DCU to pursue choice 2. Voting records show that that isn't
likely to happen unless Phil, Dave, and Chris are all elected to the
Board, joining Paul Kinzelman to make a true "Real Choices" majority.
Enjoy,
Larry
|
739.16 | | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | | Wed Jan 19 1994 13:07 | 11 |
|
RE: .13
I'll get the exact figures but I believe are below 80,000. One of the
reasons is that last Sept. we had a drop of 7400 members. I also had a
stroke when I saw it. I was told that the number was mostly members
that had been hit with inactivity fees until there balance dropped
below the $5 min. as well as totally inactive accounts. A LOT of potential
right out the window. It is one of the primary reasons I feel DCU must
change its attitude and approach.
|
739.17 | Let's go for a new board! | GENRAL::WILSON | | Wed Jan 19 1994 13:34 | 24 |
| RE: .11
"Why do so many members choose not to do business with DCU?"
Case in point. Current new vehicle loan rate for 48 mos. is 6.9%.
Another Credit Union we belong to here in Colorado Springs just gave us
a 48 mos vehicle loan for 5.5% and we had the cash in hand the very
same day we approached them for a loan (although I don't know if the
DCU operates this way, didn't ask about it). Nowadays you have to go
where it hits your pocketbook the least.
Asked about interest rates on savings, etc., and received a better
picture there too.
Also, about the comment awhile back about the DCU becoming
"upper-class" (not sure if that's the exact wording). Look at the
attitude of some of the board members, specifically the chair"person".
No wonder we're getting disenchanted.
jw
(a member in "good standing", who thinks that type of distinction is
ridiculous)
|
739.18 | encourage the $5 members to stay | KALI::FERGUSON | | Wed Jan 19 1994 13:36 | 30 |
| I am a little confused, and concerned, about DCU's approach about fees.
It seems that if you are not a large saver, and you don't currently
have a loan, you get fees. These people then leave DCU and DCU
management cheers. Note this means they don't apply here for the
next loan they need.
Now, the people who are large savers frequently do not need to get
a loan (besides mortgages, I guess) because they have the cash to
buy what they want (or the financial knowledge to go elsewhere for
good rates). So we end up with large savers and no loans ... which
means our interest rates can't be very high, which means the large
savers leave DCU and DCU management cheers because now their ratios
look better, since they aren't getting enough loans and have too
much in savings.
We must encourage the people needing loans to get them with DCU, with
the best interest rates (not just competitive) and with NO FEE savings
and checking accounts to keep them "hooked" into DCU. I approve of
the $5 savings members, I want them to stay, I want them to get loans
with DCU. We need both people who save and people who need loans to
keep this a viable credit union. Somebody has to pay the interest on
those deposits.
I will be voting for the three NO FEES candidates. I applaud them for
taking the time and effort to try to make this a better credit union.
I wonder how much of our "record profits" is due to people refinancing
mortgages, and what happens when rates go back up and we no longer
get much profit from this activity?
|
739.19 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Friends dont let Friends Early Apex | Wed Jan 19 1994 14:03 | 51 |
|
> I am a little confused, and concerned, about DCU's approach about fees.
>
> It seems that if you are not a large saver, and you don't currently
> have a loan, you get fees. These people then leave DCU and DCU
> management cheers. Note this means they don't apply here for the
> next loan they need.
This is precisely what DCU is doing, and you have every right to be
confused, and angry about this practice.
The bottom line here is the capital ratio. In a perverse way,
driving away members (ie, decreasing the asset base) helps the
capital ratio. DCU seems nearly fascinated with the prospect
of bringing this number up as quickly and dramatically as possible,
without regard for what falls by the way.
> We must encourage the people needing loans to get them with DCU, with
> the best interest rates (not just competitive) and with NO FEE savings
> and checking accounts to keep them "hooked" into DCU. I approve of
> the $5 savings members, I want them to stay, I want them to get loans
> with DCU. We need both people who save and people who need loans to
> keep this a viable credit union. Somebody has to pay the interest on
> those deposits.
Every member that we drive away with "upscale banking," "relationship
banking," or whatever name for it is in vogue is a lost opportunity
for future business. The individual or family that can't save a lot
or borrow a lot right now may very well be able to do so in the
future. And besides, who cares how much you save or borrow? That's
none of DCU's business. Their business is to help with financial
services without regard to levels of income.
Something that DCU has seemed to completely miss is something
that others have touched on here, and that's attitude. The
whole "relationship banking" program is just a means by which
DCU can dictate the type of member it wants. What DCU calls
credit union "abusers" I call small savers; what they call "waste"
I call the cost of doing business. The only "relationship" a
member should be required to have is eligibility in the field
of membership. This isn't a country club where some higher
power should pass judgement on our fitness for membership, it's
a financial cooperative who's primary concern should be service
to Digital employees and their families.
> I will be voting for the three NO FEES candidates. I applaud them for
> taking the time and effort to try to make this a better credit union.
Thanks for the support!
Chris
|
739.20 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Wed Jan 19 1994 14:05 | 30 |
|
Re: .14 and .17
> That's because there are very few people taking out loans
> with DCU due to their uncompetitive rates.
What is the "cost of ownership" of one loan vs. another? Rates
don't tell the whole story. Gasp, you're going to see me say
something good about DCU!
I bought a new Saturn SL2 in November and financed with DCU. In .17,
the DCU rate of 6.9% is compared to a local rate in Colorado of 5.5%.
My loan was $7965 for 42 months at 6.9 is $213.98 a month. At the 5.5%
rate the same loan would be $208.89 so I would have saved $5.09 a month
on the payment, BUT ...
At the DCU they do it payroll deduction ($53.50 weekly) AND apply
the weekly deduction to the balance weekly. On paper it's a monthly
installment. I get a double benefit: 1) for the same money paid out
as on a normal monthly installment loan, to get a 13th payment made
each year AND since the money is applied weekly, the principal is being
reduced more quickly. The loan will cost me less this way at 6.9%
than with someone else at 5.5% where I'd have to mail in a monthly
payment.
The DCU should be selling the h*** out of this, but they don't.
You have to be astute enough to figure it out for yourself.
Steve
|
739.21 | Todays loss in pennies = tomorrows income in $$$ | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | | Wed Jan 19 1994 14:05 | 24 |
|
RE: .18
Exactly! Short term "success", long term failure IMO. Precisely why I
have decided to break with "tradition" and run for the Board with two
other people who feel DCU must look beyond today's bottom to the bottom
line 3-5 years down the road. As somebody else put it to me, "Cut
your way back to profitability". Wonder where we've seen this before?
>I wonder how much of our "record profits" is due to people refinancing
>mortgages, and what happens when rates go back up and we no longer
>get much profit from this activity?
Funny you should ask because I asked this precise question at the last
Finance & Investment Comm. meeting. It was estimated that roughly $1
million profit was due to the refinancing binge. We are estimating far
less in the coming year. But we were wrong last year and could be
wrong again. Guessing where interest rates will go and how people will
react (if they go start going up it might spur people who have been
fence sitting to refinance) is such a shot in the dark. Also, DCU has
begun servicing all mortgages it sells. This will provide a steady,
and growing, income to DCU, as well as maintain membership
satisfaction.
|
739.23 | Weekly deductions more common than you think | GENRAL::WILSON | | Wed Jan 19 1994 14:27 | 8 |
| RE: .20
No, actually, the DCU isn't the only institution who will deduct weekly
from your paycheck. It's more common than you think.
jw
(A finance person who is "astute" enough to figure that out)
|
739.24 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Wed Jan 19 1994 14:36 | 12 |
|
Re: .23
> It's more common than you think.
I realize that payroll deduction is common, but that isn't what
reduces the cost of the loan. That's just a convenience issue.
What about weekly reduction of the loan balance? Do the others
do that as well?
Steve
|
739.25 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Wed Jan 19 1994 14:47 | 60 |
| Actually, it works the other way around in terms of savings. DCU MUST FEEL
ABLE TO LOAN OUT YOUR SAVINGS to make money. They cannot make money on
having your money sit in the DCU vaults ... even if loaned ona day to day
basis with the Federal Reserve.
The only way they can loan out your savings is if they get "quality savings",
which are high value long term savings. Small value accounts, or highly
dynamic accounts cannot be loaned out, except on a daily basis to the
Reserve, which earns DCU less than we get.
With quality savings, these funds are available to make loans to members,
at rates sufficient to pay operating costs and interest.
So, to improve the status of the credit union, they need more quality
savings. (This is why the assorted "club" accounts which allowed withdrawals
at any old time were actually "costly". DCU could not rely on the money
there to be able to loan it out. A closed withdrawal account is much easier
to loan out.)
This is also why the almighty Capital Ratio is so important. Essentially
it is a measure of how well DCU can cope with withdrawals of members
savings. (Eg Say you have invested $1000 with DCU, and they have loaned it
to me. If you came in today and withdrew that money, rather than calling
my loan, DCU draws on its capital ratio to pay your money back.) The higher
the Capital Ratio, the more of DCU's "lesser quality" savings can be loaned
out, and thus allow more loans. By allowing more loans, you should be able
to reduce the interest rates on those loans.
In implementing fees, DCU wants to discourage the small, dynamic saver
who puts $50 a month into savings, then draws it out next month. That
$50 cannot be loaned out unless DCU's capital ratio is excellent. They
want the saver into savings for the longer haul, because that can be loaned
out. Fees will also have the effect of improving the Capital ratio.
In essence the capital ratio is a measure of the money that DCU 'owns'
versus the money members have on deposit. The money DCU owns comes from
its profits. It gives DCU the ability to cover losses, like the Mangone
scandal in big time, and Joe Borrower's default in small time, while main-
taining DCU's member liabilities = DCU's member assets on deposit.
To say that the equation is complex is an understatement.
Yes, a good capital ratio is an admirable goal, but given that we should not
be subject to major fraud again (if the board and Sup. COmmittee are doing
their job), and that the member defaults are extremely lower than average,
DCU should not be aiming for an ever increasing Capital Ratio in such an
almighty hurry.
DCU could achieve quality savings by biting the bullet and offering better
than competetive rates, and if short term quality savings are such a problem,
then modify some of the terms of the accounts. The fees, especially as
written, are not a real reflection of recouping the cost of "non-profitable"
accounts, but rather a stick to get rid of non "quality" accounts.
As I have said many times, if fees were really to make accounts profitable,
then they would be based on a per-transaction basis ... after all, the
chequing account which has 50 cheques per month on it is far more expensive
to operate than the one with 5 cheques written on it.
Stuart
|
739.26 | They do reduce the loan bal. | GENRAL::WILSON | | Wed Jan 19 1994 15:23 | 6 |
| RE: .24
Yep, reduction of the loan balance as well. (wouldn't let them have my
money weekly if that wasn't the case).
jw
|
739.27 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Wed Jan 19 1994 15:39 | 7 |
|
Re: .26
Well in that case all else being equal, the rate tells the story.
Steve
|
739.28 | Membership numbers | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | | Wed Jan 19 1994 23:54 | 20 |
| > <<< Note 739.13 by CADSYS::RITCHIE "Gotta love log homes" >>>
>
>I wonder if we are still over 80,000 members. I asked several months ago, but
>no one seems to know exactly how many members we currently have.
Current membership is 74,053 as of 12/31/93.
membership was 84,684 as of 12/31/92.
-- 1993 -- Members Change
April 83,975
May 83,856 - 119
June 83,858 + 2
July 83,789 - 69
August 83,671 - 118
September 76,011 -7660
October 75,626 - 385
November 75,223 - 403
December 74,053 -1170
|
739.30 | | STAR::FERLAN | DECamds as your cluster mgmt tool | Thu Jan 20 1994 09:26 | 26 |
|
Note the tremendous change Aug-Oct... About the time fees were
"reintroduced"
August 83,671 - 118
September 76,011 -7660
October 75,626 - 385
It doesn't take a genious to figure it out... It'd be an intersting
exercise to determine after what day the bulk of those accounts left in
September... Looking back at the minutes shows 22-sep-1993 was the
date Phil posted the Unredacted BOD minutes from April 27, 1993 when
the fees were first introduced to the board... THings that make you go
hmmmmm....
Phil, gotta ask.. you're not gonna get in any kind of "hot water" or
get some kind of "censorship thing" from the BOD are you? I'm sure we
all appreciate the cold hard facts you are bringing to light.. I just
hope that the other not so sharing and caring members of the board will
be "offended"...
John
|
739.31 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | WLDBIL(tm) | Thu Jan 20 1994 09:49 | 4 |
|
I'm fairly certain that Phil is well past the "hot water" stage, and
I'd like to personally thank him for taking the heat.
|
739.32 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Thu Jan 20 1994 09:51 | 10 |
|
Interesting. The DCU loses 10631 members during 1993 and 72%
of those leave in September. It doesn't take a genius to figure
out that something happened around that time which precipitated
the exodus. It might also be interesting to know whether there's
data about those accounts. Where they active? Did they borrow
money? Did they have long term CDs? etc.
Steve
|
739.33 | | RANGER::MCANULTY | | Thu Jan 20 1994 09:57 | 13 |
| re: .28
This question really needs to be asked of the entire BoD
Why was this 10% drop in membership in Sep (-7660) to not mentioned in the
October or November BoD Minutes? Membership #'s are (or of right ought
to be) easily tracked, and such a radical change in the status of the
CU should have been brought out in a board meeting and brought to the
attention of the BoD and the membership.
Peter McA'Nulty
Concerned, but quiet notes reader
|
739.34 | Remote Members are already the "Under-Class" | GLDOA::PENFROY | Just Do It or Just Say No? | Thu Jan 20 1994 12:48 | 14 |
|
If the candidates are really concerned about the ENTIRE membership,
let's hear some talk about the class distinction that currently
exists between remote members and GMA members!
What about the FEE remote members have been paying all this time
because we don't have access to DCU ATMs and branches?!?!?! AND we have
to make deposits through the U.S. Mail for heavens sake!
Eliminating fees on basic services is good, but I'll vote for ANY
candidate that commits to making life easier for remote members.
Paul
|
739.35 | Many thanks | CADSYS::RITCHIE | Gotta love log homes | Thu Jan 20 1994 13:03 | 20 |
| Thanks for digging up that info, Phil. All I can say is
W O W !
followed by
*Sigh*
It sounds like the Prez and those that listen to him on the BOD have this loss
of membership all justified in their minds. They think it is inevitable, or
something they have had no control over, or a good thing (lose the abusers).
I wish I had the time to explore the other credit unions in my area, one of
which I am a member. I know there is a lot of growth taking place in credit
unions besides DCU, despite economic downturns and low interest rates. The
lines at ICFCU at Searstown in Leominster are out the doors on Saturday morning.
Thanks again, Phil. This credit union management never ceases to amaze me.
Elaine
|
739.36 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jan 20 1994 13:15 | 13 |
| I think Mr. Badger completely missed the point. He also missed the
point that children are exempt from fees on their savings accounts.
I think some people are jumping to conclusions regarding the drop in
membership. Wasn't Digital laying off around the same time? I
wouldn't be surprised to learn that membership dropped because of the
new fee structure, but I'd be very surprised if it was the only reason.
To whoever said it is very easy to find higher interest bearing
accounts outside of DCU, I'd like some more info on that. My scans
through the local paper don't bare that out. Maybe there are some CUs
which are outside of my membership ability that I've overlooked as
well.
|
739.37 | No DCU mortgages in Texas... | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Thu Jan 20 1994 13:28 | 10 |
| re: .34
I agree but I also realize that at any point in time, one group of
members will be 'subsidizing' another. That's part of what a credit
union is all about. I know that because my nearest DCU branch is about
1000 miles away, I will never get the same services and service that
those in the GMA do. I do expect them to make dealing with them as
easy as possible for those of us not near a branch.
Bob
|
739.38 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Thu Jan 20 1994 13:57 | 11 |
| Just because Digital has transitioned people doesn't remove their eligibility
for continued membership in DCU, nor from joining again. From what I read,
membership was for employees and ex-employees.
It may make doing business a little less convenient, but no more difficult
than Bob Ainsley's is for example.
If transitioned people were closing their accounts because they thought they
must, then that is something DCU should actually address.
Stuart
|
739.39 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jan 20 1994 15:33 | 5 |
| � -< No DCU mortgages in Texas... >-
Due to the large number of forclosures that occured down there not that
long ago, I don't think there were very many institutions outside of
the state that did offer mortgages.
|
739.40 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Jan 20 1994 15:37 | 6 |
| �Just because Digital has transitioned people doesn't remove their eligibility
�for continued membership in DCU, nor from joining again. From what I read,
�membership was for employees and ex-employees.
You're right, but that still doesn't mean people aren't cancelling DCU
accounts because they've been "cancelled" by Digital.
|
739.41 | Sorry for the long reply, trying to catch up | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | | Thu Jan 20 1994 15:51 | 75 |
|
RE .29 & .25
> SCUM SMALL SAVER
Since not everybody in this world is born into money, wins the
lottery or has a large inheritence, we were all "scum small savers"
at one point. (And don't forget scum small borrower).
RE: .30
> Phil, gotta ask.. you're not gonna get in any kind of "hot water" or
> get some kind of "censorship thing" from the BOD are you? I'm sure we
> all appreciate the cold hard facts you are bringing to light.. I just
> hope that the other not so sharing and caring members of the board will
> be "offended"...
"hot water"? Sometimes hot water is required, depending on the task at
hand. But why would anybody care about a posting of declining
membership numbers?
"censorship thing"? There is nothing confidential about how many
members we have and how many we did have. It would even be valid to
request this information from DCU via formal request.
RE: .31
> I'm fairly certain that Phil is well past the "hot water" stage, and
> I'd like to personally thank him for taking the heat.
I really don't see the "hot water" issue here. Simply stating my
opinion, backed up with some concrete fact, and willing to offer
the membership a clear choice in the direction of their credit union.
Guess it does go a tad against against "tradition". Oh well, add
that to the list of charges... ;-)
RE: .28
> This question really needs to be asked of the entire BoD
>
> Why was this 10% drop in membership in Sep (-7660) to not mentioned in the
> October or November BoD Minutes? Membership #'s are (or of right ought
> to be) easily tracked, and such a radical change in the status of the
> CU should have been brought out in a board meeting and brought to the
> attention of the BoD and the membership.
Don't know. We get detail monthly, on number of members (I requested it
when I first got on the Board) and accounts. Until recently, the
changes have not been all that large and it wasn't usually noted in the
minutes. But you're probably correct in that it should have been.
RE: .36
> I think some people are jumping to conclusions regarding the drop in
> membership. Wasn't Digital laying off around the same time?
Digital has been laying people off regularly for the last 2 years
haven't they? Also, getting layed off from Digital does not mean
people close out accounts and leave. We have over 20,000 family
members and ex-employees to bear this out.
RE: .38
>Just because Digital has transitioned people doesn't remove their eligibility
>for continued membership in DCU,
Correct.
>nor from joining again. From what I read,
>membership was for employees and ex-employees.
Incorrect. Once you leave DCU, if you aren't an employee or the family
member of an employee, then you can NOT rejoin. You have left the
field of membership.
|
739.42 | | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Thu Jan 20 1994 17:12 | 10 |
| re: .39 I guess I left off the :-) It makes no sense for DCU to offer
mortgages somewhere that they don't have an office. I don't think the
volume would be great enough to justify them paying a broker to try and
peddle them in Texas. I was just trying to show that there never will
be a time when all members are equally equal. After all, DCU couldn't
offer a home equity line of credit in Texas if it wanted to, since 2nd
mortgages for something other than taxes and home improvements are
prohibited by the Texas Constitution.
Bob
|
739.43 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Jan 21 1994 00:21 | 11 |
| re .41 and membership ...
Phil,
Do you not believe that DCU should make it clear to existing members
that if they are transitioned, or otherwise leave the employ of the
company, that they are entitled to maintain their membership in DCU ?
Through a comment on the statement, or an entry in Network etc ?
I don't recall seeing anything.
Stuart
|
739.44 | | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | | Fri Jan 21 1994 01:37 | 17 |
|
RE: .42
Bob, actually it may make sense for DCU to offer mortgages in Texas, or
anywhere else, if there is enough demand for it and it would offer a
reasonable return on the effort involved in setting up and maintaining
the program.
RE: .43
Stuart, nobody is telling people that are transitioned that they have
to leave DCU. I've never heard anybody even wonder about this. DCU
has run promos in the Network brochures which state "Once a member,
always a member". I certainly don't think people are leaving DCU under
a mistaken impression that they must since they no longer work for
Digital.
|
739.46 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Jan 21 1994 10:16 | 5 |
| If someone leaves Digital and takes a job outside of the GMA area, does
it make sense to keep an account with DCU? Even if they stay within
GMA, what if their new employer offers a CU with a branch in the place
of work? Why should a person maintain ties with DCU? I've gotten out
of CUs when it was no longer convenient to be a member.
|
739.47 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Jan 21 1994 11:28 | 7 |
| > Stuart, nobody is telling people that are transitioned that they have
> has run promos in the Network brochures which state "Once a member,
> always a member". I certainly don't think people are leaving DCU under
> a mistaken impression that they must since they no longer work for
> Digital.
Well, I think it would be a good idea just to affirm it ...
|
739.48 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Jan 21 1994 11:30 | 11 |
| > If someone leaves Digital and takes a job outside of the GMA area, does
> it make sense to keep an account with DCU? Even if they stay within
> GMA, what if their new employer offers a CU with a branch in the place
> of work? Why should a person maintain ties with DCU? I've gotten out
> of CUs when it was no longer convenient to be a member.
No argument there ... but I'm just saying that for people who haven't
moved, and it wouldn't be inconvenient to do their banking at DCU, they
should be encouraged to stay!
Stuart
|
739.50 | | CSC32::S_BROOK | There and back to see how far it is | Fri Jan 21 1994 12:08 | 5 |
| Neither do I buy that argument ... but I am still saying that it would
be a good idea to remind members that TFSO does not mean saying goodbye
to DCU if it is still convenient for them.
Stuart
|
739.51 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Jan 21 1994 14:53 | 11 |
| �No argument there ... but I'm just saying that for people who haven't
�moved, and it wouldn't be inconvenient to do their banking at DCU, they
�should be encouraged to stay!
And I wasn't trying to start an argument. I want to see the facts.
Most people in here are assuming that the drop in membership is due to
the fee structure simply based on the fact that fees were introduced
and there was a decline in membership. I presented another potential
reason for the decline. I would think people would want to know all
the facts before jumping to conclusions. I forgot that only Board
Members are not allowed to jump to conclusions.
|
739.52 | | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | | Fri Jan 21 1994 15:10 | 10 |
|
RE: reasons for membership decline
The factor you point to has been present for the last years, yet
DCU experienced no huge loss of membership, until...
Also, it was requested that DCU determine the reasons for people leaving,
including people who had left in this group. It was opposed. Instead,
we'll be surveying people who leave starting in Feb. (I believe).
|
739.53 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Fri Jan 21 1994 15:25 | 18 |
|
Re: .51
> Most people in here are assuming that the drop in membership is due
> to the fee structure simply based on the fact that fees were
> introduced ...
While it is reasonable for you to ask the question and it may well
be that TFSO has been part of the reason, the facts don't point to
TFSO as a primary or even significant reason. TFSO may be the
reason for some who left each month during 1993 since TFSO has been
going on right along, but of all members of the DCU who left during
1993, 72% left in September. The fees were announced in September.
You can't be sure without data, but it is very unlikely that was a
coincidence.
Steve
|
739.54 | Many ways to test customer opinion | RLTIME::COOK | | Fri Jan 21 1994 15:54 | 18 |
|
<<< Note 739.52 by ASE003::GRANSEWICZ >>>
> Also, it was requested that DCU determine the reasons for people leaving,
> including people who had left in this group. It was opposed. Instead,
> we'll be surveying people who leave starting in Feb. (I believe).
Not really a survey, but when I closed my share draft account last week I
was not asked why. I may or may not have answered, but I found it interesting
that no one cared about the why they were losing a customer.
al
|
739.55 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Fri Jan 21 1994 16:02 | 12 |
|
Re: .54
My wife is nurse/supervisor at a hospital where late last spring they
had a 10% layoff of hospital personnel because of declining admissions.
Some of the nurses working under her regularly MOAN and COMPLAIN when
they get admissions onto their unit. She can't seem to get them to
understand that those admissions are the CUSTOMERS WHO ARE PAYING THEIR
WAGES. Go figure.
Steve
|
739.56 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Jan 21 1994 16:12 | 24 |
| � The factor you point to has been present for the last years, yet
� DCU experienced no huge loss of membership, until...
Agreed, however that doesn't negate it's influence. Perhaps it wasn't
the result of recent layoffs, but a result of the previous layoffs.
Time has elapsed, people have found jobs elsewhere, funds have been
depleted, interest is not paid if an account is closed prior to the
quarterly posting date, there are alot of factors.
� Also, it was requested that DCU determine the reasons for people leaving,
� including people who had left in this group. It was opposed.
This is new information. Thanks for providing it. I'm glad to see at
least someone on the board wasn't simply jumping to conclusions but was
looking for the root cause. It's too bad he/she wasn't allowed to
follow through.
�Instead,
� we'll be surveying people who leave starting in Feb. (I believe).
I closed a U-Name-It account in January. There was a space on the card
for putting in a reason why the account was closed. Was this done as a
result of the above decision or has that question been on the form all
along?
|
739.57 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Fri Jan 21 1994 16:13 | 10 |
| � While it is reasonable for you to ask the question and it may well
� be that TFSO has been part of the reason, the facts don't point to
� TFSO as a primary or even significant reason.
I didn't say it was. I presented it as a potential reason.
� You can't be sure without data, but it is very unlikely that was a
� coincidence.
You're right, I can't. That's why I want to see data.
|
739.58 | Why I'm a $5 "relationship" member... | MUNCH::FRANCINI | Screwy Wabbit | Sun Jan 23 1994 00:53 | 78 |
| re: many notes passim about scummy members..
By the DCU's own rules, I am presently a "relationship member".
I have a car loan with a balance of around $9000. It's the third one
I've had with them in 10 years.
I have a $5 savings account.
I have no other accounts at DCU.
I guess I'll be a scummy member for a long time, considering what I
presently do for banking services...
My checking account is with BayBank (the largest retail consumer bank
in Mass.), not because they are better than DCU on fees, but because
they are ubiquitous in Massachusetts. With the account I have, I
have a fixed fee no matter how many checks/ATM transactions I do.
(Like Bill Parke, my checking account has too high a velocity to keep
it consistently over any "minimum checking balance".)
I have a no-fee AT&T Universal Visa.
I use SAVE for long-term savings.
What would it take to move all of this activity into the DCU?
1. A better ATM fee structure than the present one. I live inside
Route 128. If I had a DCU account, I'd be using non-DCU ATMs almost
100% of the time. $1/transaction is waaay too steep. There's at least
one _commercial_ bank (in NH, sadly for me, not Mass.) that offers 100%
free ATM access for any ATM in the U.S., plus at least one credit union
was mentioned recently elsewhere in this file that had free foreign ATM
access. While "free" might be considered giving the store away, a
better compromise might be called for.
2. No checking fees. It's a bloody credit union, not a bank.
3. Return my checks to me or use the electronic check imaging scheme
mentioned elsewhere. [BTW: BayBank _does_ offer this, but there's an
extra fee, while returning physical checks costs $0.00 - choice here is
obvious.]
4. No-annual-fee credit card with competitive rates. [I tend to
maintain a substantial balance on the card, so the rate is important,
but the fee (or lack thereof) is (to me) a barometer of how much the
issuer wants my business.
5. Some sort of mutual fund scheme that gives rates comparable to the
stock funds in SAVE.
Until much of this changes, I'll continue to have a $5 savings account
and get car loans. [I use the DCU because of the utterly convenient
payment plan, mostly, and the effective interest rate cut caused by the
weekly payments.] Another reason I'll keep it is to follow the
goings-on and vote in people who will steer the DCU away from its
present sham goals and towards its original purpose - giving Digital
employees a place to put their savings and make loans, at fair rates
all around - NOT to make a profit. [Actually, since all depositors are
technically the owners of the credit union, mustn't all profits be
returned to the membership? Does this happen?]
On the one hand, I'm scummy 'coz I cost the DCU some piddling change to
maintain that $5 savings account. On the other hand, I'm a
"relationship" member because I pay them many, many times more that
cost in interest on the car loan. Doesn't figure.
back to lurking...
John Francini
|
739.59 | | 38346::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Mon Jan 24 1994 13:46 | 24 |
| � By the DCU's own rules, I am presently a "relationship member".
So why are you calling yourself scum? ;^)
� 2. No checking fees. It's a bloody credit union, not a bank.
Since you are a relationship member you have that. Even if you weren't
a relationship member, you can get fee free checking by direct
depositing your paycheck.
� 4. No-annual-fee credit card with competitive rates. [I tend to
� maintain a substantial balance on the card, so the rate is important,
� but the fee (or lack thereof) is (to me) a barometer of how much the
� issuer wants my business.
As a relationship member you can get that too. For a fee-free card,
DCU Visa interest rates are competitive from what I've seen.
� 5. Some sort of mutual fund scheme that gives rates comparable to the
� stock funds in SAVE.
I think NCUA rules prohibit that from happening.
|
739.60 | Detailed data we were given on closed accts | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | Candidate for DCU Director | Mon Feb 14 1994 19:52 | 117 |
|
I have been accused of posting "misinformation" in this notes
conference by other Directors. That "misinformation" consisted of
EXACT membership numbers, which was the question that Elaine
Ritchie requested (739.13). Earlier that day, I posted what I
had been told was the reason for the large drop in membership (739.16).
Since many of the other Directors read this conference and have
yet to post any clarification of this "misinformation", I will
post what the Board was given in our January Board package. When
we asked for this information back in September (when the large drop
in membership occurred) it wasn't felt it was necessary to collect it
since we knew the large drop was from "cleanup". I will venture
a guess and say that all the discussion in here around this topic
spurred some movement on the collection of this information.
So here it is:
1993 Membership
---------------
New Memberships 2,670
Closed Memberships 13,301
------
Net Change 10,631
Closed Memberships:
o Inactive < $5.00 and no other accounts 7,465
o Branch Closure 483
o Escheat (inactive for 3 years) 662
o Loss Policy - Member Closed 50
o Checking Account Abuse - Member Closed 93
o Dormant 519
o Prior Year Clean Up 788
o Layoffs & Other 3,241
Total 13,301
Memberships 1993
Net Digital Net Family DCU Closed Possible Causes for
Month Employees Members Memberships Additional Closings
------- ----------- ---------- -------------------- -----------------------
January <231> 0 Westminster/Springfield
branch closings late 92
February <198> 41
March <225> 21 Burlington, VT branch
closing
April <152> 35 Northboro branch closing
DCU closed 138
checking accts (abuse)
May <150> 31 DCU closed 117
checking accts (abuse)
June < 83> 85
July <120> 51 June NETWORK received.
Article addressing
"relationship banking",
"cooperative" philosophy
& possibility of future
changes.
August <162> 44 1st escheat mailing
(3 years inactive)
to 1,538 members
September <7646> <14> 7,465 $0 & inactive 2nd escheat mailing
First TIS Account
Pricing/Structure
Mailing
October <270> <115> 1st dormant mailing
(2 years inactive)
to 3,440 members.
Continued TIS Account
Pricing/Structure
reaction
November <319> <84> Westminster, MA branch
closing.
Continued TIS Account
Pricing/Structure
reaction.
Letter sent late Nov. to
760 members notifying
them of the closing of
all shares, excluding
Primary, due to previous
loan charge-off.
December <1132> <38> 662 escheat (Comm of MA) DCU closed 117 checking
accounts (abuse).
TIS Reminder -
effective 1/1/94.
Letter sent late Nov. to
760 members notifying
them of the closing of
all shares, excluding
Primary, due to previous
loan charge-off.
-------- ------
<10,688> 57
======== ======
<> = closed memberships
|
739.61 | | STRATA::JOERILEY | Legalize Freedom | Tue Feb 15 1994 01:40 | 7 |
| RE:.60
I notice that DCU closed a number of checking accounts for abuse.
Can you tell me what's the criteria for abuse and where these accounts
closed with the permission of their owners or without?
Joe
|
739.62 | | CVG::THOMPSON | An other snowy day in paradise | Tue Feb 15 1994 07:35 | 21 |
| I see a couple of things. One is that we had a lot of inactive
accounts. Questions that that suggests are: Why did we hold them
on the books so long and how do other CUs handle them? Also why
were there so many inactive accounts? Does this mean that we attract
people who will never be active? For example, employees who join
just because there is a DCU form in their new employee orientation
packet. What can we do to entice these casual joiners to become active
in the future.
What's the difference between dormant, inactive, and escheat?
Why did prior year clean up not show up until now? And why was this
years cleanup almost 10 times as large?
How much of layoffs and other is layoffs? I'm not surprised at the
number charged to layoffs BTW. Nor to branch closings. Convenience
is after all one of the most commonly used reasons for DCU membership.
That, as an aside, strikes me as a clue to the kind of thing DCU needs
to being to other services to get people to be more active members.
Alfred
|
739.64 | | 38346::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Feb 15 1994 09:58 | 14 |
| The numbers seem to back up management's claims of alot of folks only
keeping enough in the account for lunch money and check cashing
priviliges.
I asked this question before, but still haven't received an answer:
Did the "carrot" beat these people away, or was there a seperate
program that "cleaned up" these accounts?
�What can we do to entice these casual joiners to become active
� in the future.
One way would be to offer better rates on savings and loans. But the
system ain't broke, so why fix it?
|
739.65 | | 38346::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Feb 15 1994 10:01 | 13 |
| �WCU is NOT convienent. but they offer more
� for me.
Such as?
�*If* we were any good, we should be able to keep these
� members. But, I guess they found something better?
In my case convience does play a big role. Otherwise I would still be
a member of Monsanto FCU or more active in Hamilton Standard FCU. I
had a car loan with Leominster FCU a few years ago, but they didn't
offer enough to overcome the lack of easy access for me to do more
business with them.
|
739.67 | sigh | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | Candidate for DCU Director | Tue Feb 15 1994 12:42 | 8 |
|
> One way would be to offer better rates on savings and loans. But the
> system ain't broke, so why fix it?
Gee Keith, taking a statement from a discussion on a different topic
and inserting it into this topic? And just when I thought you had
changed... Oh well, I continue to hope.
|
739.68 | | 38346::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Feb 15 1994 12:44 | 3 |
| Sorry if I can think about 2 things at once and see their relationship,
Phil. I'm not a very good at looking at things totally in black and
white.
|
739.69 | | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | Candidate for DCU Director | Tue Feb 15 1994 12:51 | 8 |
|
That's fine Keith, but please don't make it sound like it was said by
somebody else. Nobody in here has ever said, as far as I can recall,
that "if it ain't broke don't fix it" applied to DCU's rates. But that
is the way your statement comes across. But of course, I must be
mistaken, or not reading it, or reading into it, etc.
Like I said, I remain hopeful...
|
739.70 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Tue Feb 15 1994 13:15 | 14 |
| "If it ain't broke, don't fix it" seems to be applied to the entire
DCU. Anytime a policy change has been announced or implemented we hear
screams of agony.
Improving capital ratio and cutting costs should mean better rates.
What really bugs me about the policies being announced and
implemented is the goals of these are not being communicated. I know
the popular feeling in here is that some of the members of the BoD and
the current management are doing this all for their own egos and their
own hidden agendas. Sorry, but I don't buy that.
IMO, the anti-fee folks aren't doing a very good job of communicating
their goals either (I'm sorry but "being a CU not a bank" just doesn't do
it for me).
|
739.71 | | AOSG::GILLETT | Candidate for 1994 DCU BoD Elections | Wed Feb 16 1994 08:31 | 54 |
|
re: .70, anti-fee folks aren't communicating goals well...
What part aren't we communicating well about? I thought we had
spelled things out very clearly:
1. Fees are unnecessary. DCU's revenue picture is in fine shape,
the credit union has experienced record earnings in the most
recently completed 2 years. Capital ratio growth is on track
without a fee structure.
2. The Relationship Banking model is one of many possible business
models that could be used by DCU or any other credit union.
The goals of Relationship Banking, however, are incongruous with
the goals of a credit union. Relationship Banking seeks to put
up a class structure, in which fees are levied against those
with little debt and/or savings. The net effect of this is to
drive away small savers/borrowers who might very well become
large savers/borrowers in the future. In short, it drives
away business.
3. An integral part of my plan for continued success for DCU is emphasize
the importance of the membership. What this equates to is striving
to bring in more business for DCU by (a) Providing a competitive
rate structure which encourages existing members to think of DCU
first, rather than second or third; (b) Emphasizing making it
more convenient and easy to access DCU services; (c) Working to
increase the membership of DCU: there are literally thousands of
people in the field of membership who are not members.
4. DCU insists on comparing itself to commercial banks rather than to
it's real competition. DCU must understand where the competition
truly is, and then make appropriate changes to meet this competition.
5. The primary, overriding concern of all management should not be
simply "make all the money you can." DCU must make money, and
must retain income. But a goal for a member-owned financial
cooperative should be to generate necessary revenue, and return
some part of proft above target levels to the membership in the
form of bonus dividends or loan interest rebates. This is different
from a commercial bank, where the overriding concern of management
is to keep its shareholders and Wall Street followers happy.
6. Management should learn to evaluate themselves not just in terms
of profit, or in terms of the capital ratio, but also in terms
of levels of member satisfaction, and growth of the membership
base.
These points above are the crux of the matter, as far as I'm concerned.
I'm curious as to which of these points haven't been clearly articulated
in the past, or which aren't crystal clear right now.
Chris
|
739.72 | | NASZKO::MACDONALD | | Wed Feb 16 1994 08:56 | 18 |
|
Re: .70
> IMO, the anti-fee folks aren't doing a very good job of communicating
> their goals either (I'm sorry but "being a CU not a bank" just doesn't do
> it for me).
Keith, There have been numerous reasons given as to why folks are
opposed to fees and what their goals are around it. You may disagree
with the reasons or goals, but they *have* been stated and it seems
they are clear enough to everyone but you. So if you want to say that
they aren't clear to YOU then I have no issue with you over it. If,
however, you simply don't want to accept them please own that and stop
saying what isn't so.
Steve
|
739.73 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Feb 16 1994 11:31 | 8 |
| �4. DCU insists on comparing itself to commercial banks rather than to
� it's real competition. DCU must understand where the competition
� truly is, and then make appropriate changes to meet this competition.
For me, commercial banks are a valid comparison since I cannot meet the
membership requirements of various CUs. There are instances in here
where other DCU members have sent their business to commerical banks,
so it appears they think this is a valid comparison as well.
|
739.74 | Seems clear to me | SMAUG::GARROD | DCU Board of Director's Candidate | Wed Feb 16 1994 12:29 | 30 |
| RE .-1
DCU is hardly competitive with commercial banks on rates. I assert that
the marketing literature compares DCU against banks because
banks tend to have worse rates/services than credit unions. DCU as a
subsidsized non profit cooperative that doesn't pay taxes should be
able to blow any bank way. It doesn't. And as pointed out in many notes
other credit unions:
a) Treat their members much better (no "I can close your account
right now") rather ("How can we serve you better")
b) Have better rates than DCU.
c) Don't have a myriad of petty fees.
DCU COULD be better than banks and comparable to other CUs. Today its
service is comparable to banks and its rate structure worse than other
CUs. Added to that it treats its members with the attitude of.
"If you'd like to do business with us fine, if not go away". A
successful institution should be much more in tune with customer
satisfaction.
In .71 Chris sums up very well what the 3 "anti-fee" candidates
(Phil Gransewicz, Chris Gillett and myself) stand for. People that I've
talked to have had no difficulty comprehending our position. I honestly
believe that you don't either. You just seem to love playing devil's
advocate.
Dave
|
739.75 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Feb 16 1994 12:40 | 22 |
| � DCU is hardly competitive with commercial banks on rates.
Not from what I've seen. On the whole, they aren't better but they are
similar give or take a tenth. This to me is competitive. You can
argue that competitive isn't good enough.
Looking back, "goals" wasn't the right word. Objectives would be
better. How are you going to go about reaching your goals? Current
management/board clearly has objectives (improving capital ratio and
cutting costs through relationship banking), but their goal isn't
clear.
�I assert that
� the marketing literature compares DCU against banks because
� banks tend to have worse rates/services than credit unions.
I believe that by law (and for other reasons), banks can and do offer
more services than CUs. For instance, how many CUs offer mutual funds,
savings bonds, and safe deposit boxes? Don't most banks today have
more branches and more ATMs than most CUs? In the past, banks did
offer lower interest rates/higher loan rates than CUs. From what I've
seen in the local papers, this doesn't seem to be the case anymore.
|
739.76 | | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | Candidate for DCU Director | Wed Feb 16 1994 13:12 | 16 |
|
Do commercial banks pay taxes? Do commercial banks pay for facilities?
If so, that is a considerable expense that DCU does NOT have to bear.
Without those considerable expenses, we are only "competitive" with
a commercial bank? Where is all that money that we don't have to spend
going?
Bottom line is that you BECOME who you benchmark against. DCU compares
itself to large banks, thus it should be no surprise to find DCU looking
and feeling like a large bank. Now some members may WANT a large bank.
They will choose DCU since we should always be better than a large
bank. But others joined a CREDIT UNION and expect DCU to look and feel
like a credit union. That means we must compare ourselves to credit
unions. After all, isn't that what we are?
|
739.77 | | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | Candidate for DCU Director | Wed Feb 16 1994 13:15 | 10 |
|
RE: .73
> For me, commercial banks are a valid comparison since I cannot meet the
> membership requirements of various CUs.
Keith, where do you live? Most only require residence. I could
join Leominster Credit Union (branch 1/4 mile from my house) even
though I live in Holden.
|
739.78 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Feb 16 1994 13:35 | 4 |
| �Where is all that money that we don't have to spend
� going?
Subsidizing non-relationship members?
|
739.79 | | ASE003::GRANSEWICZ | Candidate for DCU Director | Wed Feb 16 1994 13:51 | 7 |
| �Where is all that money that we don't have to spend
� going?
>
> Subsidizing non-relationship members?
Got any facts to indicate this?
|
739.80 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Feb 16 1994 14:07 | 13 |
| I guessed you missed the '?' at the end of that. In case you have
forgotten, '?' at the end of a sentence indicates a question, not a
statement. If the answer to my question is 'Yes', it would explain
some of the relationship-banking decisions.
Phil, as a board member you have access to Financial information,
including (if I read the meeting minutes correctly), monthly updates.
Do you have an answer to your question? Or perhaps, tell us where you
think all this money is going. From what I've seen of the financials,
the profits don't seem to be going anywhere. They seem to be just
piling up.
One answer I'm surprised I haven't seen yet is "Employee bonuses".
|
739.81 | Wrong group | STAR::BUDA | I am the NRA | Wed Feb 16 1994 14:07 | 7 |
| RE: Note 739.78 by PATE::MACNEAL
> Subsidizing non-relationship members?
More than likely increasing the salaries of DCU management...
- mark
|
739.82 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Wed Mar 09 1994 14:40 | 2 |
| Please define/list "basic services" (i.e. the services that fees should
not be levied on, no matter what).
|