Case Study
From Laggard to Leader: Desjardins Evolves Member Centricity for the Digital Age
We helped this Canadian financial institution meet members’ rising expectations and radically improve its Net Promoter Score—and its bottom line.
Case Study
We helped this Canadian financial institution meet members’ rising expectations and radically improve its Net Promoter Score—and its bottom line.
NPS score increase
increase in sales initiated online, over four years
NPS score increase
increase in sales initiated online, over four years
A diversified financial institution with a 125-year legacy, Desjardins stands out among Canadian banks in two key ways: It’s the leading Francophone financial institution in Quebec, and it’s member-owned, which allows it to house banking and insurance under one roof.
But those advantages didn’t guarantee enduring relationships with its customers. Facing a lagging Net Promoter Score (NPS®), the loss of 80,000 members in five years, and competition from digital-forward banks, Desjardins approached us with two pivotal questions: Who are we going to be, and how are we going to compete?
Our answer: By embracing digital innovation and reigniting its member-focused mission, Desjardins could deepen existing member relationships, expand to new audiences, and secure its standing as a market leader in customer service.
“Our online experience is a major driver of members’ loyalty. This is what we mean by ‘meeting our members where they are.’”
Over the next seven years, we worked with the organization to reverse its trajectory. Our north star was an enterprise-wide NPS assessment, which allowed us to capture customers’ pain points and priorities and convey them to the company’s front and back lines.
We then turned our attention to shaping an omnichannel strategy that clarified the role of digital and human channels. Finally, we deepened conversations about technological delivery and worked to modernize core systems at scale.
Our collaborative process was guided by four pillars:
increase in customers over five years
revenue growth in one year
Delivering on a new mission meant widening the aperture—from tackling one-off improvements to treating member centricity as how business is done. Clear, consistent support from senior leadership and a pervasive focus on “customer listening” drove momentum. Then, success came down to connecting the dots between members’ feedback and the back-end systems and processes needed to make an improved experience a reality.
“Today, the vast majority of our interactions with members and clients occur online, especially on their mobile, and our online experience is a major driver of members’ loyalty,” said Nathalie Larue, executive vice president, Personal Services, at Desjardins. “This is what we mean by ‘meeting our members where they are.’”
As with any transformation, change management helped Desjardins stick the landing. “I’m ultimately managing a human transformation,” says Mathieu Staniulis, vice president of Products, Solutions, and Digital Platforms and chief transformation officer. “It was a pivotal moment when [we] realized our KPIs were not moving, and our transformation was not achieving its goals. We had to work harder to get our people on board with the changes being made.”
Transforming to a member-centric, omnichannel organization helped Desjardins achieve a groundswell of tangible wins. After its steep drop in membership, the company reversed course over the next five years, growing its membership by 140,000 customers. Sales initiated online grew from 25% to roughly 40% in four years, putting Desjardins ahead of competition in Canada by approximately 10 percentage points.
“I’m ultimately managing a human transformation. We had to work harder to get our people on board with the changes being made.”
NPS soared 11 points, as measured via NPS PrismTM, the market standard CX benchmarking platform. Additionally, the company saw bottom-line benefits—to the tune of 10% revenue growth in one year. Most crucially, 96% of Desjardins employees understood member centricity as a core component of the organization’s strategy.
The journey to a digitally enabled future isn’t over. The company plans to further strengthen member relationships and redefine what customer intimacy means in the digital era by tapping into advanced data, analytics, and generative AI capabilities to give their members and clients the support they need to be financially empowered
At the outset of our partnership, Desjardins wanted to avoid being “just another bank.” By making good on its goal to be the “#1 choice for members and clients,” it far exceeded that goal—with room to grow in an increasingly digital era.
Desjardins Group is the largest cooperative financial group in North America and the sixth largest cooperative financial group in the world, with assets of $464.7 billion and 7.7 million members and clients. With business entities and units offering a full range of financial and insurance services, Desjardins is a pioneer and leader in online and mobile banking services in Canada. As a cooperative financial group contributing to the development of communities, Desjardins's mission is to provide its members and clients with the support they need to be financially empowered.