Every day, your frontline employees are performing thousands of transactions and interacting with thousands of customers. And because of the nature of banking, when they make mistakes it can result in lost money, fines, a loss of trust, and audit findings.
And while it's nice that employees all passed their compliance training, you need them to actually BE compliant with operating policies and procedures.
As I've helped companies write policies and procedures for their ScreenSteps knowledge base, I've witnessed the advantages of writing your compliance documents so that employees can not only pass off compliance training requirements but also perform tasks correctly.
Watch the video below to learn how ScreenSteps helps banks with compliance.
In it, I share three common approaches banks use to maintain compliance. Then I'll explain the downfall of these approaches. And wrap up with five ways ScreenSteps helps fill in the gaps.
Typically, when companies and financial institutions need employees to be compliant with procedures, they do three things:
First, banks use off-the-shelf e-learning with their LMS.
Pros: It’s affordable, it scales really well, and you can show the auditor a report that says everybody took it.
Cons: It’s generic, forgettable, and employees don’t always see how it applies in their day-to-day routines.
The goal is usually to have employees understand the regulations and policies and intuitively apply their understanding to daily procedures. But that doesn't always happen.
Second, banks upload PDF policies and procedures to their intranet or a shared folder.
Pros: This satisfies the requirement to have policies and procedures.
Cons: Banks aren’t even sure if employees are using the procedures because there aren’t any metrics. However, all indications suggest that frontline employees don’t use the PDFs because they’re difficult to find and not easy to follow.
Another challenge that many banks have is that PDFs, Word files, spreadsheets, PowerPoint, and sticky notes are all over the place. There's no ONE location to find answers.
🔍 Related: How to Document Procedures in Your Bank or Credit Union (5 Steps)
Third, managers and trainers individually work with employees to teach and remind them how to do procedures.
Pros: This has a personal touch and can be customized to what employees need.
Cons: This approach doesn’t scale and it’s not consistent between managers and trainers. Plus, employees forget what they were told when they’re actually performing a transaction.
Another thing to consider is how exhausting this is for managers and trainers. Being asked the same questions, again and again, gets old really fast.
The thing is, none of these approaches are designed to help frontline employees, in highly regulated industries like banking, consistently do the procedures at the moment they are actually doing the procedures.
Aka: These approaches don't address the problem.
The approaches above require employees to memorize, intuitively know, or learn by repeatedly getting help from a co-worker.
In a perfect world, you’d have a resource that enables employees to perform each transaction and handle each customer interaction at the moment they’re actually doing it.
No need to memorize all the steps for all 150 procedures at your bank. No need for all of your employees to be experts at all the regulations. No need to call somebody over for help every time you have a question.
The resource would also provide reports on who is using what, which procedures need updating, and it would notify everybody when things change.
Well, that’s what we do.
ScreenSteps is a cloud knowledge base that is designed to enable employees to follow the right procedure, step-by-step, at the moment they are doing it. Here are five ways ScreenSteps can help your bank with compliance.
First, all of your departments can contribute to the ScreenSteps knowledge base so that it becomes your one-stop-shop for policies and procedures (with the flexibility of restricting viewing and authoring permissions).
Most banks have procedures, job aids, and work instructions scattered around and employees are confused about where to go when they need information. ScreenSteps can be used to organize the procedures for all of your departments.
Second, using optimized search, in less than 3 seconds your employees can pull up applicable job aids, checklists, decision trees, procedures, and step-by-step guides every time they do a task or help a customer.
Third, trainers can use these resources as part of their training curriculum and stop the cycle of forgetting.
After training is over, employees can use ScreenSteps while completing a transaction or interacting with a customer, reinforcing what they learn without asking a manager or a coworker for a reminder.
Fourth, management can view reports to see who is using what as well as what employees are searching for.
Note: One financial institution we worked with saw that last year, their 1,200 employees had viewed procedures almost 1 million times. Turns out, employees really, REALLY like having a resource they can go to for information.
Fifth, ScreenSteps will keep track of when your procedures need updates and it allows your teams to give feedback when changes to procedures need to be made.
And once an update is made you can send a notification to your departments and log when employees acknowledge the update.
When companies use ScreenSteps, employees have the policies and procedures at their fingertips. This results in fewer mistakes, more consistent operations, and more effective training that allows for quicker onboarding and cross-training.
How would it change your bank's operations if employees had a reliable resource at their fingertips?
With ScreenSteps knowledge bank for banks, you have a one-stop shop where employees know they can find answers to their questions.
Think ScreenSteps could simplify compliance at your bank? Set up a time to talk to a ScreenSteps rep to see how ScreenSteps could improve compliance with your unique bank.