A few weeks ago, I had the chance to talk to Christi McGrath, Training Specialist at Wichita Federal Credit Union, to learn about their experience rolling out ScreenSteps. And it’s been on my mind ever since.
I knew it was going to be a good story. After the launch, they saw an immediate impact. Tellers who had once relied heavily on their manager's help and on systemic tribal knowledge were now solving problems and responding to requests completely on their own.
But what I took away from our conversation was something that went even deeper.
This didn't happen because they just changed the way they captured, designed, and shared knowledge. It happened because they fundamentally changed the way their employees worked. And that’s the lesson that stuck with me.
You can have all the right answers written down. But unless employees feel confident and empowered to use them in the moment, it won’t matter.
Wichita FCU got both sides right. They made it easy for tellers to find, follow, and trust answers at their fingertips. And they made checking those answers a cultural habit.
This blog breaks down what I learned from that conversation and why I think it’s a playbook for anyone trying to create meaningful change on the frontlines.
P.S. If you'd like to check out the Wichita FCU success story, here's a link.
Employees won’t use what they can’t find. And they definitely won’t use what they can’t trust.
Christi understood this from day one. She wasn’t setting out to build a perfectly manicured documentation system. She just needed to accurately answer the questions that the tellers were asking. And she needed to be able to capture those answers quickly and present them in a way that made it easy for tellers to find and follow, even in the middle of a member interaction.
That’s exactly what she did:
It worked. Tellers knew where to look. They trusted what they found. And they could follow it in the moment.
“Today I used the article How to Remove a Joint Owner From an Existing Account while helping a member. It made the process a lot easier knowing I had the article for reassurance.”
If your resources aren’t easy to find, easy to follow, and easy to trust, none of it will matter.
This was the difference maker.
We’ve seen it time and time again: it doesn’t matter how good your guides are, if employees don’t build the habit of using them, they won’t make a difference.
That’s what made Wichita FCU so compelling to me. They didn’t just capture trusted knowledge. They built their entire culture around it.
They built a habit. They built a culture. And as a result, “check ScreenSteps first” became the new instinct.
That’s where the Find & Follow Framework comes in:
When all three are in place, employees perform better. When even one of them is missing, things break down.
"I used ScreenSteps today to tell a member what documents she needed for a name change and for her Auto Loan. I'm loving it so much!"
You can’t bolt a new tool onto an old habit and expect transformation.
Here’s what really stuck with me after that call with Christi:
You can have fast authoring. Beautiful guides. A powerful chatbot. But if you don’t have both ...
... it’s not going to make a meaningful difference.
Most tools out there are lopsided. Some focus on speed, but leave answers scattered. Others centralize info, but don’t help employees build a habit around it. Wichita FCU nailed it because they invested in both. And it showed up in the metrics and in the way tellers talked about their work.
“ScreenSteps is the foundation for teller success. It gives them something they can go to on their own and not feel lost.”
That’s the kind of change that lasts.
If any of this resonates with you, here’s where I’d start.
Go observe. When a member comes in with a question and the employee doesn’t immediately know what to do, what happens?
That moment will tell you everything. If their instinct isn’t to check a knowledge resource, it’s worth asking why. Do they not trust the guidance? Is it hard to find? Hard to follow? What looks like a behavior problem might actually be a knowledge transfer problem.
Take a look at what you currently have. Ask yourself:
If you’re not confident in the answers, that’s a good place to start making improvements.
Look at the tools you’re currently relying on:
I’m not saying those tools don’t have their place. But if they’re not helping your team actually perform better in the moment, then they’re not getting the job done. This is the problem ScreenSteps is designed to solve. Making sure employees always have clear, trusted guidance right when they need it, and actually build the habit of using it.
If you're interested in how ScreenSteps and the Find & Follow Framework can help drive these kinds of changes at your organization, let’s talk. We'd love to hear what you’re working on, learn more about your situation, and see if we can help.
Book a demo with the ScreenSteps team today.