The credit unions achieving breakthrough results—like the $1 billion in growth American Heritage Credit Union generated in just 18 months—aren’t necessarily smarter or better funded. They’re simply executing differently. They’ve learned what works, what doesn’t, and how to avoid the costly missteps that stall data initiatives before they gain momentum.
Here’s your practical roadmap for formulating a data strategy that drives measurable impact.
The Do's: Building for Success
DO Start with High-Impact Quick Wins
Launch Credit Union took this approach with their incentive tracking program. Rather than overhauling everything at once, they automated one critical manual process and eliminated 480 hours of management labor annually. That early win built confidence for expanding into additional modules.
DO Build Cross-Departmental Buy-In from Day One
Here’s the reality: 95% of financial institutions report that data is broken up in silos. That means critical information that one part of your institution has about your customers isn’t being shared with another part. It’s like having three mechanics working on the same car without talking to each other. You’re going to drain the wrong fluid.
Executives need daily financial visibility, not just quarterly reports. Front-line staff need complete customer relationships in real-time. Managers need performance metrics that enable proactive coaching. Lending teams need pipeline visibility. When everyone has skin in the game from the start, you avoid the fatal mistake of treating this as purely a technical implementation.
DO Integrate, Don't Just Aggregate
The same thing happens with data. Financial institutions spend money putting data into a warehouse, but if you’re not integrating those different data sources with each other, you’re just creating an expensive graveyard. Your data needs to work together—core systems, lending platforms, digital banking, card systems, marketing tools—all connected into one real-time, queryable foundation.
DO Anchor Around Your Institution's Mission
Start by measuring what actually matters to your mission: churn rates, cross-sell effectiveness, share-of-wallet, customer profitability, employee efficiency, and marketing campaign attribution to opened products. These metrics define your starting point and your ROI.
DO Establish Strong Governance Before You Scale
Establish a governance committee that includes representation from across the enterprise and not just IT. Define data ownership, accountability, and validation processes from the start. Governance isn’t bureaucracy. It’s the foundation of trust that makes everything else possible.
DO Align Incentives with Adoption
Pennsylvania State Employees Credit Union automated their cross-sell tracking and incentive calculations, eliminating the weekly manual process of spreadsheets and email approvals. The result wasn’t just efficiency; it was adoption. When staff can see their performance daily and know they’ll be paid accurately for their efforts, they engage with the system.
The Don'ts: Avoiding Costly Missteps
DON'T Treat This as Purely Technical
Technology is essential, but transformation requires organizational change management. If your data initiative lives exclusively in IT, you’ve already limited its potential impact.
DON'T Try to Boil the Ocean
Focus on insights that tie directly to strategic goals: growth, efficiency, intelligence, and member empowerment. The goal isn’t more reports. The goal is smarter, faster decisions.
DON'T Ignore End User Adoption
Build training into your implementation plan. Make the tools intuitive. And critically, demonstrate value early so people want to use them. When PSECU streamlined their cross-sell process, managers could approve incentives with a few clicks instead of sifting through weekly spreadsheet emails. That’s the kind of tangible improvement that drives adoption.
DON'T Underestimate Customization Needs
DON'T Forget Cost vs. Value
The Road Ahead
The average U.S. financial institution operates over 200 vendor systems. Your data strategy must account for this reality, not fight it. Modern data architectures can connect cores, digital banking, lending, card, and marketing systems into one real-time foundation while delivering performance at a fraction of traditional costs.
The institutions that win are those that connect their systems, activate their data, and empower every team with actionable intelligence.
But here’s the critical question: Are you going to spend 2026 debating how to become data-driven, or are you going to spend it executing?
The difference between these two groups isn’t luck or budget. It’s execution. Follow these do’s and don’ts, start with quick wins that prove value, build governance frameworks that enable sustainable scale, and align every department around shared goals.
Ready to Activate Your Data Strategy?
Some credit unions will spend another year in analysis paralysis. Others will achieve breakthrough results like the institutions we’ve highlighted here.
Let’s transform scattered information into strategic intelligence that drives growth.
We’ll make a plan to get you there.
