
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Episode 253: Desjardins thought its cooperative roots made it member-first by default. Then members started leaving.
Desjardins is a 125-year-old financial co-op based in Quebec. It has deep community ties and a proud history. But that pride masked a painful truth: Members no longer saw it as customer-centric. The organization believed its cooperative structure guaranteed loyalty—until low NPS scores and rising member churn showed otherwise.
Mathieu Staniulis and Séverine Clairet recount how Desjardins confronted its own mythology, restructured governance, and began treating feedback as a system, not a score.
Desjardins’ wake-up call came in the early 2010s. Despite its co-op status, members said the experience felt disjointed. Branches operated as near-independent entities. “It was really difficult to see the full scope of our company because we were presenting ourselves as different companies,” says Mathieu. CEO Guy Cormier led a bold move: unifying the 17 siloed organizations within Desjardins under a single governance structure.
But structure alone wasn’t enough. Internally, CX, risk, and profit still pulled in different directions.
As Mathieu puts it, “People in charge of customer experience only talk about customer experience and NPS. People in P&L ownership talk about their performance—their bottom line. How can they improve their performance, especially on the financial metrics? And then you have the risk people trying to manage risk and deal with regulators always bringing new regulations, especially in the financial industry. And I believe we have to find a way to work together to balance customer experience, efficiency or financial metrics, and risk management.”
The challenge became about integrating those forces to make balanced, member-first decisions—without sacrificing performance.
Now Desjardins faces a new frontier: recreating intimacy in a digital world. Transactions moved online. But financial advice—the core of trust and loyalty—remains unsolved. The question, Mathieu says, is urgent and unanswered: “How do we bring advice into a digital world?”
Guests: Mathieu Staniulis, Vice President, Products, Solutions & Digital, and Chief Transformation Officer | Séverine Clairet, Vice President Customer Experience & Marketing Strategy, Desjardins
Host: Rob Markey, Partner, Bain & Company
Give us feedback: Customer Confidential Podcast Feedback
Send us a note: Contact Rob
Time-Stamped Topics
00:01 – A logout button reveals blind spots in member experience
00:04 – Desjardins’ founding story: community aid in a kitchen
00:06 – “Member-owned” in theory vs. practice across 17 silos
00:08 – How Guy Cormier unified Desjardins under one governance model
00:09 – Why NPS lagged despite a strong co-op identity
00:12 – “The S means system”: transforming how feedback drives action
00:15 – Balancing CX, P&L, and risk without silos
00:18 – The call center debate: cost now vs. loyalty later
00:20 – Journey teams as a model for cross-functional accountability
00:21 – Digital did the easy part, so what comes next?
00:22 – Can “digital” be intimate? The next frontier for co-ops
Notable Quotes
Additional Resources
4.9
4444 ratings
Episode 253: Desjardins thought its cooperative roots made it member-first by default. Then members started leaving.
Desjardins is a 125-year-old financial co-op based in Quebec. It has deep community ties and a proud history. But that pride masked a painful truth: Members no longer saw it as customer-centric. The organization believed its cooperative structure guaranteed loyalty—until low NPS scores and rising member churn showed otherwise.
Mathieu Staniulis and Séverine Clairet recount how Desjardins confronted its own mythology, restructured governance, and began treating feedback as a system, not a score.
Desjardins’ wake-up call came in the early 2010s. Despite its co-op status, members said the experience felt disjointed. Branches operated as near-independent entities. “It was really difficult to see the full scope of our company because we were presenting ourselves as different companies,” says Mathieu. CEO Guy Cormier led a bold move: unifying the 17 siloed organizations within Desjardins under a single governance structure.
But structure alone wasn’t enough. Internally, CX, risk, and profit still pulled in different directions.
As Mathieu puts it, “People in charge of customer experience only talk about customer experience and NPS. People in P&L ownership talk about their performance—their bottom line. How can they improve their performance, especially on the financial metrics? And then you have the risk people trying to manage risk and deal with regulators always bringing new regulations, especially in the financial industry. And I believe we have to find a way to work together to balance customer experience, efficiency or financial metrics, and risk management.”
The challenge became about integrating those forces to make balanced, member-first decisions—without sacrificing performance.
Now Desjardins faces a new frontier: recreating intimacy in a digital world. Transactions moved online. But financial advice—the core of trust and loyalty—remains unsolved. The question, Mathieu says, is urgent and unanswered: “How do we bring advice into a digital world?”
Guests: Mathieu Staniulis, Vice President, Products, Solutions & Digital, and Chief Transformation Officer | Séverine Clairet, Vice President Customer Experience & Marketing Strategy, Desjardins
Host: Rob Markey, Partner, Bain & Company
Give us feedback: Customer Confidential Podcast Feedback
Send us a note: Contact Rob
Time-Stamped Topics
00:01 – A logout button reveals blind spots in member experience
00:04 – Desjardins’ founding story: community aid in a kitchen
00:06 – “Member-owned” in theory vs. practice across 17 silos
00:08 – How Guy Cormier unified Desjardins under one governance model
00:09 – Why NPS lagged despite a strong co-op identity
00:12 – “The S means system”: transforming how feedback drives action
00:15 – Balancing CX, P&L, and risk without silos
00:18 – The call center debate: cost now vs. loyalty later
00:20 – Journey teams as a model for cross-functional accountability
00:21 – Digital did the easy part, so what comes next?
00:22 – Can “digital” be intimate? The next frontier for co-ops
Notable Quotes
Additional Resources
1,868 Listeners
1,716 Listeners
381 Listeners
32,120 Listeners
1,061 Listeners
2,668 Listeners
1,947 Listeners
3,987 Listeners
168 Listeners
59 Listeners
33 Listeners
644 Listeners
221 Listeners
1,364 Listeners
161 Listeners