Why Effort Matters as Much as Satisfaction
Credit unions in the US have mostly measured member experience through satisfaction scores and NPS. Both have value, and both leave a critical question unanswered. How hard did the member have to work to get what they needed? That question matters most at the specific moments along the member journey where friction quietly builds.
Picture a member trying to dispute a charge. The first call routes through an IVR menu. The second transfers to a different department. The third gets a callback promised within 24 hours that arrives in 72. The issue eventually gets resolved, and the member, when surveyed, gives a satisfaction score of 8 out of 10 because the resolution was correct. The CSAT looks fine. The reality is that the member just spent two weeks of mental energy on something that should have taken ten minutes. So, while this member may still be on the books, chances are that their next financial decision may be with another credit union that offers better service.
That gap between what got measured and what got experienced is what Customer Effort Score, or CES, was built to close. CES asks members to rate how easy or difficult a specific interaction was, usually on a five or seven-point scale. The lower the effort, the higher the loyalty. The research backing CES is clear: ease of doing business is one of the strongest predictors of repeat behavior and retention.
What CES Tells You That NPS Doesn’t
NPS measures sentiment. CES measures friction. They answer different questions, and they each surface different problems.
A member can score high on NPS, meaning they are likely to recommend the credit union, while still finding specific interactions difficult. They stay because they trust the credit union, but they quietly use other tools for the things that feel hard. Over time, that quiet shift erodes wallet share.
CES catches this earlier than NPS does. A high-effort interaction does not always pull NPS down immediately, but it does change member behavior. CES gives credit unions a leading indicator of where members are starting to disengage.
5 Places to Deploy CES in the Credit Union Journey
CES works best when applied to specific transactions and interactions, not as a general experience measure. FIVE moments deliver the most useful CES data for credit unions.
1. After a loan application
Members who report high effort during application are at elevated risk of abandoning future lending opportunities, even if they completed this one. CES at this moment surfaces process and digital friction that NPS often misses, things like document upload problems, unclear status communication, and back-and-forth on missing information.
2. After a member service interaction
Whether the contact happened by phone, chat, or in branch, CES at this moment captures whether the issue was resolved with reasonable effort or whether the member walked away frustrated. The CX 2026 report identified poor communication (37%) and long wait times (36%) as the top sources of negative experiences. CES catches both.
3. After onboarding
New member onboarding is one of the highest-effort interactions in the credit union relationship. A high-effort onboarding score signals friction that will affect every subsequent interaction. It is also one of the easiest moments to fix once the friction is exposed.
4. After a digital task
Mobile deposit, bill pay setup, transfer between accounts. Each of these moments is an effort test. CES surfaces friction the digital team would not otherwise see, because members rarely call to complain about a confusing app screen; they simply stop using it.
5. After a fee dispute or escalation
These are make-or-break moments. A high-effort resolution at this point creates churn risk regardless of how the issue was ultimately resolved. CES at this touchpoint is the strongest single predictor of whether the member will stay or leave within the next six months.
What the CX 2026 Data Tells us About Effort
The Sogolytics CX Index 2026 found that fast response and resolution time was tied for the top driver of positive customer experiences at 33%. This finding maps directly to CES. When effort is low and resolution is fast, the experience stands out. When effort is high, even a positive resolution feels diminished.
The same report found that ease of access was a top experience factor at 26%. It means that ease is not just a nice-to-have, but is a measurable contributor to loyalty, and CES is the metric that tracks it, alongside NPS and CSAT in a complete measurement program.
How to Design a Credit Union CES Program
A strong CES program is built on FIVE principles.
1. Survey at the moment, not later
CES needs to be administered immediately after the interaction it measures. Memory of effort fades within hours. A CES survey sent three days after the interaction captures recall, not reality.
2. Keep the question simple
The standard CES question, on a scale of one to seven, how easy was it to handle your request today, works well. Avoid stacking it with multiple questions in the same survey. Effort fatigue from a long survey skews the very thing being measured.
3. Always include a verbatim follow-up
The CES score tells you that effort was high. The verbatim tells you why. Without the why, the score is unactionable.
4. Tie CES to specific operational owners
The CES for digital banking belongs to the digital team. The CES for branch service belongs to the branch operations team. Without ownership, CES data does not turn into change.
5. Track CES alongside NPS, not instead of it
Each metric tells you something different. The most mature credit union experience programs use CES, NPS, and CSAT in combination, each at the moment best suited to it.

Use Case: A CES Program That Caught a Churn Signal Early
Consider a credit union that added CES to its post-loan application survey. NPS for the lending program was sitting at 51, which leadership read as solid. The CES data told a different story. Members reported high effort on three specific steps: document upload, status check, and the response to follow-up information requests. Effort scores on those three steps averaged 4.8 out of 7, well below the credit union’s internal target of 5.5.
The team did not wait for NPS to drop. They redesigned the three high-effort steps. Document upload was rebuilt to handle phone photos cleanly. Status was made visible in the member portal without requiring a call. Follow-up information requests were consolidated into a single message instead of three separate emails.
Two quarters later, the CES on those steps had climbed to 6.1. The NPS on the lending program had climbed from 51 to 59. More importantly, the loan abandonment rate for applications that hit the previous friction steps had dropped by 18 percentage points. The CES data caught the problem six months before NPS would have, and the early read translated into real revenue.
Conclusion
This article has covered a lot of ground: why effort matters as much as satisfaction, what CES tells you that NPS misses, the five places to deploy CES in a credit union journey, what the CX 2026 data says about effort, the five principles of a strong CES program, and a use case showing how an early CES signal saved 18 percentage points of loan abandonment. Effort is the silent driver of credit union member behavior, and CES is how you catch it.
Sogolytics’ Experience Navigator was built to give credit union leaders a structured way to do this work without starting from a blank page. The four-step setup, industry and vertical, business model, operational scope, and objectives, configures the platform to the specific shape of a credit union’s CES program. From there, it maps CES to the digital, physical, process, and human touchpoints that members really experience, and recommends the right feedback method and metric for each one, so effort signals arrive with operational context attached. Branch managers, digital teams, and lending leads can each see their segment of the effort picture alongside the others, which is what turns CES from a slide into an operating tool.
While measuring effort is only half the job done, the real value comes from acting on what CES reveals, every quarter, across every team that touches the member. That is where most credit unions need a partner, and where Experience Navigator earns its place in the stack.
To explore how Experience Navigator supports credit union CES programs, visit Vist the Platform.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Customer Effort Score (CES)?
Customer Effort Score is a metric that measures how easy or difficult it was for a member to complete a specific interaction with the credit union. The standard CES question asks members to rate, on a five or seven-point scale, how easy it was to handle their request. Lower effort scores correlate strongly with higher loyalty and retention. The metric is most useful when applied to specific transactional moments, like loan applications, contact center calls, and digital tasks, rather than as a general experience measure.
How is CES different from NPS and CSAT?
NPS measures whether a member would recommend the credit union (relationship-level sentiment). CSAT measures how satisfied a member was with a specific interaction (transactional satisfaction). CES measures how much effort the member had to put in to get something done (transactional friction). The three metrics answer different questions and surface different problems. Strong credit union experience programs use all three, attached to the moments each one was designed to measure.
When should a credit union use a CES survey?
CES is most useful right after specific transactional moments, especially loan applications, contact center calls, in-branch service interactions, digital task completion (mobile deposit, bill pay setup, transfers), onboarding, and complaint or dispute resolution. The survey should be sent within minutes or hours of the interaction, while memory of the effort is fresh. CES sent days later captures recall, not reality.
Why is effort a better predictor of churn than satisfaction?
Satisfaction reflects how a member felt after the interaction was over. Effort reflects how the interaction itself behaved. A member can be satisfied with a correct outcome and still find the process so painful that they quietly stop using that channel. CES catches the second pattern, which is invisible to satisfaction surveys but visible in member behavior. Research consistently shows that low-effort interactions correlate more strongly with loyalty and retention than high-satisfaction interactions do.
How should a credit union act on a low CES score?
Start with the verbatim feedback attached to the score. Patterns usually emerge within an hour of reading. Common high-effort themes for credit unions cluster around document handling, status communication, multi-step processes, and channel handoffs. Pick the highest-volume cluster and address it operationally. A single fix in a high-volume effort point will move CES faster than a dozen scattered improvements. Then communicate the change back to members so they see that the feedback led somewhere.
How does CES support member retention?
CES gives credit unions a leading indicator of disengagement. By the time a member’s NPS drops, they have often already shifted their primary financial activity elsewhere. By the time they leave, the decision was made months earlier. CES catches the friction that drives those shifts in real time, while there is still a chance to fix the process and earn the member back. The credit unions using CES well are usually the ones with the steadiest retention numbers across their digital-first segments.



