Deposit growth is one of the most direct indicators of member trust. When members bring more of their money to a credit union, it means they trust your institution and want a deeper relationship that benefits both parties.
The question is, what really drives that decision? And how much of it is shaped by the quality of member experience?
The latter is most important, as the quality of member experience influences the decision more than most credit union leaders realize.
Onboarding is the First Financial Decision Point
A new member onboarding experience is one of the most consequential moments in the credit union relationship. A member who joins and finds the process clear, welcoming, and easy to navigate is far more likely to move their primary banking relationship to that institution. But a member who encounters confusing eligibility rules, unclear welcome emails, or clunky document uploads starts the relationship on the back foot.
Experience Navigator’s onboarding analysis reveals exactly where these gaps exist. The platform identifies confusion in the online membership application portal, pinpoints where document upload failures occur, and measures clarity of the welcome email against actual first-action completion rates. These are not soft metrics. They have a direct line to see whether a new member opens a second product within six months.
Digital Satisfaction Drives Balance Behavior
Members who find digital banking frustrating do not simply feel bad about their credit union. They move their money somewhere else. Digital experience quality is closely tied to customer loyalty in banking and loyalty is what keeps deposits in place. Sogolytics’ U.S. Banking 2026 Study found that the bank with the strongest digital experience ratings (JPMorgan Chase, 87% mobile app ease) also led on overall satisfaction and recommendation, while banks with weaker digital experiences saw notably higher switching intent.
Credit unions face the same dynamic, often more acutely, since members increasingly interact with their institution entirely through the app and the online portal. And the digital frictions that drive them away are rarely dramatic. They are small, daily, and cumulative.
Navigation complexity on the online banking platform keeps members from finding basic features, such as account balances and transaction history, which can lead to frustration and decreased engagement with the platform. Login and authentication friction discourages daily use. Mobile app instability during peak transaction periods creates exactly the kind of stress that makes members question whether they should keep their primary checking account at this credit union.
On the other hand, members who rate digital experiences highly tend to maintain higher balances, adopt more products, and show significantly lower churn rates.
| Experience touchpoint | High score outcome | Financial impact |
|---|---|---|
| Onboarding ease | 2.3x product adoption within 90 days | Increased deposits and cross-sell revenue |
| Digital banking satisfaction | Higher average account balances | Lower churn, increased primary banking share |
| Issue resolution speed | Longer member tenure | Stable and growing deposit base |
| Fee transparency clarity | Greater product trust | More likely to open additional accounts |
| Personalization quality | Stronger emotional loyalty | Higher wallet share over time |
Issue Resolution as a Retention Lever
How a credit union handles problems often matters more than whether they happen in the first place. A member who hits a snag and gets it resolved quickly, with clear communication and genuine care, can walk away more loyal than one who never had a problem at all. Service researchers call this the ‘Service Recovery Paradox,’ and while the effect isn’t automatic, the underlying principle holds in financial services: how you respond to a failure shapes the relationship far more than the absence of failure ever does.
When complaint resolution speed correlates with deposit retention, the business case for investing in support quality becomes clear. A credit union that tracks complaint categories, measures resolution time, and monitors satisfaction post-resolution has the data it needs to make targeted service improvements with measurable financial returns.
Turning Data into Deposit Strategy
The key is not just collecting experience data. It is connected to behavioral and financial data so that patterns become visible. Members who rate onboarding highly tend to open additional accounts at a higher rate. Members reporting digital friction maintain lower balances. Faster issue resolution correlates with longer tenure.
Experience Navigator gives credit union leadership the ability to see these connections in real time, prioritize improvements based on their financial impact, and present the business case for CX investment at a board level. That is how experience management moves from a member satisfaction initiative to a deposit growth strategy.



