Back in 2006, when Paul Sheriff had only recently been named group financial director for a midsize banking business based in the United Kingdom, his team noticed that the profit margins of a certain banking product were experiencing a steady decline.
What\u2019s more, the customers being drawn to the product were deemed to be at \u201chigher risk\u201d than the bank\u2019s other customers.
While Sheriff tells us that he helped to put an end to the product\u2019s life, he also wants us to know that the numbers behind the problematic product appeared to be hidden in the bank\u2019s overall financial statements.
\u201cThe numbers from the backward-looking book of customers were dwarfing those of new customers such that everything looked okay,\u201d explains Sheriff, who notes that an effort to study the bank\u2019s new customer data separately was what suddenly flagged the troubling trend.
Sheriff relates that once the numbers made clear that the product was not sustainable for the business in the long run, canceling the product ultimately prevented the bank from suffering significant losses when the financial crisis arrived 18 months later.
\u201cThe real takeaway for me was to always delve into the details behind the data,\u201d he observes. \u201cThe overall position may look good, but there will likely be nuggets that look not so good and signal something else.\u201d
When asked about how he was able to put the brakes on the product line, Sheriff emphasizes the importance of taking people on the journey and building consensus. He advises not to make snap decisions and to allow time for reflection and consensus-building.
Sheriff first began acquiring consensus-building skills early in his career when he managed different teams. He tarted with a small team of three people and then gradually progressed to managing a team of 300. He emphasizes that the tools and techniques that he developed while managing bigger teams have helped him in his current role as CFO of NewDay. \u2013Jack Sweeney