Nearly every financial institution has a digital strategy, but only a handful actually see it through to completion.
The reality? Banks and credit unions often spend months (sometimes years) building impressive roadmaps only to watch priorities shift, technology stall in procurement, and execution grind to a halt. Meanwhile, customer expectations keep climbing, and competitors who move faster gain an edge. If your digital initiatives keep getting stuck between “planning” and “done,” here’s how to break the cycle.
1. Misalignment between leadership, IT, and staff
Executives want growth and competitive positioning. IT wants scalability and security. Front-line teams want tools that make their jobs easier. When these priorities aren’t aligned, even the best plans fall apart.
2. Overly ambitious timelines and scope
Trying to modernize everything at once leads to decision fatigue and project fatigue. Big-bang rollouts rarely work in banking, where change management is critical. Only 30% of banks that have undergone a digital transformation report successfully implementing their digital strategy, and the majority fall short of their stated objectives.
3. Technology without process redesign
Buying new tools doesn’t fix broken workflows. Without rethinking how teams work, even the best technology becomes just another silo.
4. No clear success metrics
If you don’t know what success looks like: faster onboarding, fewer manual tasks, higher NPS, you can’t measure progress or build momentum.
Step 1: Define shared outcomes — Not Just Features
Saying “we’re going digital” isn’t enough. Successful execution starts with measurable goals that every team can rally around. Instead of focusing on features, focus on impact. For example:
Clear, outcome-driven goals create alignment among leadership, IT, and frontline staff, ensuring that digital investments translate into tangible results for customers and employees.
Step 2: Bring stakeholders in early
Your frontline staff are the ones who will live in these systems every day. Involve them in planning. They’ll spot roadblocks and opportunities leadership might miss — and they’ll be far more invested in the rollout.
Step 3: Prioritize and sequence
Start with initiatives that deliver visible wins. Quick wins create buy-in, which fuels momentum for bigger changes.
Step 4: Communicate constantly and train effectively
The number-one reason digital rollouts fail isn’t technology — it’s adoption. Communicate the “why,” provide hands-on training, and celebrate small victories.
A roadmap isn’t static. It should evolve as your bank learns and customer needs shift.
Every bank has a digital strategy. The ones that win are those that execute and execute in a way that serves both their customers (or members) and their teams.
Starting small, aligning early, and measuring as you go can be the difference between a flashy presentation and a true transformation.
At Vikar, we’ve been helping financial institutions for 8+ years bridge the gap between digital strategy and execution. Our approach is built on pragmatism: start with the most urgent needs, then build momentum toward long-term transformation.
Start with Urgent Needs
Move Off Legacy Technology in Phases
Unify Lending and Deposit Operations
Embed Stakeholder Alignment
Measure and Adapt
The Result
A roadmap that isn’t just a glossy slide deck, but an actionable, phased plan that accelerates digital transformation, improves customer experience, and strengthens operational efficiency.
Curious what execution could look like for your team? Let’s talk:
Ryan Taphouse is an experienced fintech professional with a strong background in supporting financial institutions through innovative technology and software solutions. He currently leads sales for the southern U.S. at Vikar, helping banks and credit unions implement forward-thinking initiatives that drive measurable results and enhance the customer experience. With a focus on strategic growth and digital transformation, Ryan is dedicated to helping institutions remain agile and competitive in an evolving financial landscape.