Centier Bank: We Are Family

Written by Candance Gwaltney of the Indiana Chamber of Commerce

If you believe a smile is contagious, then beware of Centier Bank. Spend a day with the Northwest Indiana financial institution and your face will ache from grinning.

Ask any of the 600-plus employees why they work for the Merrillvillebased bank and you better be ready to listen to a heartfelt story. Not one about a job, but one about pride and loyalty. But mostly, one about family.

“They are our family; Centier Bank is your family,” proclaims Evelyn Kijewski, a loan document supervisor. “They hurt when you hurt, and they help you when you need help. They cheer you when you do something good or not so good, or (when you) just make that little stride that you feel good about and you wonder if someone notices – they do.”

Celebrating its 115th anniversary, Centier Bank remains a locally owned and operated community institution. And that’s how it’s going to stay, shares president Mike Schrage. He is the fourth generation to own and manage the family bank founded by his great-grandfather.

“We want to keep the community bank atmosphere as we continue to grow. The culture is the most important part of the organization to preserve,” he emphasizes. Any acquisitions and expansions into new communities must fit culturally with Centier. “The biggest challenge to me as the bank grows is to keep the family feeling, especially internally within the bank. With 44 offices we started to get geographically diversified a bit,” Schrage says.

Centier continues to hold company-wide events such as reunions, Christmas parties, summer picnics and an annual recognition program called Celebration of Excellence. But it’s the day-to-day interactions between employees and their communities that make working for Centier like spending time with family.

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Getting to know you
What sets Centier apart is its standard of service, says Dakita Jones, branch manager for the Gary-Midtown retail location. Jones doesn’t mind when clients (usually the grumpy ones) say she’s over the top. “Look at our faces,” she says with a huge grin. “You can’t fake this.”

For her employees, that feeling comes through confidence. Tellers receive training that allows them to stay informed so they can handle issues on their own. “I try to keep them empowered in their position,” she says.

Jones is involved in the community through programs says of his location. Branch managers write their own business plans and have freedom to make decisions.

Keeping continuity
A weekly conference call among the bank’s 150 officers keeps all locations informed on what’s happening with personnel, interest rates and other business.

“I think people really savor being part of an organization that communicates to them, is transparent and open with them about what’s going on, what they are going to be doing in the future,” Schrage says. “There are very few secrets here about where our future path is.”

Employees know where new branches will open before construction even starts.

Creating a ‘Best Place’
The winning culture at Centier is many years in the making. Schrage admits that when he took the reins, he didn’t have the same focus he has now. It took him a while to learn some of the lessons and standards set by previous generations. Bank founder Henry Schrage “preserved it through the Depression through his own loyalty and putting up his trust fund to fund any bad loans the bank had during the Depression.” Schrage’s father Wally added personality to the bank.

“He was just the good guy (everyone) could depend on who would take care of them in good and bad times,” Schrage recalls. Mike Schrage started his career with a different focus. “I just wanted to grow the bank and be the biggest bank in Northwest Indiana. And that’s all I cared about. So we lost some of the personality, some of the loyalties… ” “I’m grateful for the people who worked in the bank over the years and transcended the generational changes of leadership in the family… they preserved some of those qualities I, as a young man, didn’t have,” he admits.

Today, principles supersede growth. All decisions are made based on Centier’s values of integrity, respect, friendship, caring and loyalty.

Fitting for culture
Schrage maintains the most important ingredient in a workplace is the employees. “We hire for cultural and value compatibility. They are not screened initially for knowledge and skills. We can teach them how to be a teller or a loan processor or anything else.”

Equally important in the hiring process is making sure Centier is the right fit for the employee, asserts Chrisanne Christ, vice president of human resources. The interview allows employees to learn if Centier has what they need to accomplish career aspirations.

Sitting at her local Centier branch about three years ago, Cathy Rydlewski could not help but notice how happy everyone looked. Already a client of 13 years, she was in need of a job. “I became a single mom and I had to support my family.”

She had never worked as a teller or in any financial position, but she decided she wanted to be a part of the Centier family. At a time she describes as a low place in her life, Centier gave her hope. “They made me believe in me.” She was told she could learn the skills needed and she would get the training.

The message she received was this: “We like who you are; come work for us.”

Today, Rydlewski describes herself as proud. She serves as a primetime banker (floating teller) and cannot imagine doing anything else. “I love my position; I’m in the front line. I’m the person who makes or breaks it with our clients.”

Growing opportunities
By growing the company at a moderate pace (plan is 8-10% per year), Centier continues to build new opportunities for employees “to feel challenged by and diversify their responsibilities,” Schrage states.

Employees don’t have to leave the organization to explore new career options, he adds. “People join Centier for a career, not a job. They really look at it as a long-term relationship when they join the bank. It’s not just a stepping stone to something else.”

Kijewski started with Centier as a part-time secretary in investments. She moved around a few times to work in loan servicing and later as an assistant for a senior partner. She started to get restless and decided to take a job with another company. One week later she called Centier asking if she could come back (and did about a year later when a suitable position became available).

She set her sights on becoming a loan operations officer. Along the way, Centier’s tuition assistance program helped her earn a degree. Last year she reached that goal. “It’s a good feeling coming into work everyday. It really is.” Now a 14-year employee, Kijewski has another goal in mind – she wants to reach the 25-year milestone. Little things mean a lot For 30-year-employee Donna Scott, it’s the respect that keeps her with such as a “save your home” class to help families get their house out of foreclosure. Trips to local nursing homes allow her to assist residents with their banking and budgeting – while also joining in Bingo games.

Serving the community is important to Jones. She admits the neighborhood appears a little rough, but the Centier branch provides a clean, cheerful place that helps change attitudes. While gushing about her experience with Centier, Jones has a few women stop by with no intention of making a deposit or doing other business. They ask her if they can have a cup of coffee. Jones smiles and invites them to help themselves.

“Centier prides itself on the level of personalized service that it avails the community to,” Schrage shares. “It is a warm neighborhood-type bank and people like to go where people know their name.”

Mark Hill, manager of the St. John branch, says that Centier is about “creating an atmosphere where people want to come back.” Clients aren’t running an errand – they are stopping in to see friends, he adds. Centier gives managers ownership in their branches. “This is my business,” Hill Centier. Outside the corporate center, her name can be found among other longtime associates. Employees with 10 years of service receive a name-engraved brick near the entry. A larger stone (such as Scott’s) honors those with 25 years.

“It’s just a little thing maybe, but certainly I think a great way to recognize folks’ loyalty to the organization,” notes senior partner Carol Highsmith. Quarter-century club inductees also are treated to a night out in Chicago each year – with dinner at an upscale restaurant and a Broadway show. All employees receive a handwritten card from Schrage on their company anniversary date along with a small gift. Centier just wants to have fun From jeans days and barbeques to Christmas caroling and Halloween costumes, the company knows how to have fun, Highsmith shares.

“We encourage a lot of that, because this is their family,” she relates. “We’re here, many times, more than we are at home. How can we make the environment a fun environment as well as a place they want to come to everyday?”

Departments dream up ideas on their own to implement with their teams and clients. As long as it fits with our values and mission, they don’t need permission, Schrage says. “You just do the unexpected. Make some special moments for people,” he states.

In fact Schrage has been known to show up to events in comical costumes. For the 2008 Celebration of Excellence he dressed as Peter Pan. “I still like my green tights,” he quips. Other disguises have included James

Bond, Frosty the Snowman and Waylon Jennings. “You take away that intimidation by… lead(ing) it from the top of the organization by the board of directors, myself, the senior team. We dress up. We dance. We let them laugh at us – that’s what we do! “You really have to say, ‘Hey, we are all equals here, we all put on our pants the same way, and we like to have fun the same way.’”

Service to community and each other
Employees are given the latitude to help their communities by organizing grassroots fundraisers and drives at the corporate center and the branches. One day it may be a fundraiser for a school or a fire victim; the next it may be a shoe or winter gear drive for the needy.

Twice a year, associates get together on a Saturday for a trash pick-up project on the highway. It’s an opportunity to build camaraderie while giving back, Highsmith shares. Centier helps its associates just as it helps the community, Christ asserts. “We feel it is part of our responsibility as their employer to help them balance their needs.”

Centier does that by offering benefits such as flexible schedules and aiding associates during difficult times. “They’re very willing to work with you as you become older and your life changes and your family life changes,” relates Sherry O’Connor, who began her career with Centier 32 years ago. She was able to work shorter days when she had children and allowed flexibility if she needed to leave for family reasons.

The C.A.R.E. committee offers financial assistance for those who cannot pay a bill (for instance, when a spouse is unemployed) or for medical expenses. Employees hold fundraisers, donate money through payroll deductions and give hours from their paid time off.

The committee also maintains a private list of associates who have dealt with different medical diagnoses. Scott took advantage of that support system when fighting cancer. She since has returned that support by writing letters and talking to others facing similar battles, she notes.

‘Through thick and thin’
Like many businesses (and especially banks), Centier faced a tough year in 2009. “I’m amazed that we’re here today as one of the Best Places to Work this year … we put a hiring freeze on last year, no pay increases this year, and there were no performance increases this year,” Schrage surmises.

That’s not how associates saw it. “We tightened our belts like a family would do,” Rydlewski shares.

Employees who didn’t have as much work to do spent time in busier departments. That also helped give everyone their full work hours and pay. Everyone was flexible and pitched in to help the whole team, Highsmith recalls.

Schrage made a pledge in February 2009 that no one would be laid off. “That was a hard pledge to keep last year, let me tell you,” he says. Centier remained on a hiring freeze until February of this year, reaching minimum staff levels. Now the company is hiring on a replacement basis only.

“Through thick and thin, whether the bank is going to lose millions of dollars in money that year, we keep our promises,” Schrage declares.

Knowing her and her employees’ jobs were secure offered Jones peace of mind. “Especially this year with us being where we are with the economy, I have never felt so much like a family,” she reflects.