Personal Banking - A Wachovia Trademark ? . - *?*:*? Today everybody *^r" ~ 7 talks about service, hut Wachovia pioneered re ? _ ? ? latiunship - banking 20 years ago when it created the highly successful Personal Banker program. At Wachovia, one individual ? a Personal Banker? ? will assist a customer ... with any of the more than 1 00 services the bank offers. Personal Bankers are extensively trained in every phase of banking procedures and are ready to oversee numerous transactions: from opening checking or brokerage accounts, to arranging loans, purchasing certificates of deposits or opening individual retirement accounts. "At Wachovia we think you should get the same sort of personal attention that you get from your doctor or dentist." said Alan Proctor, branch manager at the Thruway Banking Center, When Wachovia committed itself to the Personal Banker concept in 1973. it integrated every aspect of the banking operation, from bank managers to data processing support staff, into the effort. That long-term focus is still in place today. In 1989, in their book. The Seri'ice Edge: 100 Companies That Profit From Customer Care . writers Ron Zemke and Dick Schaaf said of Wachovia's Personal Banker program: "...seven or eight years and several million dollars' worth of mid-seven ties vintage investment were required to get it right, but today Wachovia is a model of well-run, customer-focused retail banking. It's also one of the top all-around banks in the country." . Too often, unfortunately, in many financial institutions customers needing assistance find themselves assigned to whichever functionary happens to be on duty on the floor or on the telephone when they visit or call. Customers are often transferred from department to department for information about loans, savings accounts, charge cards and other services. Wachovia helps tts Personal Bankers respond quickly and efficiently to the needs of customers by consolidating all ac count records on a computer network. The on-line information, system gives Personal Bankers and Service Representatives ? ? via computer terminals instant- access tothe information necessary to handle all of a customer's needs. New accounts can be set up by the Personal Banker directly on the terminal while the customer is at the desk. No written forms are needed other than a signature card. Also. Personal Bankers or Service Repre sentatives can make name and address changes, enter stop payments, update demographic information, order or update banking cards, order credit reports and make numerous other transactions at their desktop terminals. Businesses and industries moving into a town find Wachovia' s Personal Bankers more than willing to assist ihem and their employees with any relocation needs, whether it be transferring bank accounts to the new city or helping the newcomer locate a child-care service. Customers cai\ choose a Personal Banker in a specific Wachovia office and can change Personal Bankers anytime they wish. Service representatives also are on hand to help Branch Manager Alan Proctor explains the savings and convenience of a Wachovia Prime Plus credit card account - to a prospective customer. ? ^ customers with any routine transactions. In these times when an individual's relationship with institutions has become impersonal and sometimes even unpro fessional, Wachovia' s Personal Banker is a refreshing reminder of the personal touch that is so important in banking. Wachovia's History: More Than a Century of Progress, Stability and Innovative Service o One summer day more than 1 14 years ago, young William Lemly moved an iron safe up the cobblestone streets of Salem ? to the neighboring community of Winston. A few days later amid the hard times of Reconstruction, the doors of a new bank ? Wachovia National Bank ? were opened. "Wachovia" is the Anglicization of "Wachau" th* naiw given to the large tract of land in Piedmont North Carolina acquired by Moravian settlers through land grants in 1 753. The name came from the German words "wach" for stream and "au" for meadowland. This land, named for Der Wachau, a valley along the Danube River, included what became the community of Salem in 1 766. Eventually, "Der Wachau" in North Carolina was dis carded by a growing English-speaking populace for a more easily pronounced version. The article "Der" was dropped; the "IT was converted to a "V," and the suffix "IA" was added. Thus, the name Wachovia. The new bank grew with the prospering businesses that were becoming important to the area: textile mills, furniture factories and tobacco factories. By 1 888, the bank had moved to a new location on the corner of Third and Main streets in Winston, where Wachovia' s headquarters was later built. in 1 89 1 , at the request of a group of Winston and Salem businessmen, the North Carolina General Assembly approved the creation of a new kind offinancial. institution called a trust company. At that time, the charter was granted for Wachovia Loan and T rust, which officially opened two years later. Its staff consisted of the president, Francis H. Fries, and his nephew, Henry Fries Shaffner. The company had been in existence only 60 days when the "Cleveland Panic" ? characterized by a shortage and hoarding of money ? hit Winston. But the trust company survived the storm and, within 10 years, became the largest financial insti tution in the state. By 1903, Wachovia Loan and Trust was a pioneer in statewide banking, opening branches in Salisbury, High Point, Asheville and Spencer. Besides their names, the two Wachovias shared similar practices and philosophies. So in 191 1, two years before the towns of Winston and Salem consolidated, the two institutions merged into Wachovia Bank and Trust Company. * The new banking company occupied the state's first * "skyscraper" ? an eight-story building located on the corner of Third and Main streets. In 1918, Wachovia joined the Federal Reserve system greatly enhancing its correspondent banking services. During the Great Depression, thousands of banks were $50 billion. Fortunately, under the dynamic leadership of Rob ert M. Hanes, Wachovia weathered those lean years without ever touching its reserves. Hanes, president of Wachovia from 1931 to 1956, led the bank through years of substantial progress. Deposits climbed from $42 million to $406 million, and loans rose from $22 million to $214 million. By 1 966, Wachovia employed more than 2,900 people and had moved into a new 30-story structure ? which will remain losses were estimated at more than . ?> . jfc & t . Prominent customers George Brooks, James A. Gray and R. J. Reynolds gather in front of the original Wachovia National Bank building. its home until late 1995 when a new headquarters building will be completed on a site across from Winston-Salem's City Hall. In the late 1960s, Wachovia formed a one-bank holding company. The Wachovia Corporation. The '70s and improved technology brought innovations for customer convenience, inctuding the Personal Banker pro gram, a new concept in individualized customer service, and Teller II, Wachovia' s automated teller machines that provide banking services 24-hours a day. The '80s saw the introduction of new Wachovia services such as an adjustable-rate mortgage that became a model for similar programs across the nation. The Personal Trust Group was one of the first to unbundle traditional trust services so that individual clients and lawyers on behalf of their clients can obtain as many ? or as few ? services as needed. Wachovia was among the first banks in the nation to offer consumers a variable-rate line of credit, BankLine. And with Phone Access, which enables customers to access their ac counts around the clock by telephone, Wachovia continued to apply technology in ways that benefit customers. In 1985, The Wachovia Corporation merged with First Atlanta Corporation to form First Wachovia Corporation. Five years later, with the merger of all operations complete, the Wachovia name was adopted by all member companies, and the holding company returned to its previous identification of simply Wachovia Corporation. The First National Bank of Atlanta became Wachovia Bank of Georgia and Wachovia Bank and Trust became Wachovia Bank of North Carolina. In 1 99 1 , Wachovia Corporation added another dimension to its interstate banking company, this time merging with South Carolina National Corporation of Columbia, S.C. Today, Wachovia has assets in excess of $33 billion and ranks 21st among the nation's largest bank holding compa nies. Wachovia has almost 16,000 employees and its three lead banks include Wachovia Bank of Georgia with 132 offices in 49 cities, Wachovia Bank of North Carolina with 221 offices in 96 cities, and South Carolina National Bank with 158 offices in 71 cities. Corporate Services offices are located in Chicago, Dallas and New York City, and interna tional offices are in Atlanta, Winston-Salem, Columbia, S.C., . New York City, London and Tokyo.