Perseverance was Tuesday's theme of America's Credit Union Conference.
CUNA President/CEO Jim Nussle asked credit unions to commit to being "fiercely cooperative" and announced that the Dakotas and Indiana had joined the Open Your Eyes to a Credit Union initiative.
Girls Who Code founder and keynote speaker Reshma Saujani said, "If we want more empathy, compassion, and humanity in society, we not only have to teach girls how to code, we have to teach them how to be brave, not perfect."
Breakout sessions covered small credit unions, elder financial abuse, and active shooter situations.
CUNA President/CEO Jim Nussle meets with the #CUNAACUC Crashers.
CO-OP Financial Services’ Channie Price discusses the future of payments during an industry trends session.
CUNA President/CEO Jim Nussle urges attendees to be “fiercely cooperative.”
“There becomes a point where we have to thrive in cultures that don’t look like us,” keynoter Reshma Soujani said during an Executive Series Q&A.
Keynoter Reshma Soujani signs copies of her book, “Brave, Not Perfect.”
CUNA’s Tom Sakash describes the resources available to small credit unions.
Local Government FCU’s Maurice Smith, a member of the CUNA CEO Council Executive Committee, discusses top issues facing credit union CEOs.
AdvantEdge Analytics’ Anne Legg offers a five-step framework to foster data centricity.
CUNA’s Elizabeth Eurgubian explains how the BankSafe program helps credit unions meet regulatory guidance requirements of the Senior Safe Act.
When planning for an active shooter situation, think ALICE says CUNA Mutual Group’s Mike Petrone: Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter, Evacuate.
“Penetration testing is designed to validate that systems are working the way you expect,” says Randy Romes of CliftonLarsonAllen.
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