Credit unions have long led with mission. But in today’s data-driven and outcome-focused environment, mission alone is no longer enough.
Anne Legg, Founder of THRIVE Strategic Services and author of Big Data / Big Climb, has launched the CU Power Framework — a structured, measurable approach designed to help credit unions quantify and prove the real impact they deliver across members, employees, and communities.
“Credit unions do extraordinary work every day,” said Legg. “But impact can no longer be assumed. It must be measured, translated, and demonstrated — to boards, regulators, policymakers, and the members themselves.”
From stories to measurable outcomes
Across the industry, credit unions share powerful stories — food insecurity initiatives, small-dollar loan programs, financial education efforts, emergency relief campaigns.
These stories matter. But without a consistent measurement framework, they remain isolated examples rather than industry-level proof.
The CU Power Framework bridges that gap.
At its core is a structured progression:
Educate → Demonstrate → Accelerate
- Educate: Align leadership around what impact truly means and how it connects to mission and strategy
- Demonstrate: Measure outcomes through a standardized “Power Report”
- Accelerate: Operationalize findings into growth, resilience, and strategic differentiation
Introducing the Core 7: A common language for impact
The framework is anchored by seven measurable impact indicators known as the Core 7, which translate mission into tangible outcomes:
- Transportation Access & Reliability
- Housing Stability
- Emergency Savings
- Retirement Contributions
- Debt Resilience
- Credit Health
- Financial Stress
Together, these indicators create a structured way to quantify how credit unions improve financial lives — not just through products, but through measurable resilience.
The Core 7 connects:
- Member financial well-being
- Employee engagement and internal capability
- Community-level economic stability
“This is about moving from narrative to proof,” Legg said. “When credit unions can show how many members moved from financially vulnerable to stable, how emergency savings increased, or how debt stress declined — that’s power.”
Why now?
Credit unions face mounting pressure:
- Margin compression
- Increased fintech competition
- Regulatory scrutiny
- Policy debates over interchange and relevance
In this environment, relevance must be demonstrated with evidence.
The CU Power Framework provides a scalable model for doing exactly that — using data credit unions already possess, including ACH transactions, loan portfolios, and savings behaviors.
Rather than requiring new systems, the framework acts as an overlay — an operating system that organizes existing data into measurable human outcomes.