Opportunity
After a century of serving their community, Seneca Savings faced a perception problem: they were seen as "safe and boring"—the bank your grandparents used. Meanwhile, regional competitors and digital-first challengers were winning younger customers with modern positioning and streamlined experiences.
The challenge wasn't product—Seneca's offerings were competitive, their service strong, their local presence a genuine advantage. The challenge was narrative. They needed to reframe "established" as "trusted," "local" as "connected," and "traditional" as "built to last."
Approach
We started with a half-day positioning workshop with the executive team and board. The goal: define who Seneca serves best, what they stand for, and why that matters in today's market. Through competitive mapping and audience analysis, we identified their real differentiator—not size or technology, but relationship-first banking backed by a century of community investment.
From that foundation, we built a complete messaging framework: core narrative, value propositions, proof points, and talk tracks for sales, marketing, and internal communications. The messaging wasn't generic financial jargon—it was specific, human, and rooted in real stories from their customer base.
Visual Identity Evolution
The logo needed evolution, not revolution. We refined the mark to feel more contemporary while preserving brand equity built over decades. New color system, updated typography, and a flexible visual language that worked across digital, print, and physical branches.
Outcome
The rebrand launched across all touchpoints over a six-month rollout: website, branches, advertising, digital banking interface, and internal communications. Early results showed measurable impact: new account openings from the 25-45 demographic increased 31%, and brand awareness studies showed significant improvement in "modern" and "trustworthy" perception metrics.
More importantly, the internal team gained a clear framework for making brand-aligned decisions. From product naming to partnership selection, the positioning and messaging gave them a lens for evaluating opportunities and maintaining consistency as they grow.