Anyone who’s ever switched banks understands the frustration, hassle, and potential for error in even a relatively small financial transaction.
So imagine what Spokane-based Sterling Bank has faced as it absorbs 27,503 consumer accounts and 4,924 business accounts from the former First Independent Bank into its own computer and ATM systems.
Sterling, which officially acquired First Independent on Feb. 29, turns on the switch Monday that fully integrates customers of the former Vancouver-based bank as Sterling account holders. It’s the final step in a transition that began in November, when members of the Firstenburg family agreed to sell family-owned First Independent’s operations to Sterling, while keeping a portfolio of troubled loans to be managed by a family company.
Taking over a popular, locally owned bank creates significant marketing and public relations challenges, and Sterling is casting itself as a worthy Washington-based competitor in the crowded and still-struggling financial industry market. It recently established an advisory board headed by Jeanne Firstenburg, First Independent’s last president and daughter-in-law of bank founder E.W. Firstenburg.