Nobody could tell it was a red Yeti until you said so.Yes, I blocked out my red yeti cup. I can't have the man taking me down.
You are now doxed.
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Nobody could tell it was a red Yeti until you said so.Yes, I blocked out my red yeti cup. I can't have the man taking me down.
Company I work for does annual surveys but I can't remember the last time they actually published the results. My guess is they are pretty bad especially anything relating to executive management so if anything is shared I'm sure it is cherry picked from something and anything really bad is not shared. I do have a pretty hands-off manager that lets me do my job without having him micromanage or nitpick anything I do. Probably helps that he once did the same job I do so he knows what that is like. Any survey questions regarding him I rate high as I want his results to look good but top level management can suck it as they are so out of tune on what goes on at the lowest levels of the company that they count on to make the company successful.I worked for a large corporation in my early career. They did the standard company-wide survey each year. One year we had a new VP and he had kuerigs installed the week before the survey went live (before this we had to pay for coffee from the lobby cafe). There were several critical comments in the survey stating "you're just trying to buy good reviews by finally putting in a coffee machine." That VP never stopped b*tching about it to anyone and everyone. "I get everyone a coffee machine and all I get are complaints!"
Spoiler alert: morale did not improve based on the survey.
I'm trying to get old school drip back into the mainstream.
Tip of the cap to the Keurig folks who knew how to sell a clunky trash producer well.
I almost worked at PFG in an junior actuarial role. Wells Fargo offered me for an analytics job before PFG sent me an offer, a lower quality job at WF paid 10K more than that actuarial job for PFG. Across the board, Wells Fargo treats its employees better than Principal. It's kind of wild when I hear about the salaries from friends at PFG. Almost all of them could make 10-20% more at WF.Yesterday there was a "town hall" with the Principal CEO and other execs.
Someone had the courage to ask (props to that employee) about lower engagement & job satisfaction scores (something like a 9% across the board drop), in the context of pay & the return to office mandate.
My take on the answers from the CEO (and this is just my impression):
1. He thinks the 3-days in office mandate is still correct despite massive backlash. "Too bad, deal with it." (Said in a very corporate way)
2. He thinks our pay is fair. "Don't like it? Well, either suck it up or get a new job." (Also said in a very corporate way.)
My take on the 2nd point ... I don't believe it. Our benefits aren't "top tier" anymore (despite what is said), they are average. And I can't speak for all areas, but the feeling is that something is off with the metrics when we keep losing our best and brightest to other companies.
Just my 2 cents.
Maybe it's because I only started drinking coffee in the past 2 years or so but I just don't get why folks go nuts over single serve pods. Drip is only marginally more work but is significantly cheaper when you talk cost per cup.
I think one thing that keeps people away from WF is job security. It seems like every other week they are laying people off. I worked at WF Mortgage in the late 90's so it wouldn't be fair to judge but I assume it hasn't got better.I almost worked at PFG in an junior actuarial role. Wells Fargo offered me for an analytics job before PFG sent me an offer, a lower quality job at WF paid 10K more than that actuarial job for PFG. Across the board, Wells Fargo treats its employees better than Principal. It's kind of wild when I hear about the salaries from friends at PFG. Almost all of them could make 10-20% more at WF.
Like you are competing with one of the largest financial employers in the DSM metro and you aren't competitive.
Although WF also requires 3 days in office a week. Its because that's what all the banks are doing. WF took the initiative from Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase.
Although WF also requires 3 days in office a week. Its because that's what all the banks are doing. WF took the initiative from Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase.
Maybe it's because I only started drinking coffee in the past 2 years or so but I just don't get why folks go nuts over single serve pods. Drip is only marginally more work but is significantly cheaper when you talk cost per cup.
Well, WF's CEO's mentor is Jamie Dimon, so it's safe to assume he'll do whatever Jamie does.That doesn't really seem like a valid reason to require employees to be in office X days per week. So what if a competitor is in office, what does that have to do with WF?
That doesn't really seem like a valid reason to require employees to be in office X days per week. So what if a competitor is in office, what does that have to do with WF?
Important reminder that the Financial sector C-suite is just a revolving door of executives going from one bank to another. I think 70% of WF's C-suite worked at JP Morgan Chase before coming here. They're all friends with each other and hang out in the same social circles.Agreed, this shows a lack of leadership at a company. My old employer, who was a small privately owned family business, acted the same way.
Jamie Dimon*Well, WF's CEO's mentor is Jamie Diamond, so it's safe to assume he'll do whatever Jamie does.
Important reminder that the Financial sector C-suite is just a revolving door of executives going from one bank to another. I think 70% of WF's C-suite worked at JP Morgan Chase before coming here. They're all friends with each other and hang out in the same social circles.
A lot of group think & collusion.
Example: JP Morgan Chase Bank builds brand new NYC headquarters (10,000+ employee capacity) right before the pandemic hits.
They made employees come back into office to protect their huge investment. Bank of America and WF shortly follow suit.
After working 20+ years in the corporate world I kind of just have the mentality that you are just another number in the database and are disposable at any point. The company will still be there tomorrow if they let you go or if you have to take a day off so there is no point in thinking that your role is important because in the big picture it is not. There is no reason to allow your personal time to be taken away from you because the more they can get out of you they will keep taking more and it will leave you stressed out and missing out on more important things in life than work. Life is too short to be too career focused, enjoy life and don't allow "the man" to take that time away from you just so the well compensated execs can get a bigger bonus at the expense of your happiness.
Thank you, autocorrect likes Diamond more lolJamie Dimon*
At the company I referenced, they did release all the results to the whole company. One thing was very obvious: unhappiness increased with each higher level in the organization. The doers at the bottom were the happiest while the people at the bottom were the least happy.
And to your point I quoted above: I try really hard not to feel this way, but its hard not to anymore. I'm about halfway through my career and have seen people who make their career their life are the ones who rise to the upper ranks of an org. I'm as much or more competent than them, but because I set boundaries around life (i.e. I'm not skipping my kids concert just because you're late on a deliverable) then I am unable to rise to the upper levels. I also want to believe there are companies out there that truly do not feel/act this way. I'm certainly trying hard to find one, if it exists!
At the company I referenced, they did release all the results to the whole company. One thing was very obvious: unhappiness increased with each higher level in the organization. The doers at the bottom were the happiest while the people at the bottom were the least happy.
And to your point I quoted above: I try really hard not to feel this way, but its hard not to anymore. I'm about halfway through my career and have seen people who make their career their life are the ones who rise to the upper ranks of an org. I'm as much or more competent than them, but because I set boundaries around life (i.e. I'm not skipping my kids concert just because you're late on a deliverable) then I am unable to rise to the upper levels. I also want to believe there are companies out there that truly do not feel/act this way. I'm certainly trying hard to find one, if it exists!
I just had my annual review. I was told my 50 hours/week was "way too low" and "it takes 60-80 hours a week to advance at this company." Then the next comment from my boss was "But you're a dad/husband, so you gotta decide which one you want." I wanted to quit on the spot. That's a moral wrong in my book. But I have a family to provide for. I am working 60 hours a week now...40 hours for my day job and 20 hours/week to find a new one.If my job ever got to be like that I wouldn't hesitate to do the same. I'm at a point at my current job that I am compensated well with good benefits and my manager is not the type to force us into doing things we don't need to be doing but the culture here as becomes so toxic in general due to the leadership at the top. If this was earlier in my career I would have left this company by now but I have 20 years in and it would cost them about a year's severance to lay me off so I'm kind of hanging around just in spite of that as I didn't put up with the crap I have the past few years to just let them off the hook for that. Now if they make it even more miserable around here where it does start to cut into my personal life and happiness then I probably would consider finding another job but for not I will just treat it as a job where I have no incentive to bust my ass more than I have to trying to please people that could care less about it as the reward for that is just going to be more work and stress.
that should actually help talent retentionThat doesn't really seem like a valid reason to require employees to be in office X days per week. So what if a competitor is in office, what does that have to do with WF?
I just had my annual review. I was told my 50 hours/week was "way too low" and "it takes 60-80 hours a week to advance at this company." Then the next comment from my boss was "But you're a dad/husband, so you gotta decide which one you want." I wanted to quit on the spot. That's a moral wrong in my book. But I have a family to provide for. I am working 60 hours a week now...40 hours for my day job and 20 hours/week to find a new one.