Thread regarding Fiserv Inc. layoffs

Dear Fiserv Executive Leadership: Measure Outcomes, Not Office Attendance

Fiserv has an opportunity to modernize how it thinks about work, productivity, and employee accountability.

The return-to-office model is being sold as “collaboration,” but for many employees, the actual workday does not support that claim. A large amount of the work still happens through Teams calls, emails, shared documents, workflow systems, and digital handoffs with colleagues, subject matter experts, developers, reviewers, and leaders who are spread across different states and locations.

That is not true in-person collaboration. That is remote work being performed from an office cubicle.

The issue is not whether employees should be accountable. They absolutely should be. The issue is whether physical presence is being mistaken for productivity.

Fiserv is a technology and financial services company. If the company wants to lead in innovation, artificial intelligence, automation, client service, and operational excellence, then it should manage employees by measurable outcomes, not outdated assumptions about “butts in seats.”

A better model would be simple:

Set clear productivity benchmarks.Set clear quality expectations.Set clear deadlines.Track cycle time, accuracy, responsiveness, client impact, rework, missed handoffs, stakeholder satisfaction, and risk reduction.Hold underperformers accountable.Reward employees who produce excellent work.Require office presence only when there is a legitimate business reason for people to be physically together.

That is a more mature operating model than blanket attendance rules.

Many employees were more willing to give extra time and discretionary effort when working from home because commuting was not draining hours and energy out of the day. When people are forced to commute to an office just to sit on virtual meetings with people in other locations, they become more protective of their time. That is not a lack of commitment. That is a rational response to an inefficient work design.

The company should ask itself a direct question:

What business outcome improves when an employee drives to an office, sits at a desk, and collaborates with remote colleagues through the same digital tools they would have used from home?

If there is a real answer, define it. Measure it. Apply it only where it makes sense.

But if the answer is vague language about culture, collaboration, or visibility, then the policy is not really about productivity. It is about control, optics, and habit.

Fiserv should not confuse visibility with value.

The future of work should not be built around where a person is sitting. It should be built around what they produce, how well they produce it, how reliably they deliver, and how much value they create for clients, teams, and shareholders.

The new CEO has a chance to reset this conversation. Not by eliminating accountability, but by making accountability smarter.

Measure the work.Measure the quality.Measure the outcomes.Measure the impact.

Then let high-performing employees do their jobs in the environment where they produce the best results, within legal, ethical, client, security, and compliance requirements.

That would be a real innovation culture.


by
| 2 views | | 25 replies (last 3 hours ago) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kw0eez0t

25 replies (most recent on top)

@18s just cause its an at-will state, doesn't mean the company will just terminate someone immediately. A lot of large companies will take the least amount of risk by documenting performance issue patterns and creating a record. If you don't have a clearly defined attendance policy in place and terminate someone over attendance issues, you just open yourself up to a wrongful termination suit. This policy is one way for them to justify a termination if it comes to that and can defend themselves in court. That's why in big companies it can take almost a year to actually fire someone for performance issues, you need all your ducks in a row. I worked under a director who wanted to terminate an employee the same day because of their demonstrated incompetence but they had to go thru a whole HR process, warnings, do PIPs, etc before they could take action.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @191+1kw0eez0t

@18s well that’s the problem with Nebraska is you have to accrue the time off. Other states you get all it upfront on Jan 1st.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @18t+1kw0eez0t

@14j Depending on the team. Half the floor was already following this but without the occurrence part for over a year. The other half was doing what they wanted it seems. They over complicated it with the occurrences for leaving early part and well being. Like most people pointed out, what if they don’t have any more well being because it’s half way thru the year and they used what they had accrued already. I’m wondering if they want to weed out people and have a valid reason even tho Nebraska is an at will state.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @18s+1kw0eez0t

@149 that was hilarious. there was like 2 minutes of silence after a question was asked which stumped the VP and HR rep on the call. They truly did not think thru the policy clearly and they should have saved the Q&A until after the slide deck but wow was that a sh-tshow. I wonder why they are rolling out that attendance policy for IDO, is it that much of a mess in Omaha?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @14j+1kw0eez0t

@149 hmmm did we expect anything better from this company? What are the chances they’re going to value employees over profits “ZERO”

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @14d+1kw0eez0t

@d8 not a troll. They rolled out an attendance policy on Monday for the IDO department. It starts today. It was so un-thought out that they literally couldn’t answer half the questions on the call.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @149+1kw0eez0t

@138 talk about a great way to get every employee to hate you and make your legacy reputation as a leader the worst in history. Nice job Frank!

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @13k+1kw0eez0t

It's not about trust or an effort to create more productivity. Under Frank, it likely was to eek as many additional minutes out of us especially during the whole tracking every badged in second fiasco. But it's simply about balance sheets people. They do not care if you want to be home. They want to make deals for kickbacks with tax dollars wherever they can get them.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @138+1kw0eez0t

The collaboration excuse is just that an excuse, it’s about control and sends out huge flashing signs that “we don’t trust you.” No wonder morale is so poor.

They have not communicated expectations widely they may have done to some but that’s part of the issue is people are confused and it’s like it’s deliberately kept vague.

They need to set expectations clearly and trust people to do their work wherever. If they aren’t performing or getting stuff done then they get held accountable but that’s part doesn’t mean watching is under surveillance. How did FB’s 9 hours 5 days a week BS work out when Q3 2025 earnings came out? Also PTO policy needs clarity. Unlimited means some people hardly take any and others take way too much.

HR needs to get a grip.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @pg+1kw0eez0t

@np either that or give employees the flexibility even a day or two WFH can make a huge difference in productivity. If people want to come in to work in the office they can if they want to WFH on these days, you have that policy in place. But NO They like to flip flop between extremes. When the management doesn’t know what they want, it’s hard for employees to ignore the signs and anxieties of being on the chopping block and give their best. We know we’re not the priority but already but we’re all trying to keep that aside and still come to the office and the executives just keep taking advantage of that fact. It makes me wonder if they’re even human sometimes. Can we have some sane leadership for once. All they see $$$ and numbers.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ny+1kw0eez0t

@OP More like, Dear management, decide on a real headquarters and move the teams there, just make a decision. If you want people to work together in an office they need to actually be together in an office, rather than a couple in NY, a couple in Coral, one in BH, a few in Milwaukee, one in Omaha, etc. teams don't know each other, mistrust what each is doing and collaboration is practically non-existent. Its a broken model, anyone can see it and maybe thats why we are where we are today.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @np+1kw0eez0t

Dear Management. Let go of your outsourced teams and rebadged if your trying to save money. Focus on the people still here and trying real hard to contine to do their jobs and most importantly hold onto their jobs. With everything thats going on around them we are still showing up and working hard for you. Learn to appreciate what you have right in front of you. Try to give us better odds this time around if you planning more layoffs. Trim the teams that do not directly report to Fiserv . You have no idea what stress we have daily not knowing what going to happen this week or next week let us focus in what we do best instead of the constant "you can be replaced with outsource teams; Ai etc."

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @nf+1kw0eez0t

@k2 Your response is so lame and birdbrained. If you find the topic to be "old," bypass it and carry on with your life. Duh! But I guess you'd need to NOT be an as$hole to do that, right? Too much like right or too decent of a thing to do?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @kw+1kw0eez0t

This conversation is so old. If you want remote work, go to a company that offers it. It's pretty simple..... DUH!

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @k2+1kw0eez0t

@jk lol I don’t see this ending well. Everyone except for SVP/VP will be leaving. I wonder what kind of Sapience activity will come out of the SVPs. They’re all pretending to be team calls 24*7. Which are all unproductive to begin with.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @k1+1kw0eez0t

It’s all about tax credits by guaranteeing a certain number of people seated in an office. That is why BH exists, why Coral is moving, and KC is in progress

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @k0+1kw0eez0t

Sapience and badge reports are coming back. Only caveat is it will be up to your manager whether to care or not... for now.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @jk+1kw0eez0t

nothings changing. Fiserv will be broken up and sold. Like the other payments companies that tried similar and failed. Wordpay, FIS, Global payments and so on

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @en+1kw0eez0t

@an I call bullsh-t on that. They already rolled out attendance expectations via a memo called WORK HOURS FOR SALARIED ASSOCIATES dated 5/15/2026.

Nice try, troll.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @d8+1kw0eez0t

@an are you trolling or you actually know

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @br+1kw0eez0t

They are rolling out an attendance policy next week.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @an+1kw0eez0t

Many companies if remote even 1 day use time tracking on computers. What happens when you manually key in and put 40 hours in Clarity and time tracking behind the scenes says 21 hours and 19 hours unaccounted is that considered theft of time? Careful for what we wish for. I know putting something and wiggling your mouse is no longer a way to avoid that these programs now pick all of that up.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ak+1kw0eez0t

Great perspective!
But remember you are talking about a company that built "the flagship east coast tech center" but didn't plan for enough parking spaces. So that location is forced to work 100+ days at home and miss the collaboration.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @a5+1kw0eez0t

I appreciate the thought you’ve put into this. If only we had leaders who weren’t totally blind to everything around them. You can deliver this to Takis personally when he comes to visit each location. Innovate and measure have never been on Fiserv’s radar. If they were, we wouldn’t be in this predicament today. It’s not too late to correct course.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @a2+1kw0eez0t

Post a reply

: