Here is some more AI for you guys: 🏛️ The Wells Fargo Agile Failure: A Psychological Safety Thesis The xyz theory is strongly supported: The failure of the Wells Fargo Agile transformation is a classic case study where a command-and-control, fear-based culture (the root of the account scandal and subsequent internal management behavior) actively sabotaged the essential values and mechanisms of Agile. Agile is a social and adaptive framework built on trust, continuous learning, and empowered teams. When management is rewarded for bullying and accountability is enforced through fear (stack ranking, layoffs), the foundation for Agile is destroyed.1. Proof of Psychological Safety (PS) Failure in the Posts The anonymous comments perfectly illustrate how a lack of PS crippled the Agile implementation: PS Failure Point: Evidence from the Posts Lack of Transparency & Retrospective Failure: The comment "Tell it to the concierge. Or speak up during retrospective. Your choice." shows that retrospectives are perceived as useless or even risky, proving the primary Agile feedback loop is broken due to fear. We-ponization of Metrics: Agile metrics, story points, burndown, etc are naturally going to be abused when your corporate culture features stack ranking..." and "we-ponizing story points is bad." PS is required for metrics to be used for learning. When metrics are used for punishment (stack ranking/layoffs), employees game them for survival, making the data useless. No Cross-Functional Collaboration: what Bob does has nothing to do with what I do. In fact, all members of the team work on different things that really don't overlap... all I care about is my tickets and their due dates." This is the opposite of an Agile team. Individuals revert to siloed, transactional work because helping others (crossing lines) means neglecting their own measurable output, which is tied to their survival via stack ranking. Command-and-Control Mindse: Agile won't work in such a top-heavy command and control environment" and "The stubborn mule boomer management can't let go of waterfall." Managers who believe they are the source of all value and need to micromanage will not give teams the autonomy required for self-organization. Role Degradation (Scrum Masters)" Scrum Masters devolved into glorified admins in handcuffs" and "Scrum Masters are seen as line level managers, but without the title or benefits..." The PS is so low that Scrum Masters cannot facilitate genuine change, as their sole role becomes enforcing management's toxic metrics, not protecting the team.2. Will the Managers Change? (The Outlook)Your question about whether management will change their behavior now that regulators might be easing up is critical. Managers Once Rewarded for Bullying Will Stay Bullies: This is a sound conclusion based on organizational behavior. Behavior that is consistently rewarded (e.g., meeting unrealistic targets through intimidation) is reinforced. Unless the reward structure is fundamentally changed to value collaboration, humility, and long-term quality, the behavior will persist. Finding Another Target for Abuse: It is likely that the target of abuse simply shifts internally. If external regulatory pressure lessens, the internal pressure on employees (offshoring, layoffs, stack ranking) may intensify as management reasserts control and seeks to cut costs to boost short-term metrics. The failure is not in the employees who "let it fail" (@cz comment), but in the systemic leadership culture that refuses to support the values of Agile.3. Policy and Culture Questions Examined Question Analysis Based on Evidence & Culture Outlook Will they stop stacked ranking? Highly unlikely. Stack ranking is the primary tool of fear used to enforce control and we-ponize metrics like story points (per the posts). Eliminating it is the single greatest act of cultural change required, and they have resisted it for years. No Will they stop layoffs and offshoring? These are cost-cutting measures driven by short-term financial pressure, not cultural transformation. The posts indicate they are ongoing ("bi-weekly layoffs for 5 years straight"). They will only stop when a new financial target is prioritized. Will they give industry standard titles? This is a symptom of management control (e.g., keeping Scrum Masters as low-power admins). Changing titles is easy, but if the underlying power structure remains (top-heavy, command-and-control), it's a superficial fix. Maybe (But Meaningless) Will they be fair? Fairness requires systemic trust and transparency. The posts show an environment where managers are gaming the metrics to fire people. In this system, "fairness" is defined as following the process that justifies the desired outcome (layoffs).No Will they come out with a straight RTO/location policy? In a fear-based culture, ambiguity (like unclear RTO policies) is often used as a quiet control mechanism and another source of leverage or stress over employees. A clear policy requires transparency and trust, which are currently absent.UnlikelyWill they stop giving useless, intimidating surveys?Anonymous surveys are the only way management can claim to listen to feedback without actually acting on it. If employees are intimidated into filling them out (and not speaking up during retrospectives), the surveys are performative and will continue as a box-ticking exercise. No Conclusion: The Wells Fargo Agile transformation failed because the organizational operating system (culture) was fundamentally incompatible with the Agile application (framework). A top-down, fear-driven culture cannot successfully adopt a bottom-up, trust-driven methodology. The toxic culture simply found a new set of metrics (JIRA, story points, burndown charts) to continue its program of control and abuse, resulting in "chaos fall" and the departure of talent. Sorry.. Might put this into a chat and have it format it for you.