Thread regarding Wells Fargo & Co. layoffs

Control Management team - 8 hours and monitored

Can someone from the Control Management team confirm that their leader communicated expectations of 8 hours a day in the office (3 days) and they said it's being monitored by reporting?

I'm not from Control Management but someone from CM told me in the office today.

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| 3831 views | | 24 replies (last January 18, 2025) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jhnvs22z

24 replies (most recent on top)

@es+1jhnvs22z

Good thing I'm a fitness nut and routinely conduct meetings and collaboration while walking outside the building with my fellow employees!

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Post ID: @q7+1jhnvs22z
  1. current reporting uses both badging and connection to network.
  2. current reporting that's in widespread use doesn't have any drill downs about hours
  3. various posters on this site claim that hours tracking is coming, someone told them, etc. Lots of trolls here.
  4. significant legal issues with blanket enforcement for exempt workers. state by state laws would apply. For example, California specifies that exempt workers cannot be compelled to work more than 4 hours a day, as long as the work they are required to do is completed. so if you get into making someone sit in an office for 8 hours, that's clearly illegal. they could require 4 - at least in california. google your state.
  5. that all said, if a manager has reason to suspect that someone is routinely "coffee badging" there is the capability to have that data pulled. The grounds for discipline would be "professionalism". it would follow normal path - verbal warning, formal warning etc.
  6. eventually they may routinize the reporting... but same legal issues apply.
  7. my experience as manager and knowing my peers' experiences is that there are still so many flagrant violations of <3 days that the focus is there right now.
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Post ID: @ph+1jhnvs22z

@ec+1jhnvs22z

"They never stipulated how many hours you need to be at the office to constitute a "day." "
PRECISELY! It could be argued that the policy of 4 hours PTO counting as a day in office should imply that at least 4 hours are required, it isn't that simple, especially legally.

First-- The expectation of a number of hours would need to be officially communicated (for this example let's say 4 hours in office at least).

Second-- It has to be taken into consideration that people take lunches at different points in their shift and lunch break timing can be controlled by managers. This means if you take your lunch before you hit 4 hours into your shift--and then commute home on your lunch--you wouldn't meet the requirement, and managers could use scheduling to play favorites or use it as a tool to get rid of team members.

Third-- It will be a big effort to monitor this across the company. Even with badge taps, many people at my site badge in and out several times a day. If you lose your badge you have to trust the security folks to link it to your profile properly (I had an issue where I had to prove I was at the office on certain days after I lost my badge and the 3rd party security company messed up linking my profile).

Fourth-- Even if they use network connections to prove time in office it's not a concrete way of proving hours in office. Sometimes I use my phone's hotspot wifi to work. I've gotten to the office before and worked for hours before realizing I was still connected to my hotspot and not through my site's wifi.

There are many legal issues WF could face if they enforce hours in office without making it an official policy communicated to team members ahead of time.

I'm not saying HY won't try it at some point, but if they do expect it to be officially communicated and at least 2-6 weeks for it to be fully implemented, perhaps longer. If HY tries to retroactively apply these expectations, I expect they will face several lawsuits.

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Post ID: @k7+1jhnvs22z

I love these dream monitoring scenarios by folks that are clearly not managers and don’t get the actual reporting. They also don’t understand what seems like a trivial thing to monitor like hours in the office is actually exceptionally difficult to do at enterprise scale given all the variety in workers and work hours. But please tell us more how we will get a spanking if we aren’t in the office for exactly 8 hours.

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Post ID: @f5+1jhnvs22z

@ec+1jhnvs22z

You better be in the office for 8 hours going forward. There is a new effort to cut jobs without severance.

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Post ID: @ew+1jhnvs22z

Our building you swipe in and you must swipe out. So they know when you come and they know when you go. They don’t need VPN

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Post ID: @es+1jhnvs22z

They never stipulated how many hours you need to be at the office to constitute a "day."

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Post ID: @ec+1jhnvs22z

I wonder how'll they'll short it ou lt for those logged in through vdi in the office and VPN at home?

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Post ID: @eb+1jhnvs22z

Work at home all day, when you go out to run an errand at night, take your computer to the office, log it in and let it sit. Pick it up 24 hours later. You just logged the 24 required hours of in-office IP address.

/s

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Post ID: @dz+1jhnvs22z

Why is IP data relevant, the CEO himself said the most important thing we do here is collaborate around the water cooler. PC doesn't even have to be on for that so if it shows 8 hrs of activity you're literally not following his guidance.

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Post ID: @dx+1jhnvs22z

Yes, we were advised last Friday by our Director that 8 hours is being tracked using IP reporting. Made it very clear that 8 hours is the expectation whether in office or at home and 3 days in office. If there is an issue with compliance, we will be looking at 4 or 5 days in the office, manadatory.

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Post ID: @dm+1jhnvs22z

Manager here. If I see 3 swipes or more a week, done. I currently don’t do any more digging. Same thing my peers do. Is there more data available, certainly, but if the employee is compliant, no need to go any further. Will things change, maybe. But I am not in the know.

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Post ID: @d3+1jhnvs22z

For $50 a week, I'll swipe your badge 3 days and randomly log you in to the hub a few hours at a time.

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Post ID: @cv+1jhnvs22z

The reporting has the ability to track both swipes and the time that the employee logged into the corporate network. It further has the ability to filter on either one of these options which then enables the manager to determine duration on the network and if the employee only swiped and did not log into the network. So for those of you simply badging in and leaving if you did not log into the network they will know and if you are leaving early they will know how long you were connected to the network.

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Post ID: @bj+1jhnvs22z

Everyone here is full of p000p. They track via IP not swipes. Swipes is always the first thing that “these managers”’on here say. Secondly there are subsets of reports on the reports they get, that any manager can drill down on, if they so choose. Hours and location being just 2.

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Post ID: @bb+1jhnvs22z

Totally false. BTW unless you are registered and regulated employees mouse jugglers are okay too.

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Post ID: @b3+1jhnvs22z

True.

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Post ID: @av+1jhnvs22z

This executive team is obsessive about employees working like slaves. This isn't like colonialism at all.

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Post ID: @ac+1jhnvs22z

there are two reports, rank and file managers have the badge swipe report. The new report that tracks hours is limited to more senior managers but will be rolled out to all in time as the kinks are worked out.

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Post ID: @ab+1jhnvs22z

they are 100% tracking hours in office and on VPN

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Post ID: @a4+1jhnvs22z

Partly true
People managers can monitor is they want to track daily swipe in office. They can track if the employee swiped in the assigned location. Hours spend in the office is not tracked in the dashboard reports.

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Post ID: @a3+1jhnvs22z

Minimum of 4 hours, 3 days a week on mine. Number of hours and days in the office depends on LOB.

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Post ID: @a2+1jhnvs22z

good luck making that stick with exempt employees. and yes, there is a new report starting to roll out that tracks hours.

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Post ID: @a1+1jhnvs22z

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