Thread regarding USAA layoffs

Open Letter to the USAA Board of Directors

“It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you will do things differently.” —Warren Buffett

This statement is particularly poignant at this stage of USAA’s history. More than any company I know, USAA prides itself on its mission and its core values of honesty, integrity, loyalty, and service. For decades, the mission and core values have led the association to undeniable success. USAA recently reached its centennial birthday, a feat that exceedingly few companies can boast. A large reason for this has been USAA’s unwavering adherence to these principles. And for good reason: Principles transcend market conditions. Principles guide a company through times of feast and famine, through bull markets and recessions, through profits and losses. Companies that remain committed to the principles that led them to success can weather all storms, even if specific business practices change over time.

The purpose of this letter is to express serious concerns about the current state of USAA and its trajectory for the future — and to do so in a way that is objective, in good faith, and free from hyperbole. I fear that senior executives within the company are withholding information from the Board to give the impression that the company is in a better position than it actually is. Worse, I fear that the CEO and his recently-hired executives are eroding USAA’s culture and instilling myopic, quarterly profit-driven business practices from the publicly traded companies from which they were hired. With these changes, USAA’s senior leaders have strayed from the company’s guiding principles and have tarnished USAA’s once-impeccable reputation in the eyes of members and the industries that USAA operates in.

USAA was once a cut above the competition because they went above and beyond for members and employees alike. USAA was the gold standard for service. It was prestigious to be a USAA member; people envied those who were able to do business with USAA because it was a well-known fact that USAA would do everything in its power to do what was right for their members. That starts with employees. It was hard to get hired at USAA because the benefits were second-to-none. Employees were treated exceptionally well both in terms of the benefits they received and the culture in which they operated.

Employees who are treated well stick around.
Employees who stick around become excellent at their job.
Employees who are excellent at their job provide an excellent experience to members.

The member experience can be no better than the employee experience. As of writing this, only 55% of employees would recommend USAA as an employer according to Glassdoor. Only 49% approve of the way the CEO is running the company. According to recent data, employee sentiment is at a disastrous 46%. This is a deeply concerning trend, especially considering that USAA was once regarded as one of the best places to work in the country. And this trend has only gotten worse recently. Benefits have been cut. People who work off-hours had their pay cut by up to 15% with the reduction of shift differential. The former Chief Human Resources Officer, when asked about why these changes were made, stated that USAA had “over-invested” in employees and that they aimed to be at the 50th percentile for pay and benefits. When a company aims to be in the 50th percentile for pay and benefits, they will naturally only attract the 50th percentile of talent, who will then provide member service in the 50th percentile. The employee experience has also worsened from the perspective of overall company culture.

For years, USAA employees were told to “do the right thing because it’s the right thing to do.” They were encouraged to “create conditions for people to succeed” and to “assume positive intent.” This mindset was fundamental to USAA’s success and helped to instill a culture of integrity and comradery at all levels of the company. Employees knew that if they acted in good faith, did what was right for each other and for members, everyone could share in the company’s inevitable success. Over the years, these cultural tenets were deliberately changed by senior leaders. Employees now find themselves working in an environment that discourages speaking up lest they be subject to indirect retaliation by being placed on a performance improvement plan, managed out of the company, or laid off. Over the last few years, some of USAA’s best and brightest employees — those who lived and breathed USAA’s culture — were let go by leaders who have no understanding of that culture.

While it is important to recognize that difficult decisions sometimes need to be made to right-size a company’s headcount, there are often alternatives to letting someone go entirely such as reassigning them to a different area. Rather than doing the right thing because it’s the right thing to do, newly-hired senior executives with less than one year with the company chose to push these people out of the company altogether. As those employees left the building, so did a piece of USAA’s culture. Decades of USAA experience have been let go over the last few years, leaving those who remain struggling to pick up the pieces and fill in the gaps that their absence has left.

It is also important to recognize that what made a company successful in the past is not necessarily what will make them successful in the future. New regulations are introduced, industries evolve, and consumer demands change. With these changes come a need to adapt. USAA has been hyper-focused on complying with regulatory requirements for the last several years and, despite some challenges along the way, has done an admirable job modernizing business practices to accommodate those regulations. With that focus on regulation, though, USAA lost sight of innovation and providing outstanding products and services to members.

Member sentiment of USAA has deteriorated significantly in recent years. While it is crucial to acknowledge that online sentiment for companies is usually negative — after all, few go out of their way to write about a company online when things go right — even internal measures of member satisfaction show that members are unhappy. USAA used to regularly have member satisfaction in the high 80s or low 90s. Now, as of the latest scorecard numbers, member satisfaction is struggling to stay above 70%. Part of this is due to the aforementioned decline in the employee experience, but more than this, members are unhappy because of one important fact: USAA no longer offers any products or services that are better than the competition.

Consider USAA’s banking products: checking accounts, savings accounts, credit cards, loans, and CDs. Checking accounts are average, paying 0.01% APY. This is common for checking accounts, so is largely unremarkable. CDs and loan rates are also average for the industry. Savings accounts, however, leave much to be desired. Banks are increasingly offering online high-yield savings accounts that pay north of 4% APY. USAA’s “Performance First” savings accounts pay 0.10% APY for balances less than $50,000. A member would have to deposit over $500,000 just to have the “opportunity” to earn 1.60% APY. These rates provide no incentive for members to deposit cash with the bank when dozens of banks offer significantly higher rates. In terms of credit cards, after USAA discontinued its unlimited 2.5% cash back credit card, none of the USAA’s credit card offerings are noteworthy.

USAA’s insurance offerings are also lackluster and are no longer differentiated by service. Adjusters are overwhelmed by claims volumes. Members are regularly complaining online that they cannot reach their assigned adjuster despite numerous phone calls, voicemails, and messages. Employees have voiced these concerns to leadership for years, and have consistently been told that “help is on the way” and that processes were going to be improved. Yet, years later, adjusters continue to struggle to keep their heads above water and manage their workload. As USAA continues to raise rates (along with all insurance companies), members are becoming disillusioned with USAA. Many members have been willing to pay more for USAA than they would for competitors because “the service is better,” but are now questioning if it’s worthwhile to pay hundreds or thousands of dollars more per year to maybe receive better service when or if they put in a claim.

Internally, USAA employees are suffering from a morale crisis. Employees have watched the company let go many of their coworkers at random over the last few years, and are left wondering if they will be next. They see the CEO receive a 157% pay increase the same year the company posts its first loss in a century. Meanwhile, employee wages are being eaten away by the highest inflation in decades. They find financial relief and peace of mind from the fact that they can work from home and avoid paying for day care, eating out, and fuel costs, only to be told that they must now commute to an office three (soon to be four) days per week so they can sit on the same Zoom calls that they were at home. Many of these employees were hired during the pandemic and were promised noncontingent remote work, only for the company to break its own core values of honesty and integrity by unilaterally reneging on that promise.

USAA is at a crossroads. For decades, the company was the prime example of what a company can be when a noble mission, principled leadership, and genuine care for members and employees align. Now, leaders appear to be making a deliberate effort to turn USAA into just another insurance company, just another bank, and just another employer. I believe that there is still time to right this ship, but it will require a complete shift in leadership. If USAA does not change, it will go the way of Sears and Blockbuster: companies that were the best of the best in their prime, but failed to innovate for the future. USAA needs leaders who will innovate for members, who will revitalize employee morale, and who will restore USAA’s rightful place as the provider of choice for the military community and their families.

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| 29967 views | | 124 replies (last August 13, 2024) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1nRPf6FC

124 replies (most recent on top)

Wayne is a di----t and the board is complacent. USAA will be gone before it’s 125 birthday.

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Post ID: @utk+1nRPf6FC

@rtn+1nRPf6FC here. The board is swayed by optics. The layoffs, decrease in benefits, etc.... are spinned as a way to get the company to be profitable again. They want the company to be profitable, but let Wayne and EMG free reign on the how.

EMG blames everyone but themselves for the loss in revenue in 100 years. First it was the benefits, then the layoffs of high earners, then it will be remote workers, then attrition, etc...

All of this is purposeful - this environment was designed this way to get people to leave so they can hire newer individuals, pay them less, and stack more work on everyone. They saw this in the Great Recession where the work kept getting done, so they think increased attrition and layoffs will lead to more work done with less people.

Bottom line, the board is not going to step in until the optics get bad and if/or the company still cannot be profitable. But knowing the current EMG, they'll keep buying time and blaming employees and lack of culture for RTO. They'll follow whatever idea Wayne's proposed and pretend that they resisted if anyone asks. They will throw you to the wolves to get their bonus, remember that.

There's not much the BOD can do because the EMG will not leave with the CEO. The current class has hired so many of their friends, who hired their friends, and it's not going to change. Bank has been a disaster since I came here decades ago, and even with CEOs leaving and EMG leaving, the people they hire grow in the role and the culture continues to disintegrate. This has been an ongoing problem for decades, but it only got this bad with Wayne who has no military experience and is not a leader.

Regardless of what the BOD does, this intricate dance will continue.

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Post ID: @jup+1nRPf6FC

EMG here. These are my two cents and advice:

The next CEO will have a hard time fixing everything; Wayne has messed things up at a faster rate than any CEO in USAA history, or even other companies. And the lackeys he hired? They're not going to leave anytime soon, especially the Wells Fargo folks who were pushed out and jumped to USAA at the behest of our glorious leader.

I don't see Wayne leaving without a fight - he uses the optics, the visuals, and twists the mission to show that he's popular. And he wants to be popular. There's no way that he'll leave. And with 4x a week in the office, he'll thrive even more and be able to receive adulation and praise from employees scared of losing their job.

Even if Wayne leaves, the people he hired will not - USAA is a cushy job for them and they've made it so that the remaining employees are too fearful of speaking to challenge them or else they'll find themselves on the chopping block. And the culture will continue to erode as they use our Members' money for selfish reasons.

I've worked with Wayne for decades and he is someone that loves flattery; he needs it, in fact. He cannot lead, so he uses optics to pretend that he can. He focuses on short-term actions to show that he's leading, and will ignore facts that do not reflect his myopic way of thinking. The messenger will be shot and the message will be ignored.

The low morale? That will be ignored. It will be spinned by discussing culture and using the mission/military. He will continue to say the right buzzwords like "employee choice", "innovation", "best in class", "we hear you", "we know what it means to serve"... to the point where it seems like things are going in the positive direction, but it never will. Henceforth, the employee meetings will be a farce that makes a mockery of both the employees and members.

And his band of merry-men and women will continue to flatter him and not create meaningful pushback; the ones who did were pushed out of the company. The people he hired know that ultimately they answer to him, so they'll do anything he says while lying to the individuals below them and pretend that they worked hard to change the status quo.

I am very tired of hearing EMG say that they pushed back on RTO and that it was not their decision - they did not push back, which was a decision.

It's interesting - EMG will follow what Wayne says in regards to things like RTO, which gives them the freedom to run things the way they want to while Wayne focuses on the optics. And they run things from a short-term perspective to get their bonus. It's a cycle where both the CEO and EMG need each other. All while the employees suffer.

Thankfully I'm retiring, but my heart aches for the thousands of employees who'll suffer needlessly due to 1 person. Some advice to current employees:

If I were young in my role, I would leave as soon as I developed the necessary skills.

If I were remote, I would take leave as soon as I got another job; the market may be hard, but your career will suffer due to NO advancement and NO growth opportunity. Staying here will only waste your time and career potential, while you get more work piled on; you will also be the first to be let go. Wayne wants remote roles completely gone. So leave before then.

If I were in a regional office, I would leave; similar to remote roles, you will NEVER be prioritized since the focus is on San Antonio. EMG will not travel to the regional offices often, and the facilities will always be behind. USAA also pays a LOWER wage than nearby offices. And they don't care - if you bring up another role or pay at other roles, they'll tell you to leave. Your skills will be behind your peers in the same area. So leave before then.

If I were in San Antonio, this one is harder. If you are laid off (and there will be many) it will be hard to find a comparable role in the area. Unfortunately, since optics matter to the CEO, optics matter to everyone below them. It will hurt your career if you don't go into the office. And you'll find yourself staying later and later since the time in the office will be prioritized. It's going to be VERY competitive. The culture will change, and not for the better. You might change along the way to deal with a toxic culture; it's inevitable, unfortunately. To survive, you have to adapt toxic traits. You may not like yourself. And unfortunately, you'll prioritize your San Antonio coworkers due to physical closeness alone and because of the toxic culture, which is the goal of the current EMG.

They do not want regional offices and they do not want remote workers. They pay lip service to Plano/Charlotte in regards to IT talent. They have been trying to capture the IT talent there for a while with CEOs past, and that talking point will continue. But they don't care about those employees and want the talent for cheap rates. There are many in regional offices seeing the signs and leaving, which leads to unequal advancement compared to San Antonio counterparts. From an optics perspective alone, regional workers are at an advantage due to less networking opportunities and also technical stagnation that may make it hard to compete in the market that they are in.

More or less, the goal is to make it so awful that remote workers and regional workers leave and San Antonio reigns supreme. They want to see you work. And when they come in, they want your praise and adulation and to feel like they did work.

And they'll pay lip service to innovation like Generative AI. There are many employees passionate about it, but with EMG focused on the short-term, innovation will continue to be far behind.

And if you're in Bank, leave. And if you're in other areas: the Enterprise and Risk EMG failed up and will continue to do so, but by using you as collateral for their bonus.

Fixing this mess will not be measued in years, but rather many decades. Do not wait it out and think that things will get better. Every CoSA has truly inept EMG that have failed upward their entire life through focusing on optics. They cannot walk their talk.

To this day, I'm perplexed that the Bank even exists; a lot of the current problems are rooted in the Bank. The Bank became too big to manage, and so they started hiring Big Bank executives to handle it. And they missed basic things like compliance, because they failed upwards. But that did not stop them from hiring others from Big Banks; many of the initital executives have left, but their protegees stayed, hired others, and the cycle continued until we got into the current situation with synchophants from Wells Fargo and BoA. Speaking with these individuals was nearly always painful; it became very apparent that they were being managed up by more talented individuals, and had little-to-no understanding of the areas they were supposed to be leading.

To sum all of this, if you are an employee in any area and any work-type, it would be in your best interest to leave as soon as you are able. I implore you to keep your resume up-to-date and an up-to-date LinkedIn profile; many do not and then suffer when they are laid off.

Network with others who are not at your company. Go to events and learn. Start practicing for interviews. The upcoming months will lead to worse morale and layoffs. And make sure to be interviewing. Interview at companies you are not interested in to gain experience. Once you do a few interviews, you will get better and better, even with the market being this bad. I'm seeing many laid off employees finding better jobs quite quickly, which is a great sign. Once you get a better offer, leave. The grass truly is greener on the other side.

This site is excellent at keeping abreast of the news. I'm very glad to see both former/current employees supporting each other. It will be imperative in the upcoming months.

Remember this - focus on your career and family. Never let a company take away your hope and confidence. Never let a company impede your personal life. If you are sad and feel angry, these are normal feelings due to an abnormal situation. If you are emotionally finding it hard to apply for roles, this is normal. Many of us wanted to retire at the company due to the benefits and culture, but those are not there anymore. There is a loss associated with that; you are grieving the loss of a future.

I've found in times of sadness and stress that self-care is important. Take it one day at a time. Grieve. And slowly start to focus on leaving - I promise that once you start doing things for your future, when you feel like you're moving forward, you will feel better and you'll be able to work. In this market, focus on your skills and connections.

If you are a lead/senior/remote and are getting tons of work thrown at you, you have to make a decision: Do you want to leave? If yes is the answer, prioritize the work that will get you to your next role. Take on the projects that will help your skillset. Take the 32 hours to really build up your skills.

And if you are still saying, I promise you that your workload will only increase. Amazing employees will continue to leave, even more than the Great Recession. And you will inherit their work on top of your own. And there will be reorgs after attrition, which means that you'll lose your team and moved onto a new one.

You will find a better job, I promise. I was at a company that was where USAA is currently at, and it was very difficult to leave. I knew that the proverbial sh-t hit the fan, but I stayed on too long due to fear, liking my team, and not thinking I was skilled enough. I was scared of leaving and had to switch anti-depressants quite frequently to handle working there. I was depressed because I knew I had to leave, but was scared to try. I had to build up my confidence slowly. I wouldn't apply for any role and would pretend I did to friends and family when they asked. My personal life was stressful because I was taking on extra work due to being scared of being laid off, and thinking that additional work would mean I was valuable. I spent all my energy doing work, and after work, I was too tired to do anything. My kids did not get the best of me during their impressionable years, which is something I regret every day. My personal life was a mess and I was taking multiple pills every day for anxiety, depression, sleeping, eating , etc...

The one thing that helped me switch was doing one thing for myself, which was cooking.

I share all of this because I know many employees are left in the dark on the behind-the-scenes of the company, and many are anxious, afraid, or upset. And they have a right to be - these are valid emotions. I implore you to look to see what's there - you are most likely underpaid. If you get angry, use that anger to start applying. And if you are where I was and afraid, you can build up your confidence. You are more than capable.

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Post ID: @rtn+1nRPf6FC

This is an absolute 100% accurate depiction of USAA. Every employee I have spoken to shares these sentiments almost verbatim.

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Post ID: @wme+1nRPf6FC

Your post makes me extremely contemplative.
Very comprehensive and well written. Thank you for taking the time.
It makes me sad that USAA finds itself in the state it does. I hope you are indeed correct when you say there is still time to “right this ship”. Hoping it can be salvaged.

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Post ID: @bjh+1nRPf6FC

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