Today's Winston-Salem Journal has an article on WF workforce reductions, mentioning that while the pace slowed in 1Q it is expected to be "just the start." This article is the first real mention I've seen re: the effect the location strategy will have on non-hub cities that have been long-standing WF locations. Excerpt below:
"Wells Fargo is consolidating more business units into fewer operational hubs as a cost-cutting measure. That includes shifting employees in downtown Charlotte, where the bank has its main East Coast operations.
There are media reports of the bank consolidating operations in Minneapolis, Columbus, Ohio, and in particular a $455 million regional hub under construction in Irving, Texas.
The bank has said part of the consolidation initiatives is to be closer to potential talent pools.
There’s been local concern that Wells Fargo’s non-branch operations in Winston-Salem could be affected by the operational hub initiative. The bulk of the workforce, primarily the bank’s wealth management division, is in the downtown Wells Fargo Center.
Wells Fargo said in a statement that it 'continues to bring employees in non-customer facing roles together and to improve and modernize our workspaces. This will strengthen our customer-centric culture, collaboration, strong risk management and innovation.'"
https://journalnow.com/news/local/business/wells-fargo-slows-pace-of-workforce-reductions-in-first-quarter/article_e8b5120e-f8bc-11ee-8acc-1b4213c915d7.html