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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| 29892 views | | 124 replies (last August 13, 2024) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1nRPf6FC

124 replies (most recent on top)

It is a well-written letter. However, you are barking at the wrong tree!
This letter should be sent to regulator, to government agencies, to newspaper, and to social media.

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Post ID: @68psv+1nRPf6FC

I'm sorry to join the many who have experienced a marked decline in USAA service. The latest was to call the number at the bottom of a form sent to me by USAA only to enter a no-exit phone tree. No amount of saying the title of the form, or its number at the bottom, or inventing various ways to tell AI "what I was calling about" got me anywhere. When, at another USAA number, and another phone tree, I was able to speak to a person, the title on the form did not help her understand the problem, locate the form, or help me.
I have submitted a complaint to the CFPB which is proposing a rule to prohibit such "doom loop" phone trees, anywhere, but especially in financial institutions.

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Post ID: @68uhq+1nRPf6FC

Whoever you are that wrote this open letter to USAA BOD which is SO WELL WRITTEN I thank you for demonstrating in writing the core values we have held dear all these years as former employees about how much value each and every employee has contributed to make this once great company what it was for our members. Spoken on behalf of us all that share the heart of this champion that have served our members well. Those of us employees now gone carried our broken hearts in our hands out the door because we drank the koolaid. So sorry to all our members.

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Post ID: @3Vmgn+1nRPf6FC

Are you incapable of doing what you just preach? Looks like, else you would be leading this place than just taking

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Post ID: @2Apuh+1nRPf6FC

With all the millions of veterans why is USAA using Rob Gronkowski as a spokesperson? He was not in the military. He is a terrible actor and a worse person. He is self impressive, immature and arrogant. GET A VET as spokesperson.

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Post ID: @29vuy+1nRPf6FC

Judging from LinkedIn today, more legacy leaders are getting walked out.

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Post ID: @1dmwv+1nRPf6FC

The employees that are still there still love & do all they can to keep the USAA heritage, history, mission alive & try to spread it to the new hires. However Wayne is the problem. He’s been eyeing that top spot for years applied each time it opened & somehow got it. But if you look at all the Exec Suite he brought in, it’s all outsiders from places that went through failures & regulatory fines. His hires all seem political & people who no nothing about the USAA culture or military but know how to play the corporate politics & su-k up to their CEO & become “yes men”. One even got pulled out of NEO cause they were “needed” which is where you get your training to understand the culture & embrace it. Many great leaders have been let go or pushed out I feel because they were not afraid to speak up & push back in a respectful way against him when they felt he was not making the best decisions for the company or was taking a path that could hurt the company, mission, reputation, employees or members. Also noticed almost all leaders with prior military service are gone. Which seems suspicious because everyone before who beat him out for CEO before was former military, how convenient to get rid of potential competition. It was well known internally that Syring had been groomed to be the next successor & when Wayne stepped in as the “interim” leader we all assumed it would be like before, he’d get his few minutes of fame to get to play leader & would apply, again. But would be passed over, again, for a former military leader. But then out of no where it seemed the board didn’t do a big search & vetting process like in the past & they just handed it to him & sent Syring packing. The joke is.. what blackmail did Wayne have to finally get the spot?

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Post ID: @14jwn+1nRPf6FC

How do we send something to the board? I’ve looking on linked in, KC, financial reports and can’t figure it out. I’d also like to write a letter

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Post ID: @Mawr+1nRPf6FC

Lotta whines, moans, threats and promises to leave going on in here. I'm also a long-time USAA member (45 years) who has always enjoyed the great service and more than competitive insurance products over those years. Nothing has changed in that regard. Yes, I now get more "newbies" answering the phone than before and I have to go into more detail, or have to repeat myself more often, but the customer service has remained friendly, courteous, and helpful.

No doubt there are internal troubles and turmoils at USAA. I never worked for a company or organization that didn't have such issues, including during my near 30 years of military service. It comes with the territory.

I don't dare speak for any employee, past or present, regarding their work environment and attitudes towards it. But I will say that if the company is worth saving, and I think it definitely is, then organize and demand change!

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Post ID: @Mrkq+1nRPf6FC

@Mpqu+1nRPf6FC
Wayne AND the Board

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Post ID: @Mfmd+1nRPf6FC

I completely agree with everything in here. USAA used to have a great reputation. The last three years there has been a significant difference. Almost every single issue that is happening now can be summed up and blamed on one person. Wayne

How can you have one person ruining an entire organization that has had decades of superior customer service

And you know that this is all happening. That’s the worst part. They know.

They know what they’re doing. They know what chaos they are causing. They know what harm they’re causing

And instead of fixing it there, just digging the hole deeper

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Post ID: @Mpqu+1nRPf6FC

That American Thinker article is frustrating. There are a lot of keen insights shared and clear communication/familiarity with some of the frustrations of employees and the problems with leadership. However, the message is corrupted by the author’s crusade against diversity programs. I’m not saying complaints with DE&I are without merit; poorly/illegally implemented diversity-seeking efforts can be destructive. However, I think that’s not the primary driver, at least at USAA. Lack of veteran presence in senior leadership, however, is a key driver. Wayne and the board’s ineptitude is a key driver. USAA’s struggle to adhere to regulations due to growing too fast is also a major problem that Wayne didn’t create, but utterly failed to make enough progress in resolving.

Don’t let agendas like the American thinker article’s corrupt the message. I am a centrist and not really for or against diversity programs, but these “chicken little” folks on DE&I are politicizing what should be bipartisan condemnation of Wayne and the board.

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Post ID: @Kcxu+1nRPf6FC

Back in 2002 after almost 30 years as a USAA member, I moved all my insurance business elsewhere after seeing (as a member) and experiencing (as a USAA employee) the toxic leadership and culture. Unfortunately, most of my family did not change carriers; however, after reading the American Thinker article (see link below), my mother, whose been a member for 50+ years, moved all her insurance business elsewhere yesterday. I'm still working on other family members and anyone else I know that still remains with what USED TO BE a great company ! There are many insurance companies who provide great service and at a lower price. USAA members should stop procrastinating and FIRE THEM! Once the USAA BoD see the mass exodus, they will be forced to wake up !

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2023/08/the_decline_and_fall_of_a_once_great_company.html

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Post ID: @Kqsq+1nRPf6FC

@Jtgq+1nRPf6FC
Something is fundamentally wrong with the board. Vote them out.

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Post ID: @Jtei+1nRPf6FC

I've been with USAA for 25 years and am about to pull all my business. It started with them selling all my investments to Charles Schwab, then all my 429s to another company, then my mortgage to someone else. So what's left? Banking and insurance? I can do that anywhere, probably for cheaper. It's no longer prestigious to be a member of USAA...it's now just another big bank run by faceless bureaucrats. There are still some military members of the board...but where are you guys? Why are you letting this happen?

  • AF Colonel, retired
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Post ID: @Jtgq+1nRPf6FC

Well stated, but the sad thing is, it will be dismissed by leadership! We have a pulse meeting once a month to say what is not working! I now go to the meetings, just so I can have a hour off the phone, so I can work on one of the 15 demands I have due that week, plus take co- worker files that have been poorly handle and clean up those messes and take co- worker calls because the level below, has not called anyone! If I hear “give them grace” one more time, I am going to say, why are we giving this level grace for the last 3 years, but no grace is given for us doing our job and cleaning up for lower levels.

Work/life balance is a joke at USAA, if you work in claims! All the people putting USAA on a pedestal must not be in claims! The morale has deteriorated in claims, due to claim volume. When I have to take co-worker calls and listen to someone so upset about the handling of their claim, which I have nothing to do with, it takes time away from me doing my job. I apologize constantly for something I had nothing to do with and do everything to right the wrong for the member, because the last 4 people they spoke to said, “ I will have your adjuster call you”. What happened to do everything you can to handle the call?!!! Because adjusters are overwhelmed, and want to get their work done. Because management wants to pretend that everything is running like a well oiled machine. Those days are long gone. Just more demands on adjusters to do the work of other areas, because they can’t handle their workloads! Change is needed, but as much as I would like to be positive, USAA leadership and their poor decisions makes it hard!

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Post ID: @Ecob+1nRPf6FC

What a sad state of affairs. I’ve been with USAA for 30 years, my dad for 50, and my father-in-law for 65 years! My in-laws even went to visit HQ. From the customer side, it’s definitely not the USAA of old. To employees reading, I want you to know I’ve appreciated your service to members—I’ve experienced caring, warmth, humor, and exemplary service over the years and my many USAA, you’re the best of USAA and I’m sorry leadership lost sight of that.

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Post ID: @Ebag+1nRPf6FC

Wow it's so sad to see all these comments from employees! The USAA community on Reddit has a lot of similar complaints. Just know that as a USAA customer I have always really appreciated the amazing customer service I've received over the years!

My dad was a USAA member for 65 years and I've been one for 35 years. I have basically everything (banking, car/home/life insurance) on USAA right now. I haven't needed to use customer service often but whenever I have it's been extraordinary which is why I've never thought about leaving until now. I'm fine with paying a little more money for great customer service but after reading about all the layoffs, super stressful work environment AND seeing major rate increases I'm moving away from USAA :>(

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Post ID: @Dwcn+1nRPf6FC

Whistleblower: USAA ‘actively lying to regulators for years’ regarding violations of law:
https://www.complianceweek.com/regulatory-enforcement/whistleblower-usaa-actively-lying-to-regulators-for-years-regarding-violations-of-law/31642.article

A look inside USAA’s ‘catastrophically mismanaged’ compliance culture:
https://www.complianceweek.com/regulatory-enforcement/a-look-inside-usaas-catastrophically-mismanaged-compliance-culture/31643.article

Whistleblower to OCC: USAA had 400,000 undisclosed Military Lending Act violations:
https://www.complianceweek.com/regulatory-enforcement/whistleblower-to-occ-usaa-had-400000-undisclosed-military-lending-act-violations/31644.article

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Post ID: @Dool+1nRPf6FC

The only way change will occur is to email true issues directly to the board members. The EC, Ethics, and HR paint them a wonderful world picture while the reality sinkhole has already destroyed the culture and employees. If you know something is wrong report it to the board. Everyone else will sweep it under the rug and blame you for the issue. Saving USAA starts with the employees using the board members to help right the wrongs created by the current EC and EMG members. The board takes issues seriously and will demand answers from the EC.

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Post ID: @Btaq+1nRPf6FC

x

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Post ID: @zbyw+1nRPf6FC

@zumr+1nRPf6FC
Realistically, can anything save us other than members voting out the Board and/or the Board resigning out of shame?

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Post ID: @zicz+1nRPf6FC

@yktf+1nRPf6FC
The push to expand member eligibility has nothing to do with genuinely expanding the mission and everything to do with the fact that the cookie cutter McKinsey-HBS management mentality of the shiny publicly traded executives only knows two solutions to all business problems: cut expenses, and grow the customer base.

To the parachute executive class, USAA's mission is a bit of marketing window dressing, like another company's Good Hands - they used to be a thing, until McKinsey gave a presentation called "good hands or boxing gloves". To the shiny suits, reputation is an asset to be leveraged into growth, and then liquidated.

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Post ID: @zumr+1nRPf6FC

@yktf+1nRPf6FC
This is the only thing that will save the company. The Members need to nominate opponents to the Board and vote them out. If the Board members who are complicit have scruples and see how their actions have hurt the company, better yet, they should resign.

And yes, you need military people on the Board because you can't realistically expect folks to understand the mission without having that personal connection. Not every employee or leader needs to be military, but there should be a substantial amount of military leaders at the top. Non-military should be the exception, and not the rule, because it a STRATEGICALLY SHREWD MOVE TO MAINTAIN THE APPROPRIATE CULTURE. But at the very least, the Board should be given they are representatives of the members.

I hear that we're thinking of expanding the client base even more to firemen and police. Is this for the sake of the members? Or is it greedy executives who want higher revenues to line their pockets? We should not expand until our members are happy again and we are best in class. That's not a dig at firemen or police at all, it's just... we shouldn't bring them in out of greed, but rather a genuine desire to expand THE MISSION. And if we do, then we should have them represented on the Board as well. It's just all greed, and for a company that's supposed to be owned by it's members, it feels like we've lost the plot.

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Post ID: @yjcz+1nRPf6FC

Wayne Peacock got 3.8 million while overseeing a 1.2 billion annual loss. Fire him

Board members who are not military members need to be fired/removed.

Board members who support Peacock need to be fired/removed.

DEI/ESG hires, programs and policies need to be fired, dissolved and reversed immediately.

Premium services and employees that went by the wayside need to be reinstated for competitiveness and return to customer service. Bring the SMEs back on board and drop the Diversity hires.

Peacock hires? Fire them all

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Post ID: @yktf+1nRPf6FC

The board had an opportunity to send Wayne packing and instead they decided to let Syring go. I heard it was because they wanted continuity. Well he-l, continuity of complete garbage? Wayne has had a bad name for the entire time I was there. The new CIO is just as awful. All she cares about is laying people off and bringing on 3p.
Keep in mind these are the same jokers that laid off 500 tenured employees and then gave themselves double raises.
The current regime rolls out the “be a good steward the member money” as a Billy Club now. While they cut employees and the benefits, they destroy once great products they all live in different states and fly in, have the best of everything and are just draining the company to line their pockets. I told people to be wary of them bringing in execs from public companies. And now you see why. They are terrible, they can’t lead, all they know how to do is ra-e the company, lay off employees and bring in 3p. I seriously doubt the board cars or they would have done something about this long ago.

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Post ID: @vpkg+1nRPf6FC

I was there when Bob Davis was given the reigns and he started out with layoffs. It took Joe Robles YEARS to undo the damage that short stint of his caused.

Wayne has p-ssed all that away.

This was an insurance giant that got huge on NO ADVERTISING. There wasn't a need for any. The service was that good.

It was one thing when USAA created Wurzbachistan when it went on an outsourcing binge. Okay, the policy bank and claims employees keep the original USAA culture while the IT employees get the bottom-feeder culture.

But Wayne let the cancer spread to all the units that make the company money and it has now spread deep into the Bank, the unit where members have frequent contact with USAA.

I don't know if I should feel sorry for the officer-retirees who are making nothing on their deposits and paying 2.5x more for life insurance than they should.

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Post ID: @vqjj+1nRPf6FC

The USAA board KNOWS and is complicit in all of this.

Who do you think installed Peacock in the first place? The board.

This sums it up, and more...years and years of reckless management which predates even Peacock:
https://www.complianceweek.com/regulatory-enforcement/whistleblower-usaa-actively-lying-to-regulators-for-years-regarding-violations-of-law/31642.article

Archive & non-paywall: https://archive.ph/sY59U

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Post ID: @vaff+1nRPf6FC

All you need to know: ​Whistleblower: USAA ‘actively lying to regulators for years’ regarding violations of law - Fri, May 6, 2022

https://www.complianceweek.com/regulatory-enforcement/whistleblower-usaa-actively-lying-to-regulators-for-years-regarding-violations-of-law/31642.article

Archive & non-paywall: https://archive.ph/sY59U

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Post ID: @vbtd+1nRPf6FC

I'm wondering if it's time (or beyond time) to start contacting the USAA Board of Directors directly. As in: sending them certified mail to their home addresses, including direct experience letters from members and employees.

They think Wayne is doing a wonderful job and he wrote off the layoffs this year as a fluke.

You tell me it's a fluke Wayne, when a 53 year-old employee drove up to the parking garage this last weekend and threw himself off the 6th floor and died. I have been interviewing USAA people desperate to get out of this company all year. The morale was bad under Bob Davis, but it has NEVER been this low. Wayne is tearing the company apart. The company has been exiting lines of business rather than going after the competition. It has blasted a revenue hole on the EMG and on advertising for a bottom-tier line of products.

FFS, the Board has a fiduciary responsibility TO THE MEMBERS. DO SOMETHING.

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Post ID: @vxtm+1nRPf6FC

As a USAA member, I encouraged both my veteran parents to also join. I've been with USAA 20 years and even visited the San Antonio compound once, ages back. When calls from other insurance brokers came, all I had to say was I had USAA and they'd say they understood...never even offered a comparison quote.

I'm horrified.

We will be pulling our business, my parents will pull theirs. I will not bow to greed and everything I seen here screams of a greedy Executive Council and a greedy board of directors.

It su-ks, this is gonna be a PITA. And... I may come back one day...but only once the ship has corrected course.

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Post ID: @vfuk+1nRPf6FC

To Unsatisfied Officer, sir if you’re saying that USAA will not allow you to place your rank, Major for example, on your checks, there could be good reasons for that. Keep in mind in the old days your address, your Social Security number, your phone number, all that data used to be pre-printed on your checks. Well that’s all perfect data for fraudsters. Including your rank. Fraudsters have gotten excellent at imitating our members and the more data you give them the better off they are. This may not be a USAA decision, and if it was, it was for good reason.

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Post ID: @vkxy+1nRPf6FC

As an employee I was selected for a project at usaa, a project I interviewed for and went through filming and production for only to be told that I wasn't diverse enough and the project was tossed.

Oh and finding out that being enlisted with an 800+ credit score qualified me for lower tiers of insurance than a brand new 22yr old officer with no credit.

Also, with few exceptions, being enlisted stops you from progressing in your career. Why are E9s with 30 years experience unable to lead at usaa, but an O3 with 4 years military experience is ready to be a VP??

It's truly tragic. All of it.

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Post ID: @ujlo+1nRPf6FC

It’s not just WP but all the people whom he subsequently brought on board or promoted. All the new SVPs / VPs have absolutely no interest in caring for members but only to expand their “territory” at the members’ expense. For example, the 2nd line has significant redundancies. One person does the work and 7 people review the same work. I questioned whether that’s wise use of members’ money but was quickly threatened and silenced. The EMGs want as many people under their span of control so they can get bigger raises and higher bonuses. A very toxic pay structure imo.

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Post ID: @uzyf+1nRPf6FC

Is USAA insuring Wayne’s super expensive mansion near Tampa? If hurricane Idalia hits it, will his insurance payments be immediate and unquestioning, or will he have to go through what every other insured here has to go through? Asking for thousands of Members….

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Post ID: @uvpq+1nRPf6FC

i admit to having grave doubts about USAA's incessant increases in insurance pricing and its lackluster returns on funds deposited. Refusing to allow military officer members to include their rank on their cheks has started to tip the scales. i am about to remove my patronage after approximately 55 years.

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Post ID: @uybw+1nRPf6FC

Say it ain't so, Batman!

How much do USAA board members make?
Average USAA Board of Directors yearly pay in the United States is approximately $279,000, which is 217% above the national average. Salary information comes from 7 data points collected directly from employees, users, and past and present job advertisements on Indeed in the past 36 months.

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Post ID: @toff+1nRPf6FC

How much does Wayne Peacock make for USAA?
President and CEO Wayne Peacock received $4.8 million in total compensation from five USAA insurance companies last year. That was up 157 percent from $1.9 million in 2021, according to figures the San Antonio-based insurance and financial services company reported to the Nebraska Department of Insurance.Mar 9, 2023

HOLY FCKN MOLY BATMAN!

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Post ID: @tbuo+1nRPf6FC

How many of you know Wayne's world includes a multimillion dollar mansion overlooking Lake Canyon and the Yacht Club. He sails on a $250,000 racing yacht. I hear he wears silk undies and Timberland shoes without socks, cuz it's "yachting".

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Post ID: @tksc+1nRPf6FC

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