Thread regarding Bank of New York Mellon Corp. layoffs

Return to Oblivion (RTO): The Crusade to Cost-Efficient Chaos

In the gilded towers of BNY a bold new vision has emerged—one that promises to revolutionize banking by replacing logic with leveraged cost ratios, and employees with AI bots. The mission? A 25% displacement goal so ambitious it makes someone with an unusually large head look like a walking Super Dome.

This is not just a transformation. It’s a crusade. A cost-efficient, culture-energizing, AI-powered march toward oblivion.

RTO: Return to Office or Return to Obsolescence
The EC’s flagship initiative, Return to Office (RTO), is less a policy and more a spiritual awakening—one that beckons employees back to the fluorescent-lit temples of productivity. Not because collaboration improves, mind you, but because empty buildings are bad for optics and worse for lease negotiations.
Employees are given two choices:

  1. Return to the office and pretend the vending machine is a coworker.
  2. Voluntarily resign, thereby forfeiting severance and preserving the sacred cost-to-income ratio.
    It’s a masterclass in corporate jiu-jitsu: force attrition without triggering WARN notices, all while claiming “voluntary turnover.” HR calls it “strategic realignment.” Employees call it “gaslighting with a badge swipe.”

Leveraged Cost Ratios: The New Religion
The EC’s obsession with leveraged cost ratios has reached theological proportions. Every decision—from layoffs to latte restrictions—is filtered through the holy spreadsheet. If the ratio improves, it’s divine intervention. If it worsens, blame middle management or the interns.
To meet the sacred 25% displacement goal, the EC has deployed a three-pronged strategy:
• Radical Offshoring: Because nothing says “client intimacy” like a 13-hour time difference.
• Real Estate Consolidation: Turn five buildings into one, then fill it with crowded parking lots and free ice cream.
• Geographic Darwinism: Employees must relocate to “low-cost hubs” like Pittsburgh, Lake Mary or “somewhere near a functioning airport in Poland.”
Those unwilling to uproot their lives are gently nudged toward “career transitions,” which is EC-speak for “LinkedIn Premium trial.”

Offshoring: The Great American Job Evaporation Act
In a move that would make Machiavelli blush, the EC has embraced offshoring with the fervor of a startup chasing Series A funding. High-paying U.S. roles are being shipped to India and Poland faster than you can say “knowledge transfer.” Now tell that to your son or daughter with a new Comp Sci degree and a huge student loan!
The rationale? “Global talent optimization.” The reality? A 3 a.m. Teams call with someone who just inherited your Jira board and thinks “Agile” is a yoga pose.
Meanwhile, U.S. employees are asked to train their replacements with a smile, a script, and a non-disparagement clause. It’s like being asked to decorate your own guillotine.

Real Estate: Consolidate, Congest, Confuse
BNY’s real estate strategy is modeled after a game of corporate musical chairs—except the music is a fire alarm test and the chairs are pulled with barely a WARN notice
Entire floors are shuttered, cubicles are repurposed as “collaboration pods,” and thermostats are set to “Arctic Ambiguity.” Employees who once had offices now share hot desks with the ghost of productivity past.
The EC touts this as “space efficiency.” Employees call it “a dystopian WeWork with free Starbucks coffee.”

AI: The Messiah of Mediocrity & Risk
To distract from the mass exodus and morale collapse, the EC has unveiled its pièce de résistance: artificial intelligence. Not the kind that solves problems, but the kind that generates code fixes and sends and endless stream of calendar meeting invites.
AI is heralded as the “game-changing solution” to banking’s future. Never mind that it can’t distinguish between a compliance breach and a cat meme. It’s here, it’s expensive, and it’s definitely not replacing the EC anytime soon.
Investors are told that AI will “energize culture.” Employees wonder if that means replacing the annual bonus with Eliza-generated haikus.

Investor Relations: Fiction Meets Finance
In quarterly earnings calls, the EC paints a picture of a vibrant, energized workforce—one that’s “leaner, more agile, and deeply committed to innovation.” This is technically true, if by “leaner” you mean “unemployed,” and by “agile” you mean “dodging layoffs.”
Analysts and interns nod approvingly, spreadsheets and dashboards sparkle, and stock prices flutter upward like a paper airplane in a hurricane. Meanwhile, the actual workforce is Googling “how to fake enthusiasm in Teams meetings.”

Corporate Absurdities That Deserve Their Own HR Memo
To truly appreciate the EC’s strategic genius, one must examine the absurdities baked into the day-to-day experience of surviving their vision:
• Buzzword Bingo: “Let’s circle back after we socialize this idea.” Translation: We have no idea what we’re doing, but we’ll pretend to have a plan once enough people nod.
• Perks That Feel Like Punishment: Free kombucha on tap—but new high priced benefits premiums and no dental coverage and no payment for unused vacation.
• Performance Reviews by Ouija Board: “You exceeded expectations, but we’re giving you a ‘Meets’ to keep your raise under budget.” “Your leadership score dropped because you didn’t smile enough in Teams meetings.”
• Office Space Shenanigans: Hot-desking in a building with no available desks. Hot seating means stall #3 on the 11th floor. “Collaboration zones” are of course next to the expensive coffee makers because by design this is where innovation happens. Open floor plans are designed by someone who’s never worked in one.
• AI Adoption Theater: “We’re using AI to streamline operations.” Translation: We bought a chatbot that can’t answer basic questions. “We’re training AI on our internal data.” Including the EC’s lunch order history and passive-aggressive “word salad” emails.
• Layoffs Framed as “Strategic Realignment”: “We’re right-sizing the organization.” By removing everyone who knows how the systems work. “This is a growth opportunity.” For the remaining employees to do three jobs.
• Relocation Roulette: “You can keep your job if you move to Lake Mary.” With 10 days’ notice and no relocation support. “Remote work is no longer aligned with our values.” But offshoring is.

Culture: The Energized Mirage
The EC insists that culture is thriving. There are town halls, virtual scavenger hunts, and mandatory quarterly mindfulness fireside chats led by designated talking heads, but when it comes to answering questions about people issues and layoff concerns…. Guess what, sorry folks we’re out of time!
But beneath the surface lies a culture of fear, fatigue, and forced optimism. Employees speak in hushed tones, Teams channels resemble support groups, and “career development” means surviving until Q4.
Still, the EC remains undeterred. After all, nothing energizes culture like a 25% headcount reduction and a chatbot named “SynergyBot.”

Conclusion: The Cost of Cost-Cutting
BNY’s EC team has achieved something truly remarkable: a strategic plan so aggressive it makes a hostile takeover look like a bake sale. Through RTO mandates, offshoring, real estate consolidation, and AI evangelism, they’ve redefined what it means to “optimize.”
But in their quest for cost efficiency, they’ve forgotten one thing: people. The ones who built the systems, served the clients, and made the spreadsheets sing.
So here’s to the displaced, the disillusioned, and the deskless. May your severance be generous, your next job be remote, and your AI overlords be slightly less passive-aggressive.


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| 14233 views | | 17 replies (last September 12) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1k4atf3py

17 replies (most recent on top)

This is humorous but completely and sadly true. The EC is being deliberate and arrogant in their lack of transparency on these issues.

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Post ID: @1ev+1k4atf3py

100% accurate and don’t forget the peakon survey :D

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Post ID: @ga+1k4atf3py

Nailed it!!

BNY started all of this when they "merged" with Mellon. They promised to cherish the Mellon heritage...but now they are erasing it from their building logos.....

BNY destroyed the wonderful comradery that Mellon had at the time...put everybody at each others throats, fearing for their jobs.....layed off many and threatened anyone who talked publicly that they would face loss of thier severance and legal action. Back then, they said that if you bevame employed, even part time, your severance would cancel.

Truly despicable, some of the things they did back then.....

Its no surprise they continue the despicable treatment of their employees...the people who made them billions .....

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Post ID: @e9+1k4atf3py

Little long but nailed it.

Employees speak in hushed tones, Teams channels resemble support groups, and “career development” means surviving until Q4.

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Post ID: @dr+1k4atf3py

You definitely could have a career as some kind of writer @OP....excellent and entertaining summation of BNY.

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Post ID: @dj+1k4atf3py

Bravo

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Post ID: @d9+1k4atf3py

Brilliant read

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Post ID: @d4+1k4atf3py

Absolutely spot on!

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Post ID: @d1+1k4atf3py

@OP nailed it. I couldn't express my feelings for the firm any better than what was written. Well done.

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Post ID: @cv+1k4atf3py

Upwards of 90 minutes each way, door to door. Insane

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Post ID: @bm+1k4atf3py

I asked Eliza to summarize this and got a picture of RV.

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Post ID: @bk+1k4atf3py

@OP bravo! Hands down the finest OP I have read in the past dozen years I have perused this site.

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Post ID: @bj+1k4atf3py

Completely accurate. Won’t be around to experience the fallout, as I’d rather be underemployed than live in Central Florida. This whole situation is a crash course in corporate cruelty.

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Post ID: @ba+1k4atf3py

@ar+1k4atf3py It takes me 45 minutes to go 20 miles there each way if I’m lucky.

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Post ID: @b6+1k4atf3py

A good summation of the idiocracy we find ourselves in.

I was just talking to someone who's on call, works all night at times, and is still expected to show up at the office the next day. His manager in India looked at Google maps and said "It's only 40 miles. It should only take you 40 minutes to get to work." No, dum--ss, it's 40 miles of horrendous traffic, and takes anywhere from ninety minutes to two hours each way.

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Post ID: @ar+1k4atf3py

Very grim and all too accurate.

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Post ID: @af+1k4atf3py

yeah what he said

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Post ID: @a5+1k4atf3py

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