Thread regarding Bank of New York Mellon Corp. layoffs

BNY Mellon: Where the Future Is Offshored, the Present Is Gaslit, and the Past Is Being PIP’d Out of Existence

Welcome to BNY Mellon, the corporate funhouse where the future is offshored, the present is gaslit, and the past has been quietly escorted out under a PIP engineered by someone who couldn’t explain your job if their bonus depended on it. If you’ve ever wanted to experience a workplace that feels like a psychological thriller written by a committee of auditors with no moral compass, congratulations—you’re already included.

Let’s begin with the crown jewel: the 1.4‑million‑square‑foot Pune facility, a gleaming monument to cost‑cutting and the executive fantasy that geography equals talent. Walk inside and you’ll hear it—the cha‑ching of budget wins echoing like a slot machine that only pays out when a U.S. employee vanishes from the payroll.
Real estate consolidation? Cha‑ching. Offshoring? Cha‑ching. RTO badge‑tracking designed to catch you missing a swipe? Cha‑ching. Eliminating work from home so you can sit in a ghost‑town office lit by flickering fluorescent lights? Cha‑ching.

Meanwhile, in the U.S., seasoned employees are being funneled into the Performance Improvement Program Funhouse—a place where your accomplishments are reinterpreted as “concerning behaviors,” your loyalty becomes “inflexibility,” and your manager suddenly develops selective amnesia about every positive review you’ve ever received. We are told it's business, not personal; it’s “People Optimization.” Or, as everyone else calls it: age discrimination with a corporate mission statement.

Your replacement? Already hired. They’re either a contractor, an H1B, or a freshly minted state college grad whose primary qualification is generating tax incentives. Nothing screams “strategic workforce planning” like swapping a 25‑year veteran for someone new who still puts “proficient in Outlook” on their résumé.

And then there’s leadership—RV and Dermie—delivering explanations so vague they might as well be fortune‑cookie messages. “Secular headwinds.” “Strategic acceleration.” “Industry realignment.” These phrases translate directly to: We cut people because it was cheaper, and we hope you’re too demoralized to question it.
They’re corporate illusionists, pulling rabbits out of hats while quietly sawing the workforce in half, all while congratulating themselves for their “courageous leadership.”
But the real horror isn’t the layoffs—it’s the cultural decay and phony empathy. Not a dramatic collapse, but a daily drip of rot. Policies drafted by people who have never met an employee. Decisions that feel like they were generated by a malfunctioning ethics simulator. And the atmosphere? Imagine a place where hope goes to file a ticket with HR and never returns. You are told to recharge, yet you quickly realize your battery no longer holds a charge.

Employees describe it as a slow‑motion freefall: one day you’re standing on a cliff, the next you’re knee‑deep in gravel wondering when the ground gave out. Every new policy feels like it was written by someone who only vaguely understands what the company does. Every leadership message arrives wrapped in jargon, dipped in legal review, and delivered with the emotional warmth of The Grinch who has no integrity and has lost their soul.

And if you’re wondering where ethical concerns go—well, they don’t go to RV. They simply vanish into corporate legal and a maze of executives who nod solemnly while approving fake performance reviews to support a visa‑driven displacement model. There’s evidence everywhere for those willing to look, but the official stance remains a polished shrug.

The downstream effects are already here: institutional knowledge evaporating, teams hollowing out, and the remaining employees expected to train their replacements while pretending everything is “energizing.” Engagement surveys now function mostly as a cry‑for‑help collection system.

But don’t worry—leadership wants you to feel valued. So check under your seat. If you’re lucky, you might find a BNY keychain in a swag bag. A small token of appreciation for your loyalty, your decades of service, and your willingness to participate in the grand experiment of replacing experience with cost efficiency.

In the end, BNY’s transformation story is simple:
Cut enough people, hide enough truth, and eventually even the spreadsheets start believing the fairy tale.

Happy New Year! Enjoy the feeling while it lasts.


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| 14542 views | | 11 replies (last March 25) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kdzr7bj5

11 replies (most recent on top)

Hello Friends,

It's once again time for our traveling Q1 Town Hall roadshows with your favorite millionaire EC grand sweepstakes lottery winners from 2025:

So let's do a quick review and highlight any updates or changes — a speed round of what’s changed since last quarter?

1. The Offshoring?
Still happening.
In fact, it’s now so efficient that the Pune facility probably has a dedicated “U.S. Employee Replacement Express Lane.”
Buy one, get one free.
Collect all 50 states.

2. The Gaslighting?
Oh, it’s evolved.
It’s now AI‑enhanced gaslighting, where leadership emails are generated by a machine trained on 10,000 hours of corporate jargon and zero hours of human empathy.
You’ll get messages like:
I “We hear your concerns. We value your voice. Please stop using it.”

3. The PIPs?
Still the same, but now they come with a QR code so you can track your own demise in real time.

4. Leadership Communication?
Still a word salad, but now with extra dressing.
You’ll hear phrases like:
• “Macro‑micro‑multi‑vector headwinds”
• “Strategic de‑densification”
• “People‑first optimization”
Translation:
“We cut people because it was cheaper.”

5. Culture?
Imagine a plant that hasn’t been watered since 2019 but leadership keeps sending emails saying,

I “We’re excited to see it thrive!”

That’s the culture.

6. Employee Morale?
Let’s just say the engagement survey still doubles as a cry‑for‑help hotline. Management response is now lower than ever since Managers tasked with fixing survey responses are now doubling as airport TSA agents!

7. Transparency?
Leadership is still committed to transparency — in the same way a brick wall is committed to letting light through. Oh, it's still pitch dark in here!

8. Ethics?
Still missing.
If found, please return to Corporate Legal.
They’ve been looking for it since 2016.

9. AI?
Now used to:
• Predict who’s next
• Write the layoff scripts
• Auto‑generate “We’re a family” emails
The future is here, and it’s… bleakly efficient.

10. What’s actually changed?*
Nothing.
Everything.
Mostly the vocabulary.
The building is the same.
The fluorescent lights still flicker.
The badge readers still judge you.
The newly installed 'Merch Boxes' still contains a keychain and other swag worth less than your dignity.
But the core?
Still the same slow‑motion freefall — just with more EC hype and Eliza jingle.

Ho, ho, ho! That's all for now. Until next time.

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Post ID: @bvf+1kdzr7bj5

I lived this article. One note that was not mentioned, while embracing the cheaper labor, there is also a push to embrace new cultures. There should be no cultural discrimination. Even if that culture has no respect for woman. I truly thought I was done with discrimination against women until your managers and coworkers are from a culture that deems women as second class citizens. So too old and a woman really does equal layoff

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Post ID: @7gv+1kdzr7bj5

Today RV is pleased to announce Q4 earnings: "On the back of eight consecutive quarters of positive OPERATING LEVERAGE, we grew earnings per share by 28% year-over-year and returned $5.0 billion of capital to our shareholders."

Translation: In a high operating leverage situation, a large proportion of the company’s costs are fixed costs. In this case, the firm earns a large profit on each incremental sale, but must attain sufficient sales volume to cover its substantial fixed costs. If it can do so, then the entity will earn a major profit on all sales after it has paid for its fixed costs. However, earnings will be more sensitive to changes in sales volume. As we continue to lose client business, revenue reductions will more negatively impact operating leverage.

RV also announced: "Today, we are raising the bar. With the foundations in place, we expect to realize greater scale and growth opportunities across our platforms. Our new medium-term financial targets represent the next milestones on our path to unlocking BNY’s full potential over the long-term."

Translation: 'Hey Eliza, what in the world does this mean? Raising the bar on what? Layoffs, misery, ethics failure, more misery, culture rot, more punitive RTO policies, joy robbing, executive compensation, and culture rot? The bar is already raised as high as it can go in these areas! Can't wait to hear more lies from our illusionist leaders!

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Post ID: @1va+1kdzr7bj5

Spot on. Management has no concern over the brain drain of tenured employees; asking lower paid, less experienced employees to figure out how to do more work with the help of AI and staff in Pune. Teams are so short staffed and with the mandatory two consecutive week vacation policy, employees spend their entire summers burned out. It’s a hard place to work.

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Post ID: @f7+1kdzr7bj5

@ap Well said. Keep the Kool Aid coming.

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Post ID: @f0+1kdzr7bj5

NOT written with Eliza! Well done!

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Post ID: @bg+1kdzr7bj5

@b1 I think this strategy has been there since the establishment of east indian company

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Post ID: @b9+1kdzr7bj5

@OP I left the bank on my own and they immediately planed hiring my replacement when I was on 30-day. Does that mean I was not on their chopping board for the next round of playoff?

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Post ID: @b8+1kdzr7bj5

I've been here a long time, and I'm still amazed at the petty spitefulness of the Kafkaesque rules and policies dreamt up by the C-Suite.

At this point I have FU money, and will stick around until they get rid of me or I decide to retire, whichever comes first.

I feel sorry for anyone stuck here because of the job market, but I'd also say keep applying until you get something. I used to say this place was the Titanic, but it's starting to feel more like the Mary Celeste these days.

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Post ID: @b1+1kdzr7bj5

Such a clever little person. I bet you dress yourself in the morning, too.

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Post ID: @ap+1kdzr7bj5

Beautifully written, a pure masterpiece!

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Post ID: @ae+1kdzr7bj5

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