Thread regarding Wells Fargo & Co. layoffs

To the managers: I will remember you

I have about 6 names I have filed away deep into memory, and I have a very long memory. There is a small chance that one day in the future your name will cross my desk and I will remember you. I will remember how you lied, manipulated and gamed the system to stack rank good people to force them out the door. I will remember your lack of ethics. If that day ever comes know this: I will remember you, and I will be sure to exert whatever influence I have to reciprocate after you burned that bridge.

Also know this, there are thousands of others like me who will remember you. They will also remember how Wells Fargo treated them. Eventually the damage to your reputation, and the firms, will catch up to you.


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| 2392 views | | 20 replies (last January 24) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kfgsny57

20 replies (most recent on top)

I hear your anger, and it's justified. What happened to you wasn't about performance—it was about power. Wells Fargo's "rank and yank" system isn't rooted in objective metrics like Six Sigma; it's a subjective exercise that often rewards compliance over competence. When there's no clear methodology, politics fill the vacuum, and good people become collateral damage.

You're not alone in this experience. The pattern you described—managers redirecting abuse from clients to employees—is precisely what transforms companies into "fearful organizations." After the 2016 fake account scandal, where employees were fired for responding to impossible sales targets, the bank's culture didn't heal; it shifted targets. The same psychological mechanisms that pressured staff to open fraudulent accounts now drive the forced ranking system that punishes those who don't conform to the new "efficiency" narratives.

This is why forgiveness isn't for them—it's for you. The managers who gamed the system operated in a culture where psychological safety was systematically destroyed. They learned that dissent was career su----e, so they became instruments of a broken system. That doesn't excuse their actions, but it explains why fighting them individually is like treating symptoms while the disease rages on.

Your path of studying management bullying and discovering "psychological safety" research was exactly right. The book you found, The Fearless Organization, uses Wells Fargo as a case study precisely because its culture of fear "brooked no dissent" and created "avoidable failure". The system demands deceit, then punishes the deceivers, leaving only the bullies who thrive in that environment.

The liberation you found through forgiveness is real. When you stop needing them to be punished, you reclaim the energy they stole. But forgiveness doesn't mean forgetting—it means learning. You studied what happened, understood the organizational dynamics, and now you see the machine instead of just the cogs. That's how you ensure it never happens to you again.

For those still carrying the list of names: remember that the best revenge is building a career where your value is measured by contribution, not compliance. The damage to Wells Fargo's reputation isn't theoretical—it's documented in continued toxic culture reports and the exodus of talent that can't thrive in fear. The managers who survived by playing that game have already limited their own futures, because the world beyond fearful organizations values collaboration over coercion.

Live well. Build something they can't touch. And know that by walking away whole, you've already won.

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Post ID: @qx+1kfgsny57

Don’t let your corporate risk management twist your head. Be well, move on. That’s the best play.

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Post ID: @q8+1kfgsny57

@cd
Even worse... you're someone who uses the word 'bootlicker'....

Su-ks being insecure, eh?

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Post ID: @gn+1kfgsny57

@fc
HA!

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Post ID: @gm+1kfgsny57

hey Siri play I will remember u by Sarah McLaughlin

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Post ID: @fc+1kfgsny57

Let go and let God (or Kali) take care of it.

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Post ID: @e7+1kfgsny57

What goes around comes around. Check your six....

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Post ID: @e1+1kfgsny57

Not to be a bootlicker, but I feel like most managers I've had at Wells have actually been good people and anything that's gone down has been corporate pressure from above.

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Post ID: @cd+1kfgsny57

@ap I’m already seeing this play out. It may not be what everyone can influence, but I’ve seen a few people who could, do it.

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Post ID: @bp+1kfgsny57

Best revenge is to live a good life. Why waste so much energy ? Especially for work? Life is too short!

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Post ID: @b0+1kfgsny57

Milton?
Dat u?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=93ApqwRp7L8

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Post ID: @as+1kfgsny57

@an

Actually I said there's a small chance. 6 people doesn't mean 6 layers above me. It means I had to work with a lot of managers in a large, cross-functional org.

I was P4, by the way.

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Post ID: @ap+1kfgsny57

“One day in the future your name will cross my desk”… says the minion P2 with a bad attitude 🤣🤣

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Post ID: @an+1kfgsny57

@a5

Seeing as you are so confident, why don't you tell us who you are?

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Post ID: @am+1kfgsny57

@a5
Good point...

"EVERYONE ELSE is wrong!!!"

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Post ID: @a8+1kfgsny57

Wow, 6, is that from your manager all the way up to CS?

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Post ID: @a6+1kfgsny57

We found the team weirdo. No wonder they got a bad eval. Six names? How many managers have to tell you you su-k before you stop blaming everyone else? And yes I realize I'm on your list now also. Sorry, not sorry.

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Post ID: @a5+1kfgsny57

@OP
Bull.

If you were even 1/10th the person of your post you wouldn't have stuck around for these great injustices you believe were hurled upon you.

You took a job. You skimmed by. You stayed exactly where you were... You're not a person or employee of influence in any way. You're a minion. You in Iowa by chance?

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Post ID: @a4+1kfgsny57

@OP I get where you're coming from. I've been there and done that. It's a waste of energy and your brain to do that. The bad managers are just mile markers on the career path of life, only useful for tracking your progress to the destination, and utterly forgettable after passing them.

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Post ID: @a1+1kfgsny57

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