Conversation witnessed and no, I’m not going to give the who or where. Think what you want, don’t really care.
Management realized that the Bora Bora was not handled well. Too many of the wrong people were let go. Experienced tenured staff, staff with intimate tech and otherwise, knowledge of proprietary systems, processes, procedures, experienced key players in many areas were let go. The “life raft” exercise failed miserably.
What they also didn’t know or realize or think would not matter, is that those who were left behind were also leaving. Citi banked (pun) on the desperation of those left behind would encourage them to put in long hours to pick up the slack, that they’d be so grateful that they were not let go and so desperate to keep their job, they’d be locked into the job, chained to their desk. The new replacement staff hired walked around for several months lost and clueless and produced nothing. The knowledge lost didn’t magically be absorbed through osmosis by sitting at the desk.
The reality was that the staff left behind and not let go, started looking for jobs upon the release of the news of Bora Bora, the Jane speech of “get off the train” motivated them. Yes, the job market su-ked and yes, it took 6+ months or more to find a job but eventually people found one and left. I’m not talking just about Wells Fargo but also elsewhere as well and are still leaving even now and they are taking their friends with them.
My opinion , Citi is now struggling to keep what they do have. Now with reviews on the horizon and the much expected lack luster rewards because “well, your a 1 or 2 but times are hard so I can’t give you anything” speech that many will hear, will make things even more worse. Its odd to me that Citi will let go tenured staff and or do very little to retain them but will think nothing of replacing them with someone inexperienced at a higher salary only to get little or much less then the person they ran off. What can Citi do to make things better? Let’s see what they come up with. I guess the real question on the table now is, is it too late?