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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| 29961 views | | 124 replies (last August 13, 2024) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1nRPf6FC

124 replies (most recent on top)

Accurate. The shift in leadership went well beyond style and impacted who USAA strived to be at a fundamental level. Instead of best in class, it seems “average” is our new aspirational goal. Wayne is literally one of the most toxic leaders I’ve ever been around - and I was at USAA when Bob Davis was CEO.

The board is _not_ showing the leadership that they need to, and Wayne has been able to install enough of his cronies to insulate them from any rumblings from staff.

I would love to see a 10yr MSAT chart - or any one of a number of external customer centric metrics. The possibility of that info being presented to the board should be keeping someone awake at night.

Root cause: failure of vision. From the board not hiring a leader, and even more fundamentally all of the external EMG hires. If more than 10% of those hires are external, then your “leadership” team is doing a very poor job growing talent internally.

Letting IMCO go was an example of this non-USAA approach. Was it profitable, at least short term? Yes! IMCO was by far the poorest performer of the bunch, and wasn’t going to be generating massive profits anytime soon. What did it do? It fit the mission, and if USAA had sought strategic alliance with a major player instead of selling off the assets/business, it might have made the “comprehensive financial service” an advantage.

At this point I’m not sure why they don’t just go back to officer only insurance, and call it a century.

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Post ID: @9nfm+1nRPf6FC

USAA was to be looked up to, now it's below average.
Why has USAA lost it luster?
I was proud to be a member, not anymore.

Sad.

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Post ID: @9wuw+1nRPf6FC

In addition to put costumer service, victims of car accidents only have a 50 day car rental. This change was quietly made to all policies with no option to add days. With the lackluster service now being provided, claims are going well above 50 days. And USAA has no remorse.

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Post ID: @9rru+1nRPf6FC

This is all how I see it as well, but I don't see anything changing because they've been convinced that usaa is in a new era that requires it to be content with being "industry standard". They no longer feel it can afford to be best in class. They've said it out loud. Execs, who are not USAA people, have said our benefits and pay are within industry standard. Our attrition is within industry standard. We use to stand apart with striving for best in class. Those days are gone.

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Post ID: @8cvs+1nRPf6FC

This is all very spot on and add in that after working for years and earning my dollars of raises, they evened it up for new people coming in and essentially I now only make $1 more than new classes. Which is essentially close to start pay at many jobs in this area due to high cost of living. The medical insurance for employees is terrible, so I went from zero medical debt to constantly having bills go to collections and being unable to see my doctors because I can’t pay them with my fsa hsa unless I meet my deductible first. It’s a mess and I’ve been lied to various times by higher ups. I have integrity and believe in honesty, but I feel it’s falling to the wayside within the company, not the lower employees.

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Post ID: @7ikh+1nRPf6FC

Kudos to the author of this post. As a former employee who elected to retire early simply because of leadership decisions that were being executed in the Bank that did not have our members best interests top priority but had higher regard for making business decisions based on ther past experiences from other banks they were "poached" from by their leadership friends who made it through a interview that really had no clue what it means to serve, was a disgrace to the service members and their families that serve and protect our country.

As a USAA member, I have had the privilege to be a dependent family member, an active duty service member, and a veteran member and to see USAA hiring senior leaders with hobbies like a professional poker player making decisionsanout my finances, with no regard to the perception that comes with that who would rather participate in tournaments and fly other senior leaders on private planes and party like rock stars would never happen under prior CEOs who had the membership and brand perception top of mind.

I can only speak from my tenure in the bank and watching amazing dedicated employees being forced to be let go or others who are just waiting for a severance package so that their departure will be comfortable for them and their families is not what those 25 Army Officers in 1922 at the Gunther Hotel envisioned when they issued their frist policy to Maj Walker Moore. As I served this country as a USAA Member with pride, I would share my great experiences with all who I could, now i am ashamed to tell others who I bank, invest and insure myself with....and have decided to move on, not that USAA will care.

I often ask myself is this part of the plan and preparation for USAA to sell part or all of the company like they did on the investments side???? Things that make you say hummmm.

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Post ID: @6cuh+1nRPf6FC

I agree. Having retired from USAA. I see the lack of pride in some of the claims personnel. They are over worked. I loved USAA. I hope they turn it around.

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Post ID: @6gcb+1nRPf6FC

This!! 100% It could not have been said better. There is a systemic breakdown and what used to be a fabulous company to work for that we were so proud of is becoming increasingly more stressful and less enjoyable. We no longer feel as though our company has our back and instead is content is providing sub par incentives for its employees. So many AMAZING people have left and so many more are not far behind. The bar just keeps getting lower and lower as far as who they are willing to hire because they can’t get enough people willing to join USAA and are struggling to fill the pipeline new hire classes. Not for nothing. It’s time they open their eyes!

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Post ID: @6gll+1nRPf6FC

Well said. Agree 100%. I miss General Joe. Been here 15 yrs. It was wonderful in the beginning but after Joe been in steady decline. Wayne!? He’s systematically destroying what used to be an incredible place to work at a rapid pace. Apocalyptic. He never provides a direct answer, always circling around the truth, always double talk. It’s insane that he is still in charge. He’s proven himself untrustworthy and incapable. Layoffs are inevitable, especially in our industry. However, at USAA , many are the victims of inexperienced incompetent leaders who are allowed to remain. I don’t mind giving my all to a company with integrity, who prides itself in its appreciation of its employees and members. It’s the essence, the heart and soul that is on life support. That spirit was tangible, it was in the air. You could see it on most faces walking the halls or zoom meetings. Now most are in survival mode. That too is reflected on most faces; the eyes are a little bit wider, the tense smiles that never reach those eyes. The anxiety of what’s around the corner and the grieving over the years of hard work that now feel pointless. Like animals lined up for the sla-ghterhouse; do you escape and jump the fence? Do you wait in line holding your breath for the inevitable? Do you rush to the front to get it over with? It’s exhausting.

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Post ID: @6ynl+1nRPf6FC

It’s sad to see a kingdom fall down and it’s heritage and commitments pushed to the side.

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Post ID: @6ifp+1nRPf6FC

This is so well written and so true in every aspect. Thank you to whoever wrote it. Sad thing is, they don’t care.

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Post ID: @6the+1nRPf6FC

Truth , been here 30+. Every word needs to be ingrained

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Post ID: @6ndx+1nRPf6FC

Let’s face it, it is an average company with average talent and very low compensations. Just move on, plenty of better opportunities out there with 2-3x USAA’s compensation.

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Post ID: @5yuz+1nRPf6FC

@4wpg+1nRPf6FC

110% agreed. All signs pointed towards Syring being the rightful next CEO. I've heard stories about how it went down between him and Wayne.

I've heard that Wayne pushed him out because "it was his turn."
I've heard that they had an agreement about how long Wayne would run things, then Wayne "changed his mind" (kind of like he "changed his mind" about RTO).

But it's all hearsay or rumors.

All I know is that Jim Syring turned IT around when no one else could, and he did it while making difficult decisions, having high standards, and generally being a "hard a-s." But people respected him because he wasn't a politician. He didn't sugar coat things. If something su-ked, he'd say so. He didn't use doublespeak.

My hope — however naively optimistic it may be — is that Wayne finishes his tenure as CEO having laid a solid foundation where someone like Syring (hopefully Syring himself) can come in make the company truly flourish.

By "solid foundation," I specifically mean:

  1. Staffing is at a level where layoffs are no longer needed
  2. Company is profitable (or close to profitable) again
  3. Competitive products and services are prioritized and coming down the pipe

In other words, my hope is that Wayne takes care of the dirty work so the next CEO can focus on really moving USAA forward.

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Post ID: @4yrg+1nRPf6FC

We had one of those —Syring. Wayne ran him off because he knew Syring was the real deal, and was jealous. Wayne knew people loved Syring and would walk through fire for him when they wouldn’t for Wayne. Who better to turn this ship around than a retired Vice Admiral?

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Post ID: @4wpg+1nRPf6FC

OP here again. It's really encouraging to see that this letter is resonating so well with people and that you all share in the sentiment. I've seen USAA actively deteriorating for years, so this was a way for me to voice my concerns, and the concerns that I know so many employees and members are feeling.

I also appreciate the idea that it will take years (if not decades) for USAA to get back on top, and to that I would say this: Employees and members don't need things to be fixed overnight. They can't be fixed overnight. But seeing the company we love(d) turn a corner and begin to right the wrongs of the past several years would allow so many employees and members breathe a huge sigh of relief.

USAA has been in a dark place for a long time with no signs of improvement on the horizon. Employees and members don't need an immediate fix — they just need to see the sun begin to rise again. They need hope that USAA is not a lost cause.

I believe that with the right leadership, USAA can once again become the best employer and financial institution in the country. It won't magically get better overnight with a new CEO; but a leader who is open, honest, candid, and transparent will do wonders to restore faith in the association.

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Post ID: @4crb+1nRPf6FC

Great letter. This is exactly what I have been saying the last few years. The current leadership is emulating exactly what happened in the early 2000’s. I do believe that leadership then and now are doing things that are unpopular but in many instances have to be done. The problem is that these leaders are ruthless about it and go way past what they should in order to try and stay relevant and employees. Davis’s made 2 mistakes in the 2000’s he over stayed his intended purpose and I. The process destroyed a culture replacing it with a culture of fear. I see the same thing happening again. Wayne may be able to protect his legacy if he does what he needs to and then graciously bows out to be replaced with a general/flag officer who can rebuild the the culture, ala Joe. What this company needs is a career general/flag officer who understands employees, environment and the bottom line vs. a bottom line hatchet man with no understanding of people and culture. Heaven only knows if that person exists. If not then the pendulum will continue to swing every decade accelerating the downward spiral of a once great company.

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Post ID: @4rkz+1nRPf6FC

I am convinced the issue is with Wayne and the board of directors (of which he is a member). I cannot imagine it would be easy to vote against him as another board member. The board turns an eye to everything and allows Wayne to run amuck. Why is it USAA holds employees to a high degree of accountability, but the same cannot be done with the CEO? Why is it the frontline has their benefits and pay cut, but the same cannot be done with the CEO? Wayne, you’re terrible at your job, you are destroying lives, and you need to leave. Board, have the ba--s to stand up to Wayne and oust him.

For many years, I spoke of an impending wave of turnover that would get stronger and stronger due to void created when tenured employees depart thanks to an increasingly toxic culture. The wave is here and you can get off now or when it crashes. In this former leader’s opinion, USAA has not yet hit bottom. Things need to get worse before real change occurs. Do you want to be one of the last few people holding the bag (workload, metrics, complaints, etc.)? The volume is off the charts and goals are unattainable. It will get worse, and you are at risk if you stay. Even the best or most favored employees no longer have a hiding place. The witch hunt is real - upper leadership talks almost entirely about how to performance manage someone out of the company versus helping them become successful.

Get your resume updated and start applying to 3 jobs per week (or more). Modify the language in your resume to make sense to the common person outside of USAA. Stay away from USAA terminology. Avoid sharing anything with anyone internally about your pursuits. Gossip travels fast. Reach out to former co-workers to ask for ideas. Have a plan and timeline for getting out. Don’t give up and stick to the plan.

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Post ID: @4crp+1nRPf6FC

Joe, prese come back and fix this.

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Post ID: @3ywj+1nRPf6FC

I find it interesting that many of the statements made here are exactly what I've been saying for the past 2-3 years, and in some cases longer. There's not a single word here that I disagree with.

So I must say, I hope senior executives pay attention. This is spot on. If your intention is to take down USAA, then congratulations: you're on the right path.

After 10 years, I recently moved my insurance products away from USAA. When asked by the MSR "why?", my response, other than incredible savings, was "because I disagree with many of the strategic decisions being made by USAA and I have grave concerns about the viability of this enterprise."

I've already started moving my money out of the Bank. This will continue when I find an institution that I'm happy with. Already I'm earning 4.15% on a standard savings account.

The only reason I'm still working at USAA is because I'm retiring soon and I love my team and manager. But one of my team has left (for precisely the reasons stated herein) and my other remaining teammate, a long term employee, is actively seeking employment elsewhere.

Please don't take this lightly. It seems apparent to me that the author has been with USAA for a long time and the content suggests they have access to senior management level reports.

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Post ID: @3ved+1nRPf6FC

I hope the BOD get the message and hopefully Wayne will take the criticism and take the "Right" actions. I have defiantly seen that there is a LOT of new external management and they really do treat working at USAA like any other company and not a company that is owned by its members and most importantly they should be focused on our members and adjusting to their feedback.

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Post ID: @3ymg+1nRPf6FC

The best way to make contact with the individual board members is to look at their biographies/profiles and find out what other boards they belong to. Or maybe they’re the managing director of a non-profit. It’s to those institutions that your letters should be sent. They’ll be sure to receive them. Also, if you write “personal” on the front of the envelope, it’s very likely they will open the envelopes themselves vs. their assistant opening it.

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Post ID: @3dfn+1nRPf6FC

Wow…I have only been with USAA for less than a year and I agree with everything stated. When I initially started I was mind blown coming from an uplifting exciting employee and member focused intense 3 day onboarding…to fast forward a few weeks later meeting the recent executive leader for my team (who at that point had only started with USAA less than a year prior) with the exact opposite outlook and focus of the mission of USAA. The focus of the executive is more around managing up and profitability. Followed by the executive letting go almost the entire team with no backup or reasoning for this huge displacement of employees. I thought coming to USAA it was a lifetime career move but the toxicity and bad culture is awful and is not a healthy working environment.

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Post ID: @3fxw+1nRPf6FC

@2bqd+1nRPf6FC re: "Ghosts..."

A chunk of those views are just me, obsessively checking back for any juicy updates. Sorry for artificially inflating the data, lol. But, agreed - like/comment/text your pals. 👍

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Post ID: @3mzb+1nRPf6FC

@2bqd+1nRPf6FC OP here. I sent this to the BoD already since it was written to them, but I wouldn’t be opposed to someone sending it to local news. I don’t think it’d go anywhere so I don’t want to do it myself. But hey, if you think it’s worth it, go for it.

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Post ID: @3kae+1nRPf6FC

Ghosts: make sure you like this post. It has almost 4000 views and only 100 likes. I know there are more of you out there! Likes = visibility, traction, maybe even a news article.

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Post ID: @2bqd+1nRPf6FC

Couldn’t have been said any better. I am both a member and employee as well as a recent total loss claimant. The experience as a total loss claimant could t have been worse. I expected more especially from a company I’ve worked for for more then 25 yrs and up until these recent years very proud to say I work for USAA . Now when I say I work for USAA providers cringe and say how much trouble they have had. So sad. It’s time to right the ship. I wonder if the board even cares any more?

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Post ID: @2zhp+1nRPf6FC

Unfortunately this is way too true. USAA should scale back and focus on what we do best take care of the military and their families. I’ve been saying for years- yes years that our service should be our selling point. Our bank products specifically need to align with industry standards that was an ask from the OCC. Fine, then our service should stand out from all others. Service is what we should be selling- it’s been our backbone. Members always knew they could call for anything. 9/11 our members called us because they couldn’t get through to family— now those same MSRs would be coached for being on the phone too long. We’ve lost our mojo for all the same reasons that have been enumerated above.

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Post ID: @2xpw+1nRPf6FC

Thank you for making the effort... I've been assuming the board is either complacent or complicit... guess we'll see!

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Post ID: @2wfd+1nRPf6FC

Also OP again. It's completely possible that the BoD's emails won't allow the email to come through for any number of reasons. I didn't get an undeliverable error, so I'm optimistic, but unless one of them replies, I won't know for certain that they've received it.

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Post ID: @1njl+1nRPf6FC

@1vkb+1nRPf6FC OP here. For obvious reasons I won't reveal my identity, but I can confirm that I have sent this to the BoD, with some modifications from the original. Changes in bold.

[…]

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. I fear that they are "controlling the narrative" in such a way that what gets reported to the top is a far cry from the ground truth; they are engineering the optics of what the Board sees to save face. Worse, I fear that the CEO and his recently-hired executives are permanently and irreparably eroding USAA’s culture by 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.  

[…]

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. **Employees see no hope for improvement on the horizon. Rumors both internally and externally are that USAA will continue to lay off employees with no apparent rhyme or reason for the foreseeable future. The silence from senior leadership is deafening. **

   

[…]

These concerns go beyond the employee experience. Though important, the employee experience must ultimately take a backseat to the member experience in a scenario where the two are at odds. The problem at hand is that employees who are afraid to speak up, who are stressed about their job security, who are uncertain about their company’s future, and who are in low spirits over long periods of time cannot do their best work. This results in a domino effect that directly impacts the member experience. Not too long ago, I witnessed an employee bawling in her car. I stopped to ask what was wrong, and she cried that she can’t handle the workload and that she wants to quit but can’t because she has young children to care for. That same employee later went in and served as the face of USAA for dozens of members that day. This should never happen at USAA.

 

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. A company can only rest on its laurels for so long before it begins to collapse into irrelevancy. For USAA, that collapse has begun. But it's not too late to save. USAA needs leaders who will innovate for members, who will revitalize employee morale, and who will restore USAA to its rightful place as the provider of choice for the military community and their families. 

While there is still a company to save, while there is still a culture to salvage, I implore you to intervene on behalf of members and employees.

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Post ID: @1yao+1nRPf6FC

I'd like to know who wrote this and if it was a legitimate letter that was delivered to the BOD or if is just a post here that they may never see.

Employee sentiment is way below 46%. In May it fell eSAT fell into the 20s and eNPS was NEGATIVE. There was very slight increase in June. I left before July metrics came out.

On my last day at USAA I sent an similar email to Wayne about his legacy as CEO. You can only address a narcissist by making him the subject of the conversation... I didn't know how to reach the BOD directly although I submitted an anonymous ethics complaint about Wayne. I've been waiting for some of this to be made more public.

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Post ID: @1vkb+1nRPf6FC

The news isn’t going to pick this up bc while it is very irksome, the same thing is playing out everywhere else. Layoffs, RTO, systems behind, no org structure makes anything clearer or simpler. The pace of change is fast, and leaders don’t have anything left in their bag of tricks. Standing still isn’t an option, they don’t have any new ideas, and so they go back to what worked in the past. It reminds me of the episode of The Office where Dwight tried to outsell the website.

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Post ID: @1qrx+1nRPf6FC

@rft+1nRPf6FC ROLF made my day.

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Post ID: @1wfw+1nRPf6FC

No way is any news channel covering this... they get so much advertising cash from USAA.

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Post ID: @1jrg+1nRPf6FC

I was at a big bank before usaa and came to usaa and it was amazing. The culture and everything was great because the bank that I was at before was more toxic than here! If I think it’s great now, I can’t imagine it in its glory days. It’s toxic, but I’m so numb to what goes on at BofA and wells that I’m so used to how bad companies are run.

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Post ID: @cag+1nRPf6FC

Thank you to both the OP and the EMG for your thoughtful posts. My hope is Fox News catches wind of this open letter and publishes it broadly... not because I watch Fox, but because it's the station that always seems to be featured on the TVs at the office. A breaking story about a crumbling culture blasting throughout the break rooms would be the finest poetic justice. 🔥

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Post ID: @ref+1nRPf6FC

@rft+1nRPf6FC Bro are you tryna seance Winston Churchill or something?

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Post ID: @yot+1nRPf6FC

With a heavy heart and a resolute pen, I find myself compelled to address the disheartening state of affairs within this company. It is with great dismay that I witness our culture succumbing to the insatiable appetite for success above all else. We must redirect our minds and hearts towards a more noble pursuit—a quest for significance.

For the better part of a century, this esteemed company has been dedicated to bestowing tranquility upon the hearts and minds of veterans and their families. Yet, I am disheartened to observe the current course that sees us engage in ruthless competition with those who neither share our interests nor uphold our values. We have regrettably lost sight of our mission and our principles, substituting them for the allure of immediate gains and financial prosperity. Let us be reminded that true value does not reside within these fleeting pursuits, but rather in the profound connections we establish with the military community and their families.

The pursuit of significance beckons us to reevaluate our priorities and realign our actions with our noble purpose. It demands that we transcend the superficial pursuit of profit and material gain, and instead focus on the lasting impact we can make on the lives of those who have sacrificed so much for our nation. We must guard against the allure of short-term gains and refocus our energies on the long-term welfare of those we have pledged to serve.

Let us rekindle the flame of our original mission, reigniting our commitment to peace of mind for veterans and their families. We must eschew the path of empty competition and rediscover the true essence of our values. Our strength lies not in the pursuit of the next asset or the next dollar, but in the strength of the connections we forge and the unwavering support we provide to those who have borne the burdens of conflict.

In this critical juncture, let us summon our collective resolve and recommit ourselves to the pursuit of significance. By doing so, we shall honor the legacy of this company, restore our sense of purpose, and safeguard the well-being of those who have valiantly served our nation.

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Post ID: @rft+1nRPf6FC

Great posting above. Developing toxic traits to survive really resonates with me. That's probably been the hardest thing, because even if you're only at work 40-50 hours, that survival mentality pollutes all your waking hours.

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Post ID: @iee+1nRPf6FC

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