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"Let's work hard so we can get that gift card." "Unless somebody is going to open a new account that will have higher fees, we really don’t care about helping them because Wells Fargo is all about sales and fees," the cartoon Wells Fargo branch worker says.
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It's impossible to say how much satire and exaggeration is involved in these videos, or even whether the people who posted them are actual current or former Wells Fargo employees, but the culture depicted by them is eerily similar to how the bank has been portrayed in news reports since the scandal broke.įor example, a video uploaded in 2010 titled " Wells Fargo Jump Into January 2011 Morning Huddle" features a manager discussing the many "solutions" employees were expected to sell, how their jobs were at risk if they failed and how branch workers would be rewarded with $5 gift cards to McDonald's while executives received cash bonuses of tens of thousands of dollars.
#Psst sound free
Using the free robot-voice animation web site, YouTube posters with pseudonyms such as wellsfargoisabadbank, WellsFargoIsHell and Wachovianatheart posted cartoons with unflattering depictions of the bank's managers and its handling of customers. If you wanted to get a good outline of the high-pressure sales culture cited as the impetus for the fake-account scandal at Wells Fargo, it's been hiding in plain sight on the Internet for several years - not in the news, however, but rather in computer-animation videos posted on YouTube.