Strong purpose-driven culture but increasing pressure on employees - Manager Truist Employee Review

1.0
23 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Truist has a strong purpose-driven culture centered around helping build better lives and communities. The company offers competitive compensation, solid benefits, retirement plans, paid time off, and employee development opportunities. Leadership experience can vary significantly depending on your direct manager, but strong managers can make the organization a rewarding place to work and grow professionally.

Cons

The biggest challenge is the increasing pressure placed on frontline employees and branch teams. Leadership has publicly emphasized the importance of attracting new client money and deposit growth, but many employees feel that the goals associated with these initiatives are becoming increasingly aggressive and, at times, disconnected from local market realities. Compensation and incentive structures have also become a source of frustration. Changes to performance metrics and bonus calculations have reduced employees’ confidence in their ability to earn incentives based on their own branch performance. It is discouraging when teams exceed expectations locally but remain dependent on broader area or market results to receive their full payout. Mid-year changes to goals and performance measurements create additional uncertainty and make it difficult for employees to plan and stay motivated. Work-life balance is another concern. While Truist promotes wellness resources, health coaching, and employee well-being initiatives, many branch employees continue to experience significant stress from constant performance pressure, staffing shortages, and extended work schedules. Some employees regularly work six-day weeks for extended periods, making it difficult to maintain a healthy balance between professional and personal responsibilities. The company frequently seeks employee feedback through surveys and engagement initiatives, which is appreciated. However, many employees feel the feedback process is overly structured, limiting opportunities to provide meaningful input or detailed concerns. As a result, employees may question whether candid feedback truly influences decision-making. Truist remains a company with many strengths, but greater stability in goal-setting, a more transparent incentive structure, stronger staffing support, and increased attention to employee workload would go a long way toward improving morale, retention, and overall employee satisfaction.

Explore other reviews about Truist

5.0
9 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great environment Management willing to help

Cons

Work is mundane and it’s slow

4.0
23 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great benefits and pay with very good training programs, lots of opportunities for growth

Cons

The culture struggles to figure itself out after the big merger. Lots of senior employees were bitter about younger/new hires getting paid well. Lots of dealing with hierarchal mindsets that get in the way of the actual work.

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