Workforce management
Workforce management
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Todd Sheffield has announced his intention to step down from the Santa Rosa, Calif.-based institution, which he has led since 2003.
November 9 -
John Lewis, who is currently general counsel for the New York-based credit union, will take over for CEO William Predmore, who is retiring at the end of the year.
November 9 -
Many employees, particularly women, are likely to become unexpected caregivers at some point. Companies should do more to ease their burden, says a top retirement and wealth specialist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.
November 9 -
Opening a bank or investment account — or even securing employment in a racism-free workplace — is out of reach for many Black Americans.
November 9 -
Vendors such as eFinancialCareers, Paradox and pymetrics work with banks to assess job applicants based on their skills and not other factors. But the technology has its limits.
November 6 -
Banks must address the societal issues that resonate deeply with their customers and communities, says Regions Financial chief John Turner.
November 6 -
The region now leads the nation in virus cases, and with winter lurking the fear is that the outbreak will only get worse.
November 5 -
“The asset management industry in particular has found it is quite productive to work from home,” says Mary Erdoes, who runs asset and wealth management at JPMorgan Chase.
November 5 -
While many companies and organizations try, diversity and inclusion efforts within the financial services have generally failed. What needs to be done in order to succeed? Join us for a panel discussion featuring guests from the Access Denied: Systemic Racism in Financial Services podcast.
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Women suing Goldman Sachs Group for gender discrimination are going after any internal documents with words like “babe,” “bimbo” or worse that they say would show bias by executives who administered the bank’s promotion and evaluation policies.
November 3