Pros
If you love sales and pressuring people into products they don't want or need this is the job for you.
Cons
Constant pressure, insults if you want to ask your coworker about their weekend because you aren't pushing sales. There are zero ways to move up in the company unless you know the manager at a higher position.
Pros
I started at Hancock Whitney 15 years ago as a teller and have progressed to a Commercial Banker. Throughout my career, the bank has supported me through graduate school, GSBLSU, leadership programs, Louisiana Bankers Association courses, and other professional development opportunities. Hancock Whitney encourages associates to be involved in their communities through volunteer efforts, professional organizations, and local events. Internally, Associate Resource Groups provide opportunities to connect with associates across the company. My experience has been supportive teams, opportunities for growth, and a culture that encourages both professional development and community involvement. Nearly 15 years later, I'm still here, which probably says more than anything else I could write in this review.
Cons
Like many large organizations, decisions and changes can sometimes take time to work through multiple levels of the company.
Pros
There are capable employees across the organization who genuinely want to improve how the bank operates. Many people are committed, hardworking, and willing to lead meaningful change if given the opportunity and support.
Cons
Hiring and promotion practices remain outdated and repetitive. The same types of people are continuously hired and promoted, reinforcing the same broken processes, groupthink, and internal politics. Internal promotions are especially discouraging, as advancement often favors familiarity over capability. Real talent is overlooked. Don't feel very inclusive here. You just exist to do a lot of busywork. There are employees who are fully capable of leading transformation, but executives and management appear disconnected from reality and blind to real opportunities. HR lacks strategic direction and does not seem equipped to support modern talent needs. This new quarterly performance review is unrealistic when you don't have growth goals that are supported. The organization continues to rely on a 30 to 40 year banking mindset in a rapidly evolving industry. Compared to peers, the bank is already behind and falling further back. Back office teams are under resourced and understaffed, leading to performative work, constant busywork, and little real impact. Changes are poorly communicated and often feel improvised, which creates frustration, confusion, and unnecessary stress.
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