Alice Tecotzky

Wells Fargo’s head of AI shares his playbook for staying in demand as banks weigh what the tech means for head count

Saul Van Beurden is the man helping Wells Fargo confront a question hanging over banks of every size: What happens to jobs in the age of AI?

He and his central team can’t, and shouldn’t, figure out what an AI-ready Wells Fargo looks like alone. The bank must teach employees skills to stay competitive in a changing industry, and they must choose to learn them, Van Beurden said.

“You cannot deny things,” Van Beurden, who is the head of AI and the co-CEO of consumer banking and lending, told Business Insider. “But how do you make it a thing where everybody has a role to play and takes their own accountability and responsibility?”

The bank is leaning on AI literacy programs and demos, among other things, to hopefully inspire “grassroots enthusiasm.” The goal is to make employees comfortable enough with the technology that they can be redeployed if their jobs change, or competitive in the job market if they leave Wells Fargo, he said. Wells Fargo doesn’t mandate AI usage, even as it bets the technology will help supercharge its growth following the Federal Reserve’s decision to lift a $1.95 trillion asset cap.

Van Beurden thinks that fluency starts outside the office. He’s trying to build an agent to help pull documents for his 2026 tax returns, and believes it’s crucial for employees to use AI in their personal lives, too.

“It’s really important to have that personal usage, to understand the power of what it can do. And then we are enabling that and allowing that to happen at the workplace,” he said.

Still, Van Beurden emphasized that everyone needs to “stay cognitive,” since AI could generate all of our ideas if we let it. He suspects that most college students are comfortable with technology but should invest time in activities like reading or playing chess. Staying sharp, he thinks, will help them in what’s broadly a brutal job market.

Wells’ workforce, like many of its competitors, is already changing because of AI. The bank’s CEO, Charlie Scharf, said in November that it will probably “have less head count as we look forward,” and added in December that generative AI has already made engineers up to 35% more productive.

Van Beurden didn’t say whether the bank would need 30% fewer engineers as a result or whether it would necessarily alter hiring, leaving it at, “it’s a great question.” Instead, he said that growth and head count aren’t always one-to-one.

“How great is it to grow without the need to hire people, because you have created the capacity to take on more clients, to take on more customers with the same amount of people?” he said, calling AI the “ideal tool” for that growth. Wells Fargo recorded $21.3 billion in revenue in the fourth quarter, up 4% year over year; revenue in its consumer bank, which Van Beurden oversees, rose 7% year over year.

The leaders of other big banks have also said that AI will likely eliminate some jobs and slow hiring, both publicly and in internal memos. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon has said his bank has “huge redeployment plans.”

Efficiency promises and big technology budgets aside, the head count cuts haven’t yet materialized at most banks. Around 60% of 240 financial services CEOs surveyed by EY said they expect AI investments to maintain or boost their head count this year.




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JPMorgan says office renovations are coming to accommodate the bank’s ballooning workforce

JPMorgan says it’s going to do something about its desk problem.

America’s biggest bank, which called its roughly 320,000-person-strong global workforce back to the office five days a week last year, has previously experienced internal tensions over desk availability and parking at some sites, like its major tech campus in Columbus, Ohio.

Now, the firm says it will tackle its office woes head-on.

“If you think about what’s happened to the head count of the company over, say, the last five or six years, it’s grown a lot,” Jeremy Barnum, the firm’s chief financial officer, told shareholders during the bank’s Tuesday earnings call.

“There was the whole return to the office, hot desking, remote work, all the stuff,” he added. “The amount of real estate square footage over that period grew a lot more slowly than headcount.”

But the lack of ample space didn’t deter the company from pushing ahead with its full-time office mandate.

“We’ve realized that it’s obviously the case that we need to provide employees a reasonable in-office experience and that, in some cases, means a little bit of de-densification and catching up on some space renovations around the world,” Barnum continued.


Jamie Dimon stands alongside New York Governor Kathy Hochul and others as he cuts a ribbon to mark the opening of the new JPMorgan Chase global headquarters at 270 Park Avenue.

Jamie Dimon cut the ribbon to mark the opening of JPMorgan’s new global headquarters at 270 Park Avenue on Tuesday.

TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images



On the call, CEO Jamie Dimon chimed in.

“Don’t scare them,” he told Barnum, presumably about alarming analysts about rising spending. “Real estate,” Dimon said, “is very small numbers.”

The firm has already opened a new state-of-the-art headquarters at 270 Park Avenue in Manhattan — a cutting-edge skyscraper featuring a bevy of restaurants, a luxurious fitness center, and tech that even remembers how you like the temperature when you reserve a conference room.

The bank’s five-day-per-week return-to-office policy proved a heated flashpoint last year, with Dimon famously telling some of the 12,000 staffers at the Columbus site that he suspected remote workers were texting one another during meetings and not completing tasks.

Last spring, a JPMorgan spokesperson told Business Insider that the firm was “working hard to ensure our sites have the capacity and amenities employees need to return full-time.”




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