Good but going down hill - Teller WesBanco Employee Review

1.0
Jan 23, 2019
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

you get to build customer relations, learn a lot and meet a lot of people.

Cons

They do not respect their seasoned employees. I have been working with them for 5 years, step in for the supervisor when she's out of office and perform the responsibilities of that job. I also meet my goals. They have hired three new hires and all three haven't had any banking experience and they all three made more than I and my fellow co-workers who have also been with the bank a while. And I'm not talking a few cents more, I'm talking dollar amounts more. They'll ask you to do other jobs and not fairly pay you for them and then give newbies more than you. And it's a very consistent situation. It's no wonder there is so much turn over.

Explore other reviews about WesBanco

5.0
Feb 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Great Benefits and amazing customer service

Cons

The soft ranges need to be adjusted between markets

1.0
Feb 15, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Benefit and PTO and the hours

Cons

Working for WesBanco was once a positive and rewarding experience, but under the current management structure, morale has significantly declined. There is a clear disconnect between leadership and the day-to-day realities of how the system operates and how work actually gets done. Decisions are being made by individuals who do not appear to fully understand workflow, staffing limitations, or operational demands. There is also a concerning double standard in expectations. Management is permitted extended lunches outside the office, while frontline employees are required to remain on site sometimes without a proper lunch break because we are running on a skeleton crew. Employees are expected to continuously cover operations without adequate relief, which is both unsustainable and unfair. The burden consistently falls on the same employees who show up every day, keep the office functioning, and meet customer needs despite staffing shortages. These employees deserve leadership support, fair treatment, and adequate coverage—not burnout. If WesBanco wants to retain dedicated staff and maintain performance standards, leadership must address staffing gaps, enforce consistent expectations across all levels, and demonstrate accountability. Without meaningful change, morale and retention will continue to suffer.

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