The Extreme Red Flag For Wells Fargo Onboarding Its New CEO Charles Scharf

Charles Scharf is not moving to San Francisco from New York for his new job as CEO of Wells Fargo. It’s one of the red flags that should make anyone question a new employee’s commment. Expect new employees to say they are committed. Be grateful when they demonstrate that commitment. Believe it when it is a part of who they really are. And mitigate those risks appropriately.

Say – Interviews, negotiations, onboarding

Expect candidates for jobs to say they are committed during interviews. If you ask them and they blink or can’t back it up during your follow up questions, make them go away. And do make your first interview question, “Why would you want this job?” You’ll learn a lot.

What they say while negotiating a job offer will tell you more about their commitment. The point here is not whether or not they negotiate, but what they negotiate and how. What they say then will give you hints about their professional, financial and personal commitment per below.

Then, what they say before and during their start will tell you even more about their real motivation and commitment.

Do – Professional, financial and personal actions

The match or mis-match between new employees’ words and actions generally will reveal the truth about their professional, financial and personal commitment.

Professional Commitment

To understand their professional commitment, look at how they spend their time. This will range from those investing the bare minimum of time acceptable, waiting until day one to start anything and taking all the time off to which they are entitled to those doing the opposite: jumping in even before day one and then working longer and harder than others.

A second window into professional commitment is the optionality new employees keep. There’s a huge difference between the employee that burns all their other bridges before starting, and those that keep one or more board seats or consulting assignments they already had, to the person that shows up at an onboarding prep session 10-days before they start their new job and says,

“If I’d read more ahead of time, I never would have taken this job. It’s OK though, I just bought a franchise so I have my exit plan.”

Financial Commitment

What new leaders negotiate for and then actually focus on highlights their financial commitment. Those focused more on short-term salary are different from those focused on mid-term performance bonuses and from those focused on long-term incentives or equity. Many Private Equity firms expect CEOs of their portfolio companies to invest material amounts of their own personal net worth into the portfolio company. Like the bacon and eggs fable, they value committed pigs over involved chickens.

Personal Commitment

This is Wells Fargo’s red flag. People staying in hotels or temporary quarters are demonstrating different levels of commitment from those renting their own places, and different levels from those buying their own places, selling their other residences and bringing their spouses, children and potbellied pigs with them.

Be – Underlying happiness drivers

Happiness is good. Actually, it’s three goods: doing good for others, things they’re good at, and good for themselves.

The test is whether the fundamental drivers of the role match the leader’s underlying happiness drivers.

Those who care most about doing good for me should be in roles where they can maximize their own recognition and reward.

Those who care most about doing things they are good at, whether it’s artistic, scientific, or interpersonal should be in roles that optimize that.

Those who care most about doing good for others should be in roles that allow them to do good for the others they most care about.

The closer the actual matches, the higher the commitment will be.

Click here for a list of my Forbes articles and a summary of my book on executive onboarding: The New Leader’s 100-Day Action Plan.

Read More Articles

Confident executive standing on a modern stage, delivering a presentation
Act Like You’re Already Successful to Jump-Start Success

Success doesn’t start when you “make it.” It starts when you behave like you already have. The best leaders - whether they are taking on a new CEO role, launching…

Read Article
Picture of the Allies Normandy World War II amphibious assault D‑Day
Why Leaders Get the Followers and Decisions They Deserve

Leaders don’t simply get the followers they deserve; they get the decisions they design for. When leaders understand the different ways people create value - artistically, scientifically, and interpersonally -…

Read Article
Primegenesis Operational Leadership
The Underappreciated Power of Operational Leadership

Operational leadership is the undervalued fulcrum between theory and reality. It is where strategy stops living in slide decks, where culture becomes observable behavior, and where tactics gain the coherence…

Read Article
NBA Champions game
The Stockdale Paradox: Preparing Your Leadership Team for Adversity

Down 29 points in the third quarter of Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals, the New York Knicks did something that had never been done in Finals history. With…

Read Article
Building Accountability in High-Performing Teams: From Slogan to Commitment

Turning empowerment from a slogan into a mutual agreement and engagement from an attitude into observable commitment  Almost every leader says they want empowered people. Almost every employee says they…

Read Article
Clear road
What To Do When Others Don’t Do What They Said They Would Do

One of the most predictable realities is that not everyone does what they said they are going to do - and even fewer do it when they said they would…

Read Article