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Citigroup Plans To Slash IT Contractors, Hire Staff To Improve Controls (reuters.com) 23

An anonymous reader shares a report: Citigroup plans to dramatically reduce its reliance on IT contractors and hire thousands of employees for IT as the lender grapples with regulatory punishments over data governance and deficient controls. Citigroup's head of technology Tim Ryan told staff in recent weeks that the bank aims to cut back external contractors to 20% of those working in IT from the current 50%, according to an internal presentation to employees seen by Reuters.

The briefing did not give a precise time horizon for the changes. As part of the overhaul, Citi will replenish the ranks by hiring more staff, and aims to have 50,000 employees in technology, up from 48,000 in 2024, the presentation showed. "Citi is growing our internal technology capabilities to support our strategy to improve safety and soundness, enable revenue growth and drive efficiencies," Citi said in a statement to Reuters.

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Citigroup Plans To Slash IT Contractors, Hire Staff To Improve Controls

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  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Thursday March 13, 2025 @05:39PM (#65231341) Journal

    They did the needful thing.

    • They did the needful.

      FTFY

    • Issuing a press release to sucker investors? They did it, all right.

      But the story says they "plan" to do this thing, so they haven't actually done anything yet, and they haven't even announced a schedule.

  • by jrnvk ( 4197967 ) on Thursday March 13, 2025 @05:50PM (#65231369)

    Hopefully others follow

  • and how many will move from contractor to in house doing the same job they are doing now?

    • Maybe they can even innovate and employ in-house contractors. Aim for the sky and put your employees in the cloud.
      • by Rinnon ( 1474161 ) on Thursday March 13, 2025 @06:29PM (#65231493)

        Maybe they can even innovate and employ in-house contractors. Aim for the sky and put your employees in the cloud.

        Damnit, it's only just this moment that I've realized it: "Work from Home" suffered from poor branding. Workers should have been selling it as huge savings for the company by "putting your employees in the cloud"!

        • Work from Home" suffered from poor branding. Workers should have been selling it as huge savings for the company by "putting your employees in the cloud"!

          ahh, the magic of marketing!

        • "putting your employees in the cloud"

          Labor as a Service

      • Consultants on "rolling contracts" is a common way to artificially boost average revenue per employee (ARPE). They're effectively employees requiring four weeks' notice by the company or consultant to terminate the contract, but pay is based on number of days worked (no holiday pay) and the rate per day is higher than salaried employees.

    • and how many will move from contractor to in house doing the same job they are doing now?

      That's fine and Citi will then have more direct and immediate control over them than they did when they were contractors.

  • My gosh (Score:2, Redundant)

    by abulafia ( 7826 )
    It is almost like large businesses have complex IT environments and benefit from people who understand them. Who could have guessed that systems with hundreds of thousands (or more) of controls, complex performance characteristics and the inevitable bugs can't be outsourced like a backed up toilet?
    • To be fair, you'd likely have similar issues in plumbing if every toilet and pipe install was completely bespoke. Plumbing contractors aren't going to be able to deal with something like a medieval castle's plumbing.

  • Software liability (corporate) would be good for domestic careers (corporate).

    It might be an overall bad idea but on this narrow aspect they'd stop outsourcing to lowest-bidders in overseas sweatshops.

  • I have always worked with small companies (25-200 employees) so huge companies with thousands of employees are something I cannot reference, but I never understood how ANY company can justify farming out all the support for their critical infrastructure to a for-profit outsource. I understand the concept of indemnifying themselves in the event of catastrophe and having someone to sue, but is that really the on the top of the list?

    In my experience, decent IT staff can look out for a company's best intere
    • Having worked in a few financial organisations, it's possible that many of the 50% are individuals working for themselves, rather than an outsourced company providing multiple staff.

      The benefit for the individual contractor is a decent daily rate (versus being permie) and not having to worry (too much) about the corporate nonsense that goes with any large organisation. The benefit for the company is the downsides for the individual: no severance, short notice to cancel contract, no holiday pay, no training,

    • If your organization is not a tech organization, it is quite likely you could build an in house team that is generally incompetent. And you won't have any way to know how to fix the problem.

      Instead of putting $X millions into building an in house team (which may be money pissed into the sink), you go to a team that's already built, already has the organization needed, already knows how to deliver, etc.

      You also avoid any sort of corporate politics around building the team. It's just numbers: $ out vs solutio

  • If your management (executives) thought it was a great idea to outsource half of its core work, that management is not doing so in a vacuum. Those executives are tasked by the board and higher-ups, to cut costs, at any cost. They keep their jobs by doing what they are told. Now they are blaming outsourcing for their incompetence. Yeah, outsourcing doesn't help, but I'm betting that the incompetence goes way deeper than the external contractors.

  • These staff are actually going to be hired in India, IBM's largest workforce is in India
  • I used to work in NYC Finance and Chase did the same exact thing about 2-decades ago because they found the exact same problems with the cheaper outsourced consultants and contractors.

    They even went full retard and actually did out-source almost all of their employees for a few years only to have to back-source and bring them back in-house as employees again after they suffered from some major project failures and outages. Of course those people who got sling-shotted lost their seniority and work time towa

  • From 50%->20% to 48K to 50K... how does that even work I don't get it.

Them as has, gets.

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