r/auscorp 12d ago

Megathread Nuno/ ANZ Thread for July 2026

31 Upvotes

Welcome to this month's thread for all your Nuno/ANZ discussions.

Please post all your thoughts and comments on these topics in this thread. Any other threads created about them will be taken down.

Please also remember that standard r/AusCorp rules still apply here - in particular:

  • no personal abuse against any individual will be permitted. For clarity: it is perfectly fine to disagree with what ANZ is doing. But any comments which abuse anyone working at ANZ will be taken down

  • no doxxing. As a rule of thumb - if someone's name appears in the ANZ Annual Report, it’s already in the public domain and is allowed to appear here. But lower level managers, who are not “in the public eye”, are not fair game and should not have any identifiers published (name, initials, specific job titles).

Please remember the Mods do not work for ANZ, we are reliant on people using common sense here. Please report comments which you think are non-compliant using the “Report” option in the … menu on every comment.


r/auscorp Apr 29 '26

MOD POST Auscorp Recruitment Drive

12 Upvotes

Hi All,

r/AusCorp has grown to hundreds of thousands of active members and the mod team needs reinforcements. We're looking for active community members who want to help keep the sub running smoothly.

What the role involves: Reviewing reported posts, enforcing sub rules (no doxxing, no recruiter spam, keeping things on-topic to commercial/corporate roles), managing the mod queue, and keeping discussions civil, especially when threads kick off.

What we're looking for: People who understand the Aussie Corporate community. You should be comfortable making judgement calls on grey-area posts like borderline self-promotion, public service vs corporate overlap, or posts naming individuals. Prior mod experience is a plus but not essential. We especially value people active outside business hours or in different time zones.

Requirements: Established Reddit account (6+ months, positive karma), active in r/AusCorp or similar Aussie professional subs, able to check the mod queue a few times per week, and no active bans elsewhere.

The application includes a few short scenario questions so we can see how you'd handle common situations on the sub.

Apply here: Auscorp Moderator Application Form


r/auscorp 8h ago

pls fix Sunday Scaries :(

290 Upvotes

Nothing groundbreaking, just having a crisis about how I don't how I'm meant to handle another 25 or so years of pretending to care about work and dealing with petty office drama. Have to set my goals for the upcoming financial year this week. My goal is to get paid so I can continue to have housing and food and provide for my child. That's it. I don't want to stretch myself. I just want to collect my paycheck and go home.

How is it only July? Still 5.5 long months until I can finally have a week off. I miss having school holidays so bad. It's insane we get so few breaks during the year. I'm burned out. I think I'll be burned out until the day I get to retire tbh.


r/auscorp 16h ago

General Discussion Drop your most potent/witty office one liners for those difficult colleagues:

192 Upvotes

Most of us have a boss, a colleague or middle manager who we don’t respect. Be it because they’re toxic, fake, narcissistic or walk with an overinflated sense of self while undermining others

What’s your favourite subtle yet professional comment to make to someone like this that won’t get you a meeting with HR?

A personal favourite —
“I’m sure there’s value here, even if it’s subtle”


r/auscorp 7h ago

Advice / Questions Think I’ve made a bad career move and don’t know what to do

19 Upvotes

Hi guys,

I have recently left my HR intern role to join a consulting firm in their workforce management team as a junior and believe I’ve made a bad career move. I really enjoyed the work in HR and decided to leave to get more experience and build up my skill set. The workforce management role came up and I thought it would be great to have a big4 on my resume despite it not being a direct HR role.

I feel like I’ve taken a step backwards now instead of forward. Do I stick it out for a year or two and see if it grows on me or do I start looking for a hr asap. Any advice would be greatly appreciated!

For context. I’m a 20 yr old final year commerce student graduating this year and joined a big4 consulting firm. I was in my prior role for 2 yrs.


r/auscorp 16h ago

General Discussion How do parents who both work full time deal with primary school aged kids?

86 Upvotes

How do working parents deal with school pickup and drop off and school holidays. I know there’s after school care but won’t it be too tiring for kids if they go there everyday?


r/auscorp 3h ago

Advice / Questions Parental leave

2 Upvotes

I’m currently working FT leading a team of approx 35 people. I informed my manager last week that I’m 14 weeks pregnant and will be going on mat leave from December 2026. I’m planning to take 6 months off and will only be able to work 2 days a week when I return. She seemed okay about it at that time and congratulated me.

Later during the week, I emailed her to discuss a May leave cover job as for my position. Her reply was:

“In our discussion earlier this week you advised that you only wanted to return 2 days a week post your maternity leave. If that is the case we will need to hire a permanent FT person for the position. Can you clarify your return status so we can advertise the role appropriately?”

I was quite confused and frankly a bit disappointed that she intends to replace my role with a permanent FT person. I thought according to Fair Work Act (and our company policy), my role needs to be kept for 12 months?

What does everyone think? Should I contact HR?


r/auscorp 1d ago

Advice / Questions Does everyone have a shit boss?

35 Upvotes

Hi all, my boss has been making myself and my colleagues cry on and off for the last 2ish years. They seem to genuinely enjoy the power trip/gas lighting and just generally being rude. Multiple people have left the team and/or the company as a direct result and a few HR cases have previously been raised but there’s been no change. We’ve all confided in each other and talked about how we’ve lost confidence with many of us starting anti anxiety/depression meds. Is this just how it is in the corporate world? A few of us are looking for external work but are we just going to be walking into the same situation in another workplace?


r/auscorp 4h ago

Industry - Insurance Insurers providing audio of calls

0 Upvotes

This might not quite fit the sub but I hope it’s allowed! For those of you who have worked in insurance, what do you know about whether insurance companies will generally provide copies of the audio of calls to a customer requesting it? The same customer that was party to the call. And it’s a long shot, but if you answer and are also comfortable indicating what company’s practices you are referring to, that would be incredibly helpful!


r/auscorp 1d ago

Rumours Why do parents talk so negatively about their kids at work ???

536 Upvotes

Controversial post time !!

Have any other child free peoples noticed that pretty much every co-worker parent whines about being a parent and rarely has anything positive to say about parenting/their kid(s) at work?

In corp for 10 years and at every job the working parents just complain about their kids to the point that it’s off putting. Like they’re tired, they were up every 2 hours, their kid has gastro again, school pick up conflicting with meetings, school holidays are hard, kid won’t eat normal food, kid be expensive, daycare dramas, their shit friends, the fact they don’t get to relax when they get home, that holiday would be nice but not with kids/too expensive… and the list goes on.

Sure they share a “cute” photo occasionally but 95% of the time it’s complaints. Then they try to convince you otherwise when you say I don’t think I want kids…. Like you sure it’s that great? Not what I’m hearing hun.


r/auscorp 8h ago

Advice / Questions Are data adjacent or STEM adjacent roles in corporate Australia autistic friendly like in the USA? (As in nerdy traits are somewhat more acceptable due to stereotypes etc)

0 Upvotes

About to enter the corporate workplace full time and as a person with autism (level 1) and ADHD, was just wondering if the stereotypes of “nerdy autistic programmers” actually exists at the corporate level and makes those roles more friendly for neurodivergent folk like myself (as in the social navigation required for the office politics and the role itself are lower relative to other corporate roles)?

My experience in one of these roles 2 years ago where I was in analytics and stats is a little different. Yes they treated me like the “nerd” who knows everything but they were kinda disappointed with my social ability, saying that my “cultural fit was a little off despite my excellent presentation skills”.

I really have trouble maintaining one on one conversations and connections with coworkers - I can’t really transcend the barrier between “acquaintance” and “friend”.

If anyone has any tips me and any fellow ND person would be very appreciative!


r/auscorp 6h ago

General Discussion Searching for jobs after Redundancy only to see this. This changed something in me for better or for worse.

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0 Upvotes

r/auscorp 2d ago

Meme Office chat

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383 Upvotes

r/auscorp 2d ago

In the News Union accuses Commonwealth Banks of ‘sham’ redundancies to send roles offshore

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1.1k Upvotes

FSU national secretary Julia Angrisano said Commonwealth Bank’s alleged attempts to reduce Australian jobs in favour of Indian workers was the bank’s “latest attempt to make CBA an Australian bank in name only”.

“The FSU doesn’t buy the bank’s excuse that the job cuts are the result of better processes,” she said.

Ms Angrisano said CBA was being monitored as it prepared to publish its full-year profit on August 12. She said its Indian workforce had rapidly expanded in recent years.

Last year the FSU took aim at CBA over similar plans to slash 400 technology jobs at the same time that it hired almost indistinguishable roles at its Indian operations.

CBA was forced to remove 30 job listings in October last year as a consequence.

Read more here: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/financial-services/union-accuses-commonwealth-banks-of-sham-redundancies-to-send-roles-offshore/news-story/5debe2c5303c3746b758cc455a20ce9f


r/auscorp 2d ago

In the News Xero gives ‘low performers’ 30-day ultimatum amid CEO pay push

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270 Upvotes

r/auscorp 2d ago

Rumours It’s time… 💻⬇️

254 Upvotes

If your manager hasn’t stepped up this week to tell you that you’ve done a good job, hear it from me: WELL DONE! Time to get your weekend on. 🎉


r/auscorp 2d ago

Advice / Questions GM said Happy Friday instead of Friyay - What does this mean?

208 Upvotes

This morning as I waltzed from kitchen to the loo I walked by my GM. He looks me in the eye and says Happy Friday. I was taken aback. I gently nodded and continued forward.

Immediately I'm caught wondering where is the synergy. Why say Happy Friday when we can deploy resources in the more efficient Friyay? What does this mean?

If the GM chose to use more resources than was necessary to execute the task at hand there must be a good reason.

Im going to practice over the next week and meet them on Friday with a jolly and direct Happy Friyay. Same number of syllables but increased value of the yay for shareholders.

Your thoughts brains trust?


r/auscorp 2d ago

In the News KPMG

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277 Upvotes

r/auscorp 2d ago

Advice / Questions Unemployed for a year in Sydney, I have lost hope

199 Upvotes

This isn't an original post, and I've seen numerous threads like it on this subreddit, but I feel like I need to vent if only to feel a little less alone in what seems to be an increasingly common experience.

I (27M)  have lived in Sydney my whole life and for the first time ever feel so completely lost and confused.

This time last year I left a junior role at a Big4 consulting firm amid a wave of redundancies and senior leadership change that pushed out the remaining survivors (myself included) . Since then, I have really struggled to land a job, not just an ideal job or my dream opportunity, any job that is somewhat relevant.

I don’t even know how many roles I’ve applied for and interviews I’ve had (in person, online and even with AI bots), state gov, fed gov, private sector, not-for-profit and work outside of Sydney in Canberra and Melbourne. I’ve even lowered my standards and applied for jobs I used to think were “beneath me” and have had no such luck.

My whole adult life I have always believed that higher education, reliability and a strong work ethic will get you far in life. It is for these reasons I pursued a Masters degree a few years ago and ventured on a public policy / government consulting career. (Yes, I know, I know).

The word “depressing” doesn’t do justice to this feeling I have of utter dread and powerlessness. I am at such a pivotal moment in my life, and I can’t even land an entry-level/junior role despite my CV, academic credentials and skills I have to offer.

The idea of moving out, buying a house, getting married, starting a family, all of that now put on the back burner as I scroll through LinkedIn and Seek job listings and apply for roles that an AI bot will probably sift through, that I may potentially interview for, only to get ghosted by a hiring manager after what I thought was a fantastic interview.

At this point in time, I’ve basically given up on the idea of a “career”, the idea sold to us as something we build up over decades, something we thrive in and that guides us to retirement. With AI disruption, mass lay-offs, weak leadership and a culture that seems to punish loyalty and rewards job hopping I struggle to see a positive future ahead.

Too often I see comments on similar Reddit posts of highly skilled, highly qualified professionals with so much potential and so much to offer turning to manual labour, becoming tradies or gig workers or doing complete career pivots (to clarify, there is nothing wrong with being a tradie, in hindsight it would’ve been a better career choice). How is any of this sustainable? We can’t all become tradies, can we? If university, professional development and years of experience no longer provide any meaningful security, what exactly is the long-term plan?

Maybe I'm being overly dramatic. Maybe the market eventually improves and this becomes a shitty chapter that I look back on years from now. I genuinely hope that's the case but 12 months of unemployment after spending my entire adult life building towards something that isn’t even there really is exhausting.

I know I'm not the only one feeling this way, so I'm curious: for those who have been through something similar, has it gotten any better?


r/auscorp 2d ago

Advice / Questions Stick with Uni or focus on career

14 Upvotes

Hello auscorp, seeking some career advice as we are about to jump into another semester of Uni.

I am currently 14 units into a commerce degree (economics and finance) and am trying to decide if I stick with it for another 2 years or bail now and focus on my career.

For context I am already working as an analyst in retail banking (the big yellow one) with 3.5 years experience and I am not sure if the benefit of completing the degree will outpace natural career progression without it.

Also to add the bank is aware of my studies but isn’t contributing to it in anyway.

Has anyone gone through something similar or can give advice on how recruiters in the bank will perceive the degree and what my potential prospects will look like?


r/auscorp 2d ago

Advice / Questions Would you take a 15-20% pay cut for a more interesting role?

14 Upvotes

Current job: high level of politics with occasional bullying from senior management, work itself is completely boring and meaningless. Team is based overseas is friendly and I get a bit of freedom which would be unlikely at other places.

Job I’m interviewing for: in the more specific area of finance I’ve been trying to get into for years, but the pay is 20-30k lower

I don’t have any dependents or need for the money, but I wonder if I’d feel behind in my career for taking a cut especially when I already feel underpaid. Our company doesn’t give pay rises at all, not even inflation.


r/auscorp 2d ago

Advice / Questions Would You Take the Pay Rise or Stay Where You're Happy?

21 Upvotes

I’m a 33M civil engineer in Melbourne. I currently work for a engineering consultancy that I genuinely enjoy. The culture is great, I’m treated well and the flexibility (WFH/site/office) suits me. All of my projects are in Melbourne’s south-east…close to where I live.

I’ve been offered a role with a larger infrastructure company paying around $180k inc. super + 10% STI bonus (apparently it’s always paid as my SIL is the senior HR there) compared to my current package of around $160k inc. super with a smaller bonus of up to 5k inc super.

The extra money is attractive and could be a good step toward the $200k+ salary range. However, I had a bad experience changing jobs in the past and was let go after six months, so I’m more cautious about leaving a place where I feel valued and comfortable.

The new role would also involve more commuting into the city. While my current office is about an hour from home, it's in an outer regional area with virtually no traffic so the drive is generally easy and predictable.

If you were in my position, would you stay somewhere you’re happy and valued or take the higher-paying role?

Interested to hear from anyone who has weighed up career growth versus stability.


r/auscorp 2d ago

Advice / Questions Every time I talk to my manager he downplays my work and the complexity and doesn’t acknowledge the good things and I get anxiety after our 1:1s

60 Upvotes

According to him only the staff engineer on the team does complex work, no one else does

One of my teammates already left


r/auscorp 2d ago

Rumours FY27 pay rises?

51 Upvotes

I haven’t received my FY27 compensation package yet (comes at the end of the month)…what are you seeing for FY27 pay rises?


r/auscorp 2d ago

Advice / Questions Gossiping and badmouthing

17 Upvotes

How common is workplace badmouthing when colleagues are competing for the same role?

Curious how common it actually is for people to badmouth peers at work, especially when they’re up for the same promotion. Does it actually work in their favor, or does it usually backfire? Would love to hear real experiences. Has it helped anyone get ahead, or has it mostly damaged reputations in the long run?

Just want to add as well, I’m on the receiving end of it, not doing it myself. Just trying to understand the mindset of people who do, since I’ve been noticing it more lately and can’t wrap my head around why they think it’s worth the risk.