Micromanagement
Metric driven
Out of touch
State Farm used to sell itself as a company built on trust, integrity, and people. That wasn’t just marketing. Employees actually felt it. There was pride in working here because leadership trusted professionals to do their jobs, managers treated people like adults, and customers benefited from employees who genuinely cared.
That company barely exists anymore.
This is not about “having to go into the office.” Most adults understand jobs evolve. The problem is what the return-to-office push represents: the complete collapse of the culture that made people stay here for decades.
The old State Farm empowered employees. The new State Farm monitors them.
The old State Farm respected expertise. The new State Farm obsesses over optics, badge swipes, and corporate theater disguised as “collaboration.”
The old State Farm cared about morale and loyalty. The new State Farm treats employees like disposable line items while executives continue collecting massive compensation packages and talking about “culture” from behind closed doors.
Employees carried this company through catastrophes, economic instability, unprecedented claim volume, and a global pandemic. Productivity stayed high. Customers were still served. Entire departments proved remote and hybrid work could succeed. Instead of recognizing that dedication, leadership’s response has been increased control, shrinking flexibility, and constant messaging that employees should simply be grateful to still have a job.
That shift changes everything.
People are burned out not because they occasionally have to drive to an office, but because the mutual respect is gone. Employees no longer feel trusted. Every new initiative feels less about improving service and more about justifying real estate costs, middle management layers, and executive decisions made by people completely disconnected from day-to-day operations.
And customers will eventually feel it too. When experienced employees leave, morale tanks, and institutional knowledge disappears, service suffers. You cannot continuously erode employee trust while pretending customer experience will remain untouched.
What’s happening now feels like a company sacrificing its identity in exchange for short-term corporate optics and shareholder-friendly numbers.
State Farm used to feel human.
Now it feels like just another corporation pretending people are its greatest asset while quietly proving otherwise every quarter.