I've worked long enough as a developer at WF. The whole environment is complex and bureaucratic as hell. MULTIPLE layers of security and authorization. Hard to get anything done. But above all complex - and everything is continually in some stage of transition. Always have to learn new systems. So, just to be a cog in the wheel, takes some education and intelligence, - just to keep yourself afloat and half-way functioning. The old military terms seem more and more to have universal meaning:
https://charliecompany.org/2012/11/...ecompany.org/2012/11/26/military-slang-terms/ - FUBAR, SNAFU, TARFU, SUSFU, ....
So, what was the last thing that was all f***** up, oh yea a new centralized security system for authorization and encrypting communications between computer systems throughout the world. Of course, they already had many systems going back decades with different security software, protocol and procedures, old IBM machines, newer PCs, different groups around the country in charge of different systems, and not all maybe not most in agreement with the new system, .... a nightmare, a slow-moving monster. You would train someone on it, but they can't, as it turns out after the scheduled training, for which they had to wait 3-4 months for class, use the know-how because of some unexpected snags, then maybe one - two years ready to try again, but they are gone .... or well, don't quite remember what they were taught. And communication between departments and managers and many other people who don't agree with each other leaves something to be desired.
In appraisal, we need or will need people with a lot of computer and math skills. In fact, those are needed EVERYWHERE, plus application knowledge. And the high schools and colleges seem to be FAR more worried about identity issues and liberal politics than education. So, you get these kids coming out of college with degrees in anthropology, $70K in debt, and not capable of getting those positions that need math and computer skills.
SO, back to the point. $41K for a salary is pretty low for the kind of people they actually need - at least in California.