Avantages
It's easy to get your foot in the door with CIBC, either as teller earning $11/hr and with (depending on management level of lenience) unlimited sick days or from the plethora of administrative or call center roles available (as high as $17/hr with union in some cases). From there on, earn your designations as anyone would in this industry, CSC, CPH, and eventually CFP and you could be doing reasonable well without much progress until 7+ years into the roles.
Inconvénients
Office politics and the way promotions are handled are areas of concern, especially in clusters of Vancouver where non-performing managers are "promoted" laterally without any significant merits (and in some cases have truly atrocious work performance and even attendance issues). It seems like certain senior management clusters worked together years before and have a tendency of hiring from within - repeat this over time and you have a very lax and unrewarding system to look forward to. Add on time consuming personal feedback form that award seniority over actual dollar revenue generation and you have the resulting drop of CIBC from no2. to where it is sitting now