Tailgate88 said:Owlagdad said:
...... And we are letting in thousands at our southern border....where they gonna work?
All they have to do is vote Democrat and the gubmint will take care of them.
Tailgate88 said:Owlagdad said:
...... And we are letting in thousands at our southern border....where they gonna work?
All they have to do is vote Democrat and the gubmint will take care of them.
Who said you are supposed to worry?zephyr88 said:Why am I supposed to worry about a language learning software company's employee count?samurai_science said:
https://www.newsweek.com/mass-layoffs-happening-2024-hiring-freeze-1855942
n the survey, nearly four in 10 companies said they are likely to have layoffs in 2024, prompting increased fears of a recession around the corner. More than half of companies also said they plan to implement a hiring freeze in 2024.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brianbushard/2024/01/12/amazon-google-duolingo-cut-hundreds-of-jobs-here-are-the-2024-tech-layoffs/?sh=3fe6f413bd2e
Amazon, Google, Duolingo Cut Hundreds Of Jobs: Here Are The 2024 Tech Layoffs
https://tech.co/news/tech-companies-layoffs
2024 looks set to follow last year's trend for tech layoffs.
I posted the news911sAg said:
Oh no alert the news!
dmart90 said:
From the article, Spotify cut 1500 jobs (17%). AI makes a ton of sense there. But the real question in my mind is how the hell was Spotify a 10000 person company too begin with?
dreyOO said:
I almost wonder if it's the opposite. Lots of tech firms have been over valued for a long time. I've seen some with very bloated teams and it took an Elon type to come in and make cuts. I think there's bound to be more and tech will be volatile.
No Spin Ag said:dmart90 said:
From the article, Spotify cut 1500 jobs (17%). AI makes a ton of sense there. But the real question in my mind is how the hell was Spotify a 10000 person company too begin with?
Great question.
I've always wondered if companies hired more people than they actually needed as a way to show "growth" to help increase their value.
Does anyone know if that is, or can be, a factor?
"Growth" to increase their value typically means growing the paying customer base. Often that comes with a big upswing in hiring. So your profitability might be low or negative; but if the number of paying customers and revenue goes up a lot; its a growth business.No Spin Ag said:dmart90 said:
From the article, Spotify cut 1500 jobs (17%). AI makes a ton of sense there. But the real question in my mind is how the hell was Spotify a 10000 person company too begin with?
Great question.
I've always wondered if companies hired more people than they actually needed as a way to show "growth" to help increase their value.
Does anyone know if that is, or can be, a factor?
Jobs? We don't need no stinking jobs!Owlagdad said:
...... And we are letting in thousands at our southern border....where they gonna work?
This is exactly what my company did. They hired 1000 WFH workers in COVID. Now, the CEO is saying that he doesnt even know what they all day. We let 150 go in Q4 along with a early retirement program, in all about 400 gone. We will cut another 200-300 this year I imagine.No Spin Ag said:dmart90 said:
From the article, Spotify cut 1500 jobs (17%). AI makes a ton of sense there. But the real question in my mind is how the hell was Spotify a 10000 person company too begin with?
Great question.
I've always wondered if companies hired more people than they actually needed as a way to show "growth" to help increase their value.
Does anyone know if that is, or can be, a factor?
Hopefully it will be like the dot.com collapse where all those folks will have to go find real jobs.Ags4DaWin said:
Most of the jobs lost will be DEI and useless jobs held by woke feminists
Hopefully the correction forces alot of companies to cut back on their useless DEI programs that bring in no money and are solely for "nice feelings".
I've got a situation where I'm seeing really dumb hiring decisions being made to support the execution of a plan put together by the new CEO.No Spin Ag said:dmart90 said:
From the article, Spotify cut 1500 jobs (17%). AI makes a ton of sense there. But the real question in my mind is how the hell was Spotify a 10000 person company too begin with?
Great question.
I've always wondered if companies hired more people than they actually needed as a way to show "growth" to help increase their value.
Does anyone know if that is, or can be, a factor?
First thing to understand is that execs pay packet doesn't even matter. It's all about share price manipulation.dreyOO said:
Absolutely. Very few execs will pay a price for it. It's the sheeple that believe in a company that is too full of hype and latte bars, rather than fanatically driven towards value creation. It happens way more frequently in tech in my experience.
Man, that is one crappy message to send out to employees. I can't imagine morale at your company is very good. I'd bet the best of you leave when you can.DallasAg 94 said:
One of our leaders last week make some interesting comment. He leads an org of over 500 people.
He said 2024 was going to be a tough grind and if you are not up for it and you are not committed, this company may not be for you and you might ought to find a more suited place.
When asked about layoffs he said (my interpretation) it is a month to month decision and as long as we have attrition, we will be fine.
Translation... please leave on your own so we don't have to pay a severance or announce layoffs.
Focus on their core business and profitability instead of crusading for "social justice"Funky Winkerbean said:
Sounds like companies are positioning to do what Elon did to X.
What are you talking about?BudFox7 said:
Narrative that the economy is bad is fake news.
zephyr88 said:Why am I supposed to worry about a language learning software company's employee count?samurai_science said:
https://www.newsweek.com/mass-layoffs-happening-2024-hiring-freeze-1855942
n the survey, nearly four in 10 companies said they are likely to have layoffs in 2024, prompting increased fears of a recession around the corner. More than half of companies also said they plan to implement a hiring freeze in 2024.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/brianbushard/2024/01/12/amazon-google-duolingo-cut-hundreds-of-jobs-here-are-the-2024-tech-layoffs/?sh=3fe6f413bd2e
Amazon, Google, Duolingo Cut Hundreds Of Jobs: Here Are The 2024 Tech Layoffs
https://tech.co/news/tech-companies-layoffs
2024 looks set to follow last year's trend for tech layoffs.
If only we could get government to do that.HollywoodBQ said:Focus on their core business and profitability instead of crusading for "social justice"Funky Winkerbean said:
Sounds like companies are positioning to do what Elon did to X.
HollywoodBQ said:What are you talking about?BudFox7 said:
Narrative that the economy is bad is fake news.
Unemployment, really?BudFox7 said:HollywoodBQ said:What are you talking about?BudFox7 said:
Narrative that the economy is bad is fake news.
Are you short the market? What's your bottom target?
Unemployment is like 3.7%. Lol. Market about to break for new ATHs in spite of relatively extremely high interest rates. When those come down, watch out.
Inflation and Biden both suck ass, but pretending like the economy is in the ****ter is silly.
Former employer did the early retirement thing last decade but it really only benefited people who were already planning to retire. They didn't catch a whole bunch of people on the fence and push them over.Jetpilot86 said:
In the airline's, furloughing is the common way to adjust expenses from the bottom. Last fall UPS adjusted from the top, offering early retirement to about 5% of the pilots instead. The takers were very senior. About two years of retirements taken care of. Figure a 2 year recession based on that.
Jetpilot86 said:
In the airline's, furloughing is the common way to adjust expenses from the bottom. Last fall UPS adjusted from the top, offering early retirement to about 5% of the pilots instead. The takers were very senior. About two years of retirements taken care of. Figure a 2 year recession based on that.
Logos Stick said:Jetpilot86 said:
In the airline's, furloughing is the common way to adjust expenses from the bottom. Last fall UPS adjusted from the top, offering early retirement to about 5% of the pilots instead. The takers were very senior. About two years of retirements taken care of. Figure a 2 year recession based on that.
I thought we had a pilot shortage and that's the reason that 50% of all new pilots need to be females or POCs. Other pilots on the board have said so.
If UPS is cutting pilots, then there ain't a shortage.
HollywoodBQ said:Former employer did the early retirement thing last decade but it really only benefited people who were already planning to retire. They didn't catch a whole bunch of people on the fence and push them over.Jetpilot86 said:
In the airline's, furloughing is the common way to adjust expenses from the bottom. Last fall UPS adjusted from the top, offering early retirement to about 5% of the pilots instead. The takers were very senior. About two years of retirements taken care of. Figure a 2 year recession based on that.