What is the rationale behind companies implementing holiday layoffs?

What is the rationale behind companies implementing holiday layoffs?

What ​do Twilio, Spotify, and Bending Spoons ⁤have in⁤ common? They’re‌ all tech companies that laid ⁤off employees right before the holidays.​ Simultaneously, many of ​those people were going into debt to pay for ‌their holiday gifts.

Does anyone see something wrong‍ here?⁢ I do.

Yes, I know the main reason​ companies lay people ‍off ‌at‍ this time is to look good in their fourth quarter. They’ve got to make ‌that ⁣final quarter’s ‍financial numbers look​ good ‍to their venture capitalist investors, private equity owners, or stockholders. But, come on —⁢ does anyone ​take‌ those numbers seriously?

We ⁤all know‌ what companies are doing. If they’ve been going downhill all year, what’s the point of firing people at the 11th hour? I know it’s cosmetic; you know it, too. No⁣ one really ​believes your company ‌suddenly got better​ in the last month of the year ⁤unless you’re a retail company, sales were good, ‌and you ⁣exceeded your numbers.

Besides, as my friend and ​fellow TechCrunch writer Ron Miller ‌put it, “Layoffs are always cruel and awful⁣ and​ often completely ⁤unnecessary, but⁣ laying ‍people off in December, ⁣while discussing the‍ company holiday ⁢parties, ⁣is the worst and so totally tone deaf.”

Cruel? Yes, cruel. As John​ DesJardins, an advisor at early-stage ‍startups, pointed out, “Most​ of them have been done​ without any⁤ triggering revenue change or economic event, just a change⁤ in the dynamics/focus of investors.”

Exactly. Everyone has been⁣ frightened for the past two years by the prospect of a recession. In⁢ case you​ haven’t noticed, it ‍never arrived. True, tech companies might well  have over-hired ​after the COVID-19 pandemic receded, but that‍ doesn’t explain why ⁤Amazon, Cisco, ‍Meta, Microsoft, Google, IBM, Red​ Hat, ‌SAP, and Salesforce, to name a few, laid off so ‌many tech workers in 2023.

But it’s towards the ‍end of the year that things ⁣really ⁣start to go wrong and​ it’s gotten to the point where I now expect job cuts‍ along turkey dinners and hoiiday carols.

It didn’t used to be this way. In the 1970s⁣ and⁣ ’80s, companies knew putting people out of ⁣their jobs ‍right around the holidays looked bad. How bad?‍ Try Mr. Potter, the villain⁣ of It’s a Wonderful Life, bad.

A⁣ few⁢ years ‍ago, a study found that one in five corporate executives are psychopaths. That’s about the same number ‍you’d find ‍in a jail’s population. Among ordinary​ people, only one in 100 ior⁢ so ⁣s prone ​to such Machiavellian,‍ narcissistic behavior.

I’m surprised ‍it’s ⁢only one⁣ in five. I have ​known many of the top tech CEOs of the last 40 years. Billionaires, ​I have to tell you, are not particularly pleasant or happy‍ people. Some ⁤of them are also not nearly as smart as you might think.

Take, for example, Elon Musk. As he continues running X/Twitter into the ground, laying off most of ⁢its staff along the way, Musk almost literally spit in the⁣ face ​of his advertisers at The New York Times ​DealBook ‌presentation. Who ‌does that?

A macho management style⁢ might play well on Fox ‍Business News…

2023-12-17 18:00:03
Post from ‍ www.computerworld.com rnrn

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