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11 votes
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Ericsson will lay off about 1,200 employees in Sweden as the telecommunications company faces slowed demand for its 5G equipment
9 votes -
Finland's proposed labour reforms risk doing more harm than good
8 votes -
Where are all the teachers? Breaking down America's teacher shortage crisis in five charts.
34 votes -
NASA’s x-ray telescope faces a long goodbye
12 votes -
The difficult emotional labour of healthcare workers
9 votes -
Idaho needs doctors: But many don't want to come
34 votes -
The Apex [Legends] team was hit with layoffs today
10 votes -
Rooster Teeth is shutting down after twenty-one years
56 votes -
'I stopped believing in myself': Game developers share the human impact of over a year of mass layoffs
42 votes -
‘There is no help’: US nurses’ suicide rate rising amid staff shortage and stress
36 votes -
US regulatory agencies take steps to fight non compete clauses in employment contracts
18 votes -
EA cutting 5% of workforce
23 votes -
Sony is laying off 900 PlayStation employees
42 votes -
Return to office policies do not improve company value, but do make employees miserable: Study
83 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission and eight states sue to block supermarket merger between Kroger and Albertsons
37 votes -
New report from US Federal Aviation Administration: Boeing lacks key elements of safety culture
19 votes -
South Korea health alert raised to ‘severe’ over doctors walkout
25 votes -
Our company is doing so well that you’re all fired
54 votes -
Why Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami will open the new Major League Soccer season with replacement match officials
5 votes -
American teachers are missing more school, and there are too few substitutes
46 votes -
Exhausted Pakistani content moderators are now trying to find other work but have been unsuccessful because their experience isn’t transferable
12 votes -
Las Vegas workers facing labor abuse get renewed federal protections from deportation
12 votes -
Disco Elysium standalone expansion reportedly cancelled and quarter of staff facing redundancy at ZA/UM
37 votes -
Nurses in Denmark shift to cosmetic care despite hospital staffing crisis – DSR believes shift is due to salary and working conditions
23 votes -
'I've never seen it this bad:' Game developers explain the huge layoffs hitting Riot, Epic, and more
45 votes -
Served: Opening a restaurant inside a prison
5 votes -
DoD updates telework policy for the first time since 2012
17 votes -
When US railroad workers get hurt on the job, some supervisors go to extremes to keep it quiet
29 votes -
US Congressional budget gridlock leads to stunning NASA layoffs
21 votes -
IGN workers unionizing - IGN Creators Guild announces 85% of eligible editorial and creative employees at games media outlet have already signed union cards
38 votes -
Inside the strange, secretive rise of the 'overemployed'
31 votes -
Finnish unions have called for industrial action to protest government proposals on labour law reforms which they say would adversely impact low-wage earners
10 votes -
The Messenger shuts down amid journalism industry-wide layoffs
5 votes -
Over 5,000 games industry workers have already lost their jobs in 2024
42 votes -
Prisoners in the US are part of a hidden workforce linked to hundreds of popular food brands
65 votes -
Why Walmart pays its US truck drivers six figures
16 votes -
Fujitsu bugs that sent innocent people to prison were known “from the start” but concealed from lawyers and judges
104 votes -
Layoffs, survivor guilt, and existential dread
The company I work for laid off half of my office this week. I'm one of the survivors, and trying to process what happened. The company has been transparent about revenues. However, we had no idea...
The company I work for laid off half of my office this week. I'm one of the survivors, and trying to process what happened.
The company has been transparent about revenues. However, we had no idea that we would be so badly penalized for management choices that created significant operating cost overruns in the face of a projected short-term demand decline. I've lost half the members of my immediate team, good friends, people whose work and thoughtfulness I deeply respected. The entire department structure is being upended. The harshness of the selection for people who were being laid off included a teammate who's in the hospital, parents of young children, people on the edge of retirement. I'm suspicious and extra hostile towards the company - it's very significant to me that all the people of color and people who've had recent medical leave are among the lost.
It's not the first time I've watched and survived a company's poor management and bad choices, but this is by far the worst. I've worked very hard at staying professional with the customers this week. I'm still inwardly seething with rage. I'm trying to figure out how to be supportive to the people who are leaving. I'm trying to figure out how to help a team lead who's in his first management job, and is totally devastated and nearly frozen with helplessness. I'm decent at my job, but don't know why I was kept and others with equal or greater skills were let go. I don't feel good about what qualities I might have had that corporate desired to keep - dutifulness, compliance, amiability, reticence?
At the same time, I'm looking at months of double workload even though corporate management claims they'll outsource part of the duties (so that's another symptom that I'm replaceable) and manage the task pipeline. There's a frankly insulting retention bonus if I stay for another year. We've gotten the usual anodyne HR garbage about the employee assistance program and coping skills. The corporate management's left us with the ominous "stay tuned for further announcements over the coming weeks".
I don't have a lot of choices here. I'm trying hard to stay focused on the present, without looking over the cliff of dread at the future. At the moment, I'm the sole support for our household and source of health insurance. My spouse is badly burnt out, and I don't want him to look for work a minute before he's healthy and enthusiastic about a job. I'm a late-50's end-career professional who wouldn't normally have much interest in restarting yet again elsewhere. I very deliberately chose this company, job and location, liked the work I was doing, the people I was doing it with, and I was looking forward to building on it. There's still the possibility that our half-vacant remote office will be closed and consolidated with the corporate headquarters. I have less than zero interest in relocating, and plan to keep separated coworkers who live here as personal friends.
I'll be grateful to hear any advice on coping with this situation, and hope the replies will be helpful to others in future.
47 votes -
Over-capacity ERs are dangerous choke points. But hospital challenges go far deeper.
11 votes -
Cloudflare CEO says viral firing video is 'painful': 'We were far from perfect… We don't always get it right'
28 votes -
‘Don’t mess with us’: WebMD parent company demands return to office in bizarre video
68 votes -
Will US companies hire fewer engineers due to Section 174?
20 votes -
Pizza Hut is lying: They’re not firing their drivers because of a minimum wage hike
61 votes -
Technology is making people busier during their so called free time
34 votes -
‘Winning requires hard work’: Wayfair CEO sends employees a gloomy pre-holiday email following layoff-filled year
27 votes -
US stores increasingly reverse course on self checkout
62 votes -
Spotify is the world's biggest music streamer but rarely turns a profit and just cut 17% of its workforce – its business model looks increasingly precarious
59 votes -
What the hell is going on at MAPPA?
10 votes -
Denmark's largest trade union has joined strike action by Swedish Tesla workers, piling pressure on the US electric car company to agree to collective bargaining rights
21 votes