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Changes coming in the technical sales side...
looks like the house of cards is coming down...
Walmart
Working at Walmart is a better job than working at mondelez
OneTru Updates
So.....how are things going? Migration on track? Which groups are being migrated right now? Good improvement?
Any truth to mass layoffs in March 2026 and for what groups?
Dystopia
https://www.counterpunch.org/2025/12/04/the-biggest-heist-in-america-is-being-sold-as-a-gift-to-children/
Company Being Sued By CT AG
Company being sued by CT AG for misleading advertising, failure to deliver speeds and allegedly fraudulent fees charges to customers. IS NY NEXT?
Signs of an impending layoff for the new folks at the big H.
Copy Pasta from a different site:
Former HR here - subtle signs your company is preparing for layoffs
I’ve been through 3 rounds of layoffs (twice in HR, once when I was also laid off), and there’s a pattern that emerges before the axe falls. Not trying to create paranoia, but if you’re seeing multiple signs on this list, it might be time to update your resume.
This got long, so I’ve broken it down by timeline and severity. Hopefully this helps someone see what’s coming and prepare accordingly.
EARLY WARNING SIGNS (3-6 months out)
Financial and strategic shifts:
Hiring freeze gets announced, especially if it’s sudden or poorly explained. When companies say “we’re being strategic about growth” out of nowhere, that’s HR-speak for “we’re about to cut costs aggressively.” Pay attention to whether it’s a soft freeze (critical roles only) or hard freeze (literally nobody).
Executives start talking about “efficiency,” “operational excellence,” “doing more with less,” or “rightsizing” in all-hands meetings. Once leadership starts using these phrases repeatedly, start paying attention. They’re preparing employees psychologically for cuts.
The company misses earnings or revenue targets multiple quarters in a row, or leadership keeps revising guidance downward. Public companies especially - check their investor relations page and quarterly calls.
Consultants show up. Specifically McKcKinsey, Bain, Deloitte, or similar firms. They’re not there to make things better for employees - they’re there to identify “redundancies” and provide cover for cuts leadership already wants to make. If you see consultants doing org chart analysis or “efficiency studies,” that’s a massive red flag.
Leadership changes at the top. New CEO, CFO, or COO often means new priorities. New executives frequently want to “make their mark” within the first 100 days, and layoffs are a quick way to cut costs and restructure.
Budget and resource signals:
Training and development budgets disappear. Conference approvals get denied, software licenses don’t get renewed, that certification you wanted gets tabled indefinitely. When companies stop investing in employee development, they’re not planning long-term with current staff.
Discretionary spending freezes. Team outings canceled, holiday parties scaled back or eliminated, small perks disappear. These are the easiest costs to cut first.
Delayed or frozen merit increases and bonuses. If annual raises get “postponed” or bonuses are cut despite decent performance, the company is hoarding cash for something.
Open headcount gets quietly closed. You might not notice a hiring freeze officially, but those three open roles on your team just stop being discussed.
Cultural and messaging changes:
The “we’re a family” messaging intensifies. Ironically, when companies start really pushing the culture stuff hard, it’s often because morale is tanking and they know what’s coming. Authentic culture doesn’t need constant reinforcement.
Town halls become more frequent but less substantive. Leadership is trying to control the narrative and keep people calm, but they’re not actually saying anything meaningful.
Internal communications shift tone. Messages become more formal, more carefully worded, more legal-sounding. This usually means lawyers are reviewing everything.
Real estate and facilities:
Office consolidation starts being discussed. Subleasing space, breaking leases early, or suddenly pushing hybrid/remote work after being office-focused. Real estate is expensive and often the first place companies look to cut.
Facilities staff reductions. If maintenance, security, or reception teams shrink, that’s a leading indicator.
MEDIUM-TERM SIGNS (1-3 months out)
The ones people miss:
Your manager starts acting weird in 1-on-1s. They seem distant, can’t give you clear answers about future projects, or suddenly don’t want to talk about your career development, or they cancel 1-on1s. They often know 4-6 weeks before you do and are terrible at hiding it. Watch for:
Avoiding eye contact
Being vague about Q2/Q3 planning
Not fighting for resources they normally would
Seeming stressed or checked out
Cross-functional projects get canceled or put on hold indefinitely. If that big initiative involving multiple teams suddenly loses steam, it’s often because leadership knows the teams won’t exist soon.
Reorganizations that don’t make sense. When they shuffle reporting structures or combine teams in weird ways, they’re often preparing for consolidation. The reorg is the setup; the layoff is the follow-through.
Senior people start leaving and aren’t replaced. When your VP quietly exits and the role just disappears or gets absorbed, that’s a restructure preview. Execs often see the writing on the wall before layoffs and jump ship.
The “high performer” narrative shifts. Suddenly everyone’s being evaluated more critically, PIPs increase, and the bar for “meeting expectations” gets higher. They’re building paper trails.
HR and administrative signals:
HR schedules random meetings with employees to “check in.” This can be them gauging morale, but it can also be them identifying who might be problems during layoffs (ie, who might sue or cause issues).
Increased focus on documentation. HR suddenly cares a lot about having everything in writing, attendance records are scrutinized, minor policy violations are documented. They’re building files.
Anonymous surveys about “organizational effectiveness” or “role clarity.” They’re identifying redundancies and overlapping responsibilities.
Operational changes:
Vendors get cut or renegotiated aggressively. If the company is trying to save money everywhere, labor costs are next.
Projects shift from innovation to maintenance. All the exciting new work stops, and teams are just keeping lights on. This suggests they don’t believe in long-term investment right now.
Contractors and temps disappear first. This is always the canary in the coal mine. If contractors are let go en masse, full-time employees are usually 4-8 weeks behind.
Financial desperation moves:
The company takes on debt or seeks additional funding under unfavorable terms. This suggests cash flow problems.
Asset sales. Selling off business units, real estate, IP, or other assets to raise cash.
Delayed payments to vendors. If your company is stretching payables or late on bills, they’re struggling with cash.
IMMEDIATE RED FLAGS (2-4 weeks out)
The “oh sh-t” tier:
You or your team suddenly gets asked to document all your processes in detail, create runbooks, or do knowledge transfers “for continuity.” They’re preparing for people to be gone and don’t want institutional knowledge walking out the door.
Managers have mysterious meetings that aren’t on the calendar, or meetings that say “leadership sync” with no agenda. Often they’re being told how to “rank” their teams (stack ranking) or getting trained on how to deliver termination news.
HR blocks calendar time that’s marked private across the entire organization on the same day. That’s layoff day. Usually a Wednesday or Thursday.
Managers seem panicked or are suddenly unavailable. They’re either in planning meetings or mentally preparing for what they have to do.
IT or Security starts asking random questions about access, or you notice permissions audits. They’re preparing to revoke access quickly.
Conference rooms get blocked all day with “private” meetings. Those are the termination meetings.
The parking lot has way more cars than usual early in the morning on a random day. Leadership arrives early to prepare and coordinate.
The final 48 hours:
Executives all happen to be “in the office” on the same day when they’re usually remote or traveling. They want to show their faces and deliver messages in person.
Your manager asks for a “quick sync” with no context, or you get a calendar invite for early morning with just “meeting.” That’s often the termination conversation.
You notice coworkers disappearing into conference rooms and not coming back, or leaving with boxes. If it’s happening, it’s happening to multiple people today.
Email access starts acting weird, VPN connections drop, or badge access to certain areas stops working. IT is already starting to shut you down.
WHAT TO DO - ACTION PLAN
Preparation phase (as soon as you see early signs)
Update LinkedIn immediately. Make sure your profile is complete and compelling. Turn on “open to work” privately so recruiters can see it but your company can’t.
Refresh your resume and tailor it for your target roles. Have multiple versions ready for different job types. Get it reviewed by someone who knows your industry.
Document your accomplishments with metrics. Revenue generated, costs saved, projects delivered, teams built. Save this somewhere personal, not company equipment.
Save important files legally. Performance reviews, reference letters, samples of your work (that aren’t confidential), documentation of your achievements. Email them to your personal account or save to personal cloud storage. Do NOT take confidential company information, client data, or proprietary code.
Screenshot or save your LinkedIn recommendations and endorsements. Sometimes people leave and delete their profiles.
Reconnect with your network NOW while you’re employed. It’s easier to get coffee as a “catch up” than as a desperate job seeker. Reach out to old colleagues, mentors, recruiters you’ve worked with.
Financial preparation:
Build emergency fund if possible. Even an extra month of expenses helps.
Understand your benefits. Know your PTO balance, how severance works at your company (if there’s a standard package), what COBRA costs, when your stock vests, and what happens to your 401k.
Reduce expenses where you can. Not to panic level, but maybe hold off on big purchases.
Check if you have any loans against 401k or obligations tied to employment. Some companies require repayment upon termination.
Legal and administrative:
Keep records of everything. If you suspect you’re being targeted unfairly (discrimination, retaliation), document it meticulously with dates and witnesses.
Check your employment contract for non-compete, non-solicitation, and IP assignment clauses. Know what you signed.
Mental preparation:
This is not about your worth. Layoffs are business decisions, usually driven by executive mistakes or market conditions. Even top performers get cut.
Have a plan for how you’ll spend day one after a layoff. Whether it’s updating your resume, going for a run, or calling a friend, having a plan helps you not spiral.
Tell your partner or trusted person what might be coming. Don’t suffer alone or let it blindside your household.
If/when it happens:
Don’t sign anything immediately. You usually have time to review severance agreements. Consider having an employment lawyer review it, especially if it includes non-compete or release clauses.
Negotiate if possible. Severance, extended healthcare, references, job search support, equity vesting. The worst they can say is no, and many companies have wiggle room.
File for unemployment immediately. Even if you get severance, you might be eligible. Don’t leave money on the table.
Ask for a neutral reference or letter of recommendation before you leave. Much easier to get this on day one than six months later.
Understand what’s happening to your benefits. COBRA deadlines, life insurance conversion options, FSA/HSA balances.
Get contact info for colleagues you want to stay in touch with. Once you lose email access, it’s hard to reconnect.
Job search strategy:
Take a day or two to process emotionally. You don’t have to start applying immediately.
Quality over quantity. Targeted applications with customized materials beat spray-and-pray.
Use your network first. Most jobs are filled through referrals. Let people know you’re looking.
Consider contract or freelance work to bridge gaps. It keeps money coming in and shows you stayed active.
Be honest in interviews about the layoff. “Company went through restructuring” or “position was eliminated due to budget cuts” is fine. Most interviewers get it, especially if layoffs were public.
WHAT NOT TO DO
Don’t panic or make it obvious you’re job hunting. Don’t print your resume on the company printer, don’t take recruiting calls at your desk, don’t update LinkedIn with “OPEN TO WORK” publicly while still employed.
Don’t badmouth the company publicly. Even if you’re furious, keep it professional. The industry is smaller than you think.
Don’t stop doing your job. Keep performing until the end. You want good references and you never know what might change.
Don’t burn bridges with your manager. Even if they’re delivering bad news, they’re probably just doing what they were told. Stay professional.
Don’t take things that aren’t yours. Seriously, don’t steal company property, access data you shouldn’t, or do anything that could give them cause for termination instead of layoff. You want that severance and unemployment eligibility.
AFTERMATH - IF YOU SURVIVE THE CUT
Survivor’s guilt is real. It’s okay to feel relieved and also sad for colleagues who were let go.
Your workload is about to increase dramatically. Set boundaries early and document what’s not getting done. Don’t try to do three people’s jobs.
Start looking anyway. Companies that do one round of layoffs often do more. Plus, the culture and workload might not be sustainable.
Support your laid-off colleagues. Write recommendations, make introductions, be a reference. What goes around comes around.
What is the over/under bet on the number of site closures/divestments under Johns tenure as IOL CEO?
Upstream: Cold Lake, Kearl, Syncrude
Downstream: Strathcona, Sarnia, Nanticoke, Terminals, Pipelines
Chemical: Sarnia
Or does it make more sense DW finally recommends to the EM board to buy the minority interest of IOL (30%)?
Chevron has become a job hopping company only
Chevron is a great company to work for if you want to impress others with your résumé. Do not work for Chevron if you want job satisfaction. You are not a human. You are just a number and you are disposable when they want to pay the stockholders more. Great company to invest your money in, but definitely not your time as an employee. My time here will only be as long as it takes me to secure a better position elsewhere.
Schwoligarchy
Don't bother working for this company of you don't want to see the executive council be the only ones who get money. Also you will have no say in any company policy. If you speak up with a good idea to improve processes or morale you will be retaliated against
Layoffs?
After the earnings call - you could see this coming- heard from some marketing folks that that theyre getting let go
What other benefits do you think Mr. Bill Pulte is going to introduce in 2026
I can't wait. 2026 is shaping up to be great and prosperous year!
More Layoffs at Comcast Today
There were more layoffs in the Data and AI org today. Lots of VPs and product team members were affected.
December layoffs
Are we safe this month or is that too much to ask for? Does T usually have layoffs in December?
What’s up guys?
What’s up guys, PSTG is going to he-l?
Layoffs in Sales Org
Looks like the grinch is coming early, org getting hit this week.
12/3 Tech Fireside RTO announcement.
Question was posed at this quarters fireside chat where Demchak essentially "hinted" that 5 day return to office will be required following a flowery rant about how while WFH "benefits employees" it "harms the company" and that he is trying to imagine a world where "he is asking you to do your job".
Good luck everyone in Pittsburgh, I would not plan on a cost of living adjustment or a commute benefit coming down the pipeline while Ol' Bill claims his 2026 stock award of the tens of millions.
Why Lexmark?
Why does everyone at Lexmark and now the legacy- Xerox SLT think that everything that Lexmark do is fantastic. They lost $600 million last year so I do not understand???
stock option vesting
last day 2/20.... i have like 15k vesting 3/1... complete stab in the back.
All Employee Call All AI?
Heard a rumour that the whole all employee call this week is going to be created by AI to show everyone what it can do…can’t wait to see if this is true
BH CM Layoff - posted yesterday
From an old post, but posted yesterday
Behavioral cm layoffs happened today on my team.
12h ago by Anonymous
1 reaction (+1/-0) | Reply
Post ID: @59f+1k8ntfhy4
AT&T commits to ending DEI programs
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/at-t-commits-to-ending-dei-programs/ar-AA1RCMNw?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=HCTS&cvid=69304c6bd46044fa8a533101e5611cf6&ei=51
In an FCC filing, the U.S. wireless carrier said, “The legal landscape governing diversity, equity, and inclusion (“DEI”) policies and programs has changed. We have closely followed the recent Executive Orders, Supreme Court rulings, and guidance issued by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and have adjusted our employment and business practices to ensure that they comply with all applicable laws and related requirements, including ending DEI-related policies as described below, not just in name but in substance.”
Yael thanksgiving email did everyone get it?
The email subtly hints at more layoffs. It clearly states road ahead will be filled with confusion and what not. any thoughts? Or did everyone even get it?
Frequent layoffs hurt the company’s future profits
I know that Verizon’s future success is the last thing on the mind of the people who have been laid off, but someone commented that layoffs and AI will help Verizon bounce back and become more competitive. I cannot let that go without an answer. That’s not the case at all. Layoffs are just short term financial engineering so the leadership can report lower labor costs during quarterly earnings.
VZ had voluntary and involuntary layoffs every year for the last 10 years. If layoffs made companies grow, VZ would be growing like crazy and the share price would reflect it.
Jeffrey Pfeffer, a professor at Stanford Business School, had studied the available data and came to the conclusion that frequent layoffs hurt in the long run.
https://www.careerusa.org/jobs/179-resources/168-career-files/158-16-must-read-articles/372-lay-off-the-layoffs.html
Bonus Day
Any confirmation if managers got the okay to stell associates?
RTO Enforcement
Have you or someone you know been disciplined for non compliance of RTO rules? Asking for a friend...
Pittsburgh office closing
Pittsburgh office will be closing on January 14, 2026. Employees will be allowed to work from home.
If there’s any layoffs to be had, start with HR.
Those jokers just loved to deliver the matter of factly snarky message of “this is what’s best for Citi, we have to let you go” with such a smug look on their face. It’s time to replace those guys with AI. If there’s any test bed low hanging fruit group of people to run off, it’d be them. Trim the limbs off of that tree.
What use are they anyway. They don’t do anything but pass out busted links and direct you to a FAQ page that does not answer your questions. Let those guys go.
Cloud Software Group to Acquire Arctera
https://www.arctera.com/press-releases/cloud-software-group-completes-acquisition-of-arctera
K&W announced closure early December
https://www.wbtv.com/2025/12/01/north-carolina-based-restaurant-chain-abruptly-closes-doors-after-almost-90-years/
Dec 24 - Jan 4 paid time off
Is this good?
Spreading Holiday Fear!
Something I’ve found deeply unprofessional is leaders openly discussing possible layoffs and the decline of Target culture with a hint of glee. As if they perhaps enjoyed spreading bad news to encourage lower level employees to flee the sinking ship as they could hop onto the nearest lifeboat. My leaders have openly discussed Target’s problems while maintaining their careers for over a decade. One has to wonder if it’s become a strategy to keep their precious little corporate roles.
All to say: if you are worried, stay the course. Don’t leave without your paycheck and a cushion to plan your next step. Target is not the end all be all of anything. Having watched a man get the saddest multiple decade anniversary acknowledgement “party” followed by a layoff the next week… you won’t be missing out on much if you’re fighting over the last life preserver.
My manager joined the strike
Finally our Networks manager has listened and agreed that this company will just keep shafting, delaying pay awards then will make excuses at the end.
His seen his colleagues wfrd in the last year, now his joining the engineers, his offered us free time off whenever we need. If you can't beat them join them. Other colleagues we request you join us, bring this $hit place to a halt.
Why would they keep layoffs under wraps?
For once I don't think it's layoffs because they'd be happy to announce that given any opportunity. I'm not sure what it is instead though.
US layoff happening today
Notifications went out this morning
more smoke and mirrors?
Teradata announces $500 million stock buyback in 2026.
That’s a lot of money for a company with yearly declining revenue. A lot of people don’t understand that amount of money. Think of it in terms of lipstick. That’s enough money to buy a new tube of $10 lipstick every day for 137,000 years. Wow, that’s a lot of lipstick!
When Stankey "retired" who do you think will be his successor?
Curious with the recent spate of telelcom CEO changes, wondering who's next in line for T throne? Thoughts..