#toxic

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Massive Insecurity or do they really want us to quit?

Over the past 2 weeks I have been flooded with messages and calls from past co workers sharing how miserable they are - they are called on the carpet for the smallest of infractions, reports are apparently run endlessly and if your metric is "off" no matter the reason, no matter the amount by 3 or 5 - you are contacted by the manager or with the tag along director who could never do the job and never has - to remind you what a loser you are, you need to get in line, formal warnings are next or have been submitted - and you are being put on notice. You are being watched. It's not what you do for a member its' all about the bean counts, the back seat driving, the frank disrespect. They ask me what to do - is that why I left? I tell them the truth - yes! it's the leadership, it's the selective punishing, get out if you can.
Every day I am reminded I did the right thing - I would rather pour beer for a living or cut grass then ever come back or encourage anyone to apply there

What is interesting is the escalation of this behavior towards employees right around the time budget projections for merit and AIP are on the horizon - and clearly more RIF are coming - writing is PAINTED ON THE WALL - AIP will be gone or might as well be and if you get more than 2% you are the outlier.


Mismanagement driving a company into the ground

The company appears to be cutting costs by encouraging resignations or creating performance-based grounds for termination, such as enforcing a four-day office attendance policy. Profitability challenges, particularly in the Optum business due to CMS V28 changes, are straining finances. Heavy investments in AI are unlikely to yield short-term returns, if any. Meanwhile, executive perks—luxury travel, corporate jets, security, double-digit raises, and millions in stock options—remain untouched. Instead, the company is pressuring its most vulnerable employees. This is a textbook case of mismanagement driving a company into the ground. Leadership is dominated by yes-men and yes-women, with dissenting voices pushed out. If you have alternatives, consider leaving this toxic environment. If not, make the best of your situation and be grateful to still have a job.

Well said, @2rc+1k6jmpfts.


This Beat Goes On / Switching to Glide

I am in Lenox. I have reserved a different conference room for the entire day every day this week. I will be selling co-ktails out of that conference room to supplement my income. Depending how week one goes I will continue. Bourbon, Vodka, Gin, Whisk-y, Tequila all top shelf stuff along with beer, wine, and seltzers. Roadies(Discreet To Go Containers) will be provided as well. Bailey's and Coffee for those in the AM hours who want to take it easy. Let me know if you are interested and I will provide details on location. We have to stick together in this environment and campaign of te---r against the employees. Nothing like getting loosened up and kicking back. Cheers!


Seagate is testing how much a person can take before cracking

My manager favors some employees while constantly giving others a nightmare workload. It's literally become unbearable. I’ve caught myself hoping for a layoff just to escape the daily toxicity more than once - and I can't afford to be laid off right now!


My Experience Navigating a Difficult Work Environment at the PMIC in San Diego

A few years ago, I joined the PMIC located in San Diego with a sense of excitement and optimism. The interview process had gone smoothly, and the role seemed technically aligned with my skills. The recruiter was persistent and enthusiastic, and that consistent follow-up played a big role in my decision to accept the offer.

Early on, things seemed fine. The technical work wasn’t particularly challenging, mostly basic bench testing, but I was eager to contribute and learn. Over time, I noticed signs of favoritism and occasional exclusion, including colleagues using their native language during meetings, which made collaboration difficult at times. However, over time, I began to notice some underlying issues; a subtle subculture that didn’t sit right with me. There was clear favoritism among certain members of the group, and at times, colleagues would speak in their native language during meetings and in the lab, which excluded others from the conversation and undermined collaboration.

Despite these red flags, I stayed professional. I treated everyone with respect, including those who weren’t particularly kind to me. I chose not to engage in office politics and instead kept my focus on work. I participated in discussions and meetings when needed but otherwise kept to myself.

Unfortunately, that approach didn’t go over well with certain individuals who seemed to be on a power trip. Some began bad-mouthing me behind my back to upper management with the intent on undermining me. They started nitpicking my work and creating conflict over petty issues. I maintained my composure, but deep down, I knew this wasn’t a healthy environment for me.

For the past 15 months, I’ve been actively applying for new roles. I’ve had a few interviews, three phone screens and one onsite, but none felt like the right fit. In fact, the onsite interview was with a lower-ranked company where the interviewers seemed unprofessional and insecure because someone who works at Qualcomm is interviewing with their low rank company, one of the interviewers said that to my face! The hiring manager even took personal calls during the interview, which was a clear red flag. I declined the opportunity, I won’t jump from the frying pan into the fire.

Meanwhile, the job market has been rough. Fifteen months of consistent effort hasn’t yielded the right opportunity yet.

More recently, my current manager, who was born and raised in the US for a reason that will be clear later, began pressuring me to engage in small talk with coworkers about personal matters, like the details of what I have done over the weekend. I was surprised when my manager requested that, and I explained that I prefer to keep my personal life private, especially my time with my wife. and I don’t see that as a requirement for professional collaboration. For context, I do attend all team-building events, even though they’re outside work hours and take time away from my personal life. I respect team cohesion, but there are boundaries.

I recognize that in some cultures, people spend the majority of their time at work and see coworkers as family, often placing their personal families second. But that’s not how I was raised, and come on we live in the US.

When my manager told me that failing to engage in more casual conversations could negatively impact my performance review, I felt that line between professional expectations and personal boundaries had been crossed. I feel like manager is just breathing down my neck constantly. It is unbelievable that he sold his soul to those foreigners. He is so weak, useless and I have lost all respect for him. At this point, I’ve chosen not to involve HR, most people know how that typically plays out.

I know I am on my way out forcibly, I am just here to vent and see if others have had similar experience and could give some tips on how to navigate through this tough situation.


Value Marketing is a dumpster fire - stay away

Should we give all of our money and resources to support a retail brand that has no awareness or subscribers - apparently. Should we reorg, then reorg, then reorg again - yes please. This company is a joke and we’re dead in the water.

Don’t apply for these roles you’ll hate it here.


Folks, we have way more power than they think...

This company does not care about you, and they think they can get rid of you in order to save costs. That is all this company cares about, is money. So, that is the way to make them hurt and feel some pain...

We are all in positions where we can make the company costs increase significantly relative to our puny wages. I'm not talking about doing something severe, illegal, or sabotage. I'm not encouraging that at all and don't condone it.

In our respective areas, we all have things such as:

  • Improvements (nice to haves) that you are working to stream line or automate - stop working it.
  • We all have "grey" areas in our work area's. Whether it is regulatory compliance (AER, Mines and Minerals act, ABSA, APEGA, OH&S, Law) etc. We have things that are often borderline and can be interpreted for or against us. We likely have sided on the companies side in these matters, at some personal exposure and risk. Stop supporting these, and side on the other side.
  • We all have specific work items that have significant Financial Risk. Mine plans, Mine Equipment, End of life, etc. which we actively try to defer or push out. I certainly know of some items that could easily be $100M on the mine side that can hit the books next year, let them.

Again, for many of these things, you don't need to do anything active. Just stop pushing to save the company money. We can do way more cost damage than they think...

The $150M savings they are expecting annually by getting rid of us, we can easily cost them that + WAY MUCH MORE. So, Fu-k Them!

Do your part! Let the ship sink and let the bean counters feel some pain.


LCS meltdown

Feels more and more like LCS only exists for media optics. No good path to profitability with any of the venture projects.
Equally concerning is the toxic culture created within…screaming, shouting, and slamming doors in meetings is modeled by management especially he who exited to run the U/S. Why is this behavior rewarded?


Do other companies have toxic individuals to this extent?

At JPMC people talk behind others people back, gossip, gaslight, berate a novice for asking questions then huff and puff about being bothered if asked. I'm sure that it happens at Wells Fargo, Citi, MS, Goldman, TD, but I am in shocked at the scale that it happens here. I'm been here only 2 weeks. The only positive thing I have seen here is people talking back to people who are like that. The worse I've seen which is subjective to me is asking them what have they done in the last 10 years outside of work after loving to work 10 hour days. They can't name anything except drinking.

Since I'm new, how do I navigate this when keeping my head low is not working? They are coming up to me to see if I am part of the fraternity or like they say in the streets "size me up".


A breakdown of sociopathy in the corporate environment

Sociopathy is Rewarded in Corporate Culture

The corporate world often values and rewards traits associated with sociopathy, such as ruthlessness, vision, and high focus on goals. Steve Jobs is often cited as a model of leadership where these qualities were admired. This focus on cutthroat tactics and maximizing quarterly profits means that when a toxic boss acts toxically, they may be rewarded, not reprimanded, for their "success."

The Toxic Paradox: Kiss Up, Kick Down

Toxic people have mastered the art of "kiss up, kick down":

Kiss Up: They expend all their effort su-king up to the boss and higher-ups, focusing on perception as the most important element of career success.

Kick Down: They sabotage co-workers, spread vicious gossip, withhold crucial information, or take credit for others' work.

Cognitive Dissonance: When higher-ups consider a toxic person their favorite, they will justify the person's poor performance to advance them. Management may even gaslight a good employee who raises concerns by shifting the blame onto them.

Toxic Work Environments are Enabled at the Top

Weak or ill-equipped leadership creates and enables the toxic environment:

Underinvestment in Training: Many companies underinvest in basic management or leadership training, leading to ineffective leaders.

Poor Modeling: When a toxic executive is at the top, their leadership style—characterized by unrealistic expectations, setting people up to fail, and openly berating people—trickles down and is modeled by other leaders, rapidly declining the work environment.

Insecure Leaders: Many people pursue leadership for validation, power, or to feel important, making them insecure leaders who may tolerate other toxic people.

Toxic people are the Bigger Problem (and Harder to Deal With)

In many cases, management knows a toxic person is a problem but doesn't fire them because they are the bigger liability.

The manager (e.g., "Ted") realizes the toxic person (e.g., "Carol") would "lose her sh-t, file complaints, and cause all sorts of headaches" if confronted. The manager may instead choose to reprimand the more agreeable, non-toxic employee who they know will try to "keep the peace."

  1. Their Reputation Matters More Than Results

Ultimately, toxic people are experts at exploiting the idea that their reputation with the higher-ups matters way more than results. They become untouchable once they establish influence with executive leadership.

Most people try to either play dirty office politics or avoid them, but the third option is to learn how to play office politics using simple power moves to make yourself immune from their tactics. But how? Does any of this ring a bell for you?


The OpenText Storyteller Quest by Sandy

Is this even legal? It’s a mandatory “training” where all marketing personnel are required to video record themselves and narrate a story based on a script. In my opinion, this is a North Korean-style approach to engaging employees and creating a false perception of the company’s success, all while everyone is overworked, poorly managed, and laid off every six months!


Looking through these threads, it is clear the culture here su-ks

Wow - I came back here to see if there was any real "news" I should be aware of, since there is no transparency at all from management, and I must say, I don't know who is luckier, the people who lost their jobs or those still here. At lease the departed are free from this cesspool of infighting and toxicity. Speechless. No wonder this company is going down the tubes.


[Article]: " T has developed a very toxic culture, and morale is understandably low. "

Morale and Culture
The continuous layoffs have taken a toll on remaining employees:

"T has developed a very toxic culture, and morale is understandably low."

7 min read · Aug 25, 2025 .
AT&T, one of America’s largest telecommunications companies, has been undergoing significant workforce reductions in recent years as it navigates industry transformation, technological changes, and financial pressures. This analysis examines the scope, causes, and implications of these layoffs for employees, the company, and the broader telecommunications sector.

https://medium.com/@averageguymedianow/at-t-layoffs-understanding-the-telecommunications-giants-workforce-reductions-52b66b8c9bdc


I don't care

Pay me to leave. Go ahead. I dare you. I’ll dance out of here happily. If this was the old Synopsys I knew and loved a decade ago, maybe I’d be upset. Maybe I'd stress over it. But walking away from what’s become an unrecognizable toxic dump? I won’t feel bad about that.


Answer this one for me

Is the us upstream, specifically production obviously, the only division where working hard and going above and beyond gets you nowhere and the worthless/lazy employees and contractors that do nothing get rewarded/promoted on whose b*lls they kiss? I wasn’t sure if this was a global plague or not.


Why would anyone want to work here?

Oh right, because there aren’t that many different options out there. They’ve cornered us into putting up with absurd levels of bullying, pressure, overtime, and exhaustion, while the only payoff is the chance we might get to keep our jobs. Just might. This is a sc--wed-up system, and State Farm has turned it into an art form.


DT Services Town Hall: a concentration of bs and sociopaths

I attended the DT Services Town Hall today. I'll be honest: I felt embarrassed, and every day I can't understand how they can say such things without bursting out laughing.
I draw a veil over the comment regarding the Tell Dell results.
I hope these people get out of their homes and touch the grass, they have completely lost touch with reality.


This is very much intentional

Letting us wait like this, creating unnecessary stress, having the entire workforce worry about our jobs... No way in he-l this is not intentional and aimed at getting some of us to quit. Their goal is to create atmosphere so stressful, so chaotic, so toxic, that people will walk away even without severance. I'm guaranteeing you this is their plan.


To the “quit complaining” crew

SOOOOO sick of explaining this so please try to follow along … it isn’t the commitment to sit at a desk 5x8 (even though the guarantee of an actual desk would be a reasonable expectation in that case) it is the forced moves and policing under the guise of collaboration as we sit on Teams with employees in different hubs and the unspoken few who have somehow skirted RTO and remained virtual. It’s a LIE and the only standard this form of RTO aligns with is the new corporate standard of mistreating, overworking, and violating employees, taking advantage of at-will employment terms for gains that only those influencing policy will enjoy.

If you are fortunate enough to live in a hub, celebrate the toxic T culture, and are somehow benefiting from being in the office, great. But the people who were adversely impacted have a right to be pi---d. Leave it at that and stay off these forums.


State Farm here! Go read our posts! It will make you feel better

Allstate sounds like the same useless sh-t hole that State Farm has become! Used to be a great place to be but has turned into an unbearable h-ll hole! Same Execs just different place as they all run in the same circles and listen to the same Consultants. Progressive will pass us to become the #1 auto insurer in the 4th quarter or at the latest, first part of 2026. Not only that, if they write 8 million new autos again they will be almost 9 million ahead and SF or anyone else will ever catch them. Everything the play they call fails they call it again and again at SF! It's always the employees fault, never them and their plans. During in-office weeks over the last several months, we have ambulances pulling up because someone has stroked out at their desk due to al the stress. The whole industry has just become toxic! Best wishes! Go Progressive is out motto at SF! Serves the right!


"Don't take it personally"

I heard one coworker tell that to another who'd just been laid off yesterday. He was actually trying to comfort him. The guy we lost has 12 years experience, the one who said not to take it personally has been here for a year and to say he still can barely do anything without somebody holding his hand would be an understatement. And now hearing this, I'm even more convinced he's nothing more than an id--t. And he's still here. Fu-k this place.


This place is toxic

They’re trying to break us so we leave and they dont have to pay severance. We have all experienced it or witnessed the behaviors. , U.S staff treated like 2nd class citizens, wrongful terminations, intentional forced ratings etc. The list goes on and on. Its not going to stop until we all come together and try to do something. We need to report them
to your states EEOC . Get An investigation going.


Toxic work culture at TCS

Summary below and I encourage people to think carefully before applying:

  • punitive approach: managers overreact to minor mistakes, pushing them harshly. Fear runs rampant.
  • hostility: bullying, gossip, cliques are widespread and allowed. Leaders sweep serious issues under the rug.
  • favoritism: certain employees receives special treatment.
  • unfair expectations: you're over capacity, with unreasonable workload and no resources. Deadlines are always urgent.
  • Lack of recognition: leaders routinely steal credit for others accomplishments.
  • Limited growth: again favoritism plays into it, if you are not in the club no promotion for you. You will not have career development.
    So glad I got out of this hole. At some point, you need to respect "yourself" as a human being. This company is not a place for it.