Thread regarding Oracle Corp. layoffs

Oracle Was My Dream Job until I Worked There

I’ve been watching the news about layoffs at Oracle and it brought back a lot of memories.

Years ago, working at Oracle was my dream job. It was one of the most prestigious names in tech and I was excited to be part of it.

But the reality, at least in my experience, was very different.

For the eight years I worked there, it was the most unstable job I ever had. Every quarter felt like a countdown to the next round of layoffs. Thousands of people would be cut and everyone wondered if their number was next. The culture at the management level was extremely aggressive and political. There was constant pressure, constant internal competition, and very little sense of long-term stability.

To be fair, the colleagues I worked with were fantastic. I made a lot of lifelong friends there and many of them were incredibly talented people.

But the environment eventually forced me to make a decision.

Instead of waiting for the next round of layoffs, I spent nearly two years quietly preparing my exit. I upgraded my skills, repositioned my career, and eventually moved on.

That decision changed everything.

I’ve now been at my current company for seven years. Last year I made nearly three times what I was making before. I enjoy the work, feel valued, and have compensation and stock options that actually reward performance.

Like any business, layoffs can happen anywhere. But the difference is that today I have modern, in-demand skills and a role where I’m excited to show up every day.

Looking back over a 40-year career, I’ve lived through a lot of economic cycles:

• The 1987 stock market crash
• The Dot-com crash of 2000
• The 2008 global financial crisis, and in 2012 Housing Bubble
• The COVID market crash of 2020

Through all of that, I’ve never been laid off once.

That wasn’t luck. It was about continually adapting, learning new skills, and being willing to take control of your own future rather than waiting for a company to decide it for you.

Sometimes the best career move you can make is the hardest one: deciding it’s time to leave.


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| 12 views | | 10 replies (last March 15) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kkfqbxd5

10 replies (most recent on top)

@pv Even the mighty VAX fell.

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Post ID: @qk+1kkfqbxd5

Digital Equipment in the 80's was my dream job. After being there awhile I realized they didn't know what they were doing. :) Still, FAR better than Oracle. I realized if the department i was working for didn't really provide anything decent for customers ect,
better go. Ah the good old days. :). and if you didn't show up....no one would notice. :)
I miss that. :) :) :)

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Post ID: @pv+1kkfqbxd5

Totally agree with you.
I left Oracle when it was the highest time, I have noticed too many signs that is getting worse and crash will come soon. I prepared my own plan and now I am on my rules with the career path. Just don’t waste your health and power there. Is it worthy to work for heart attack, depression or stroke? Is the severence really worth of each day since last year you wake up fully stressed?
Keeping my fingers and thumbs for all employees.

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Post ID: @bf+1kkfqbxd5

If you've never been laid off, no matter how good you are, luck has been involved.

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Post ID: @ag+1kkfqbxd5

@a6 I think you mean billion

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Post ID: @a9+1kkfqbxd5

Oracle was my nightmare for 27 years. Lol then I woke up and got a real job.

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Post ID: @a7+1kkfqbxd5

OP, I followed a similar career path and have never been laid off. 25 years ago big tech was the dream job. It has changed every where. Read other threads on this site. Not many happy employees anywhere. Not many people look far enough ahead in their future to plan their way around life's obstacles.

Something you didn't include in your summary that a lot of people miss is how the population has changed. When I was born in 1958 the world population was near 3 trillion people and today it is over 8.25 trillion. Think about that... from the beginning of time until the late 1950s to get to 3 trillion and than in less than 70 years it has ballooned to 8.25 trillion. This is unprecedented, it has nearly tripled in far less than a century. Life is not what it used to be and never will be again.

https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/world-population-by-year/

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Post ID: @a6+1kkfqbxd5

Slop

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Post ID: @a4+1kkfqbxd5

@a2 a lot of people want to work for large companies like Oracle, IBM, Google, Microsoft, etc

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Post ID: @a3+1kkfqbxd5

Oracle was your "dream job"? Talk about a low bar lmao

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Post ID: @a2+1kkfqbxd5

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