Thread regarding Optum layoffs

Layoffs Trigger Heightened Nepotism and Cronyism

It's time to say the quiet part out loud. Have you ever wondered why upper leadership are so terrible at their roles, have no expertise related to their core functions, and can hardly string together a coherent sentence? It's because they were never qualified to begin with. VPs, Sr. Directors, Directors, etc., they're school mates, college roommates, they attend the same church. That incompetent Associate Director who somehow gets away with doing no work at all? Well, the VP just so happens to be his uncle Dave. Uncle Dave even fashioned the role description with his nephew in mind. The truth is that...you never had a chance.

The recruiters are aligning the resumes of their friends and families to hiring manager specifications, and influencing the hiring decisions. Think you're a perfect fit for the role? Well, so does the recruiter. So much so, that they ensure your resume isn't seen by a hiring manager. It's important for them to quell the competition, after all.

Nepotism and Cronyism aren't new, but have increased in this abysmal job market. If you're not getting interviews, you aren't to blame. If you're making it to the final rounds of interviews but have no luck, it’s because you're being used by the hiring manager to meet an interview quota...they were never genuinely interested in you.

For all you overachievers who are excellent at your roles, your leadership feels the same way—which is precisely why you're being blocked from promotion. They want you to remain right where you are.

So, don't blame yourself. You're not imagining things and you haven't done anything wrong. You are just navigating a system that was never made for you to win. The good managers who support their teams are purged while Incompetence reigns supreme. But don't give up. If VP uncle Dave is trying to squeeze his niece or nephew into that management role...let's not make it easy for him 😉.


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| 2 views | | 7 replies (last May 4) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kqj3dyfh

7 replies (most recent on top)

@OP love it!!

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Post ID: @r6+1kqj3dyfh

@a9 they are a “kid” only because you are super old. Stop hating young people out of jealously.

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Post ID: @fx+1kqj3dyfh

@aw Plenty of nepotism throughout all of our leadership. Bad decisions from all over bleed into other parts, including tech. Who do you think is responsible for chasing and funding the terribly incompetent ideas and projects that tech leadership promotes? It takes two to tango.

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Post ID: @ed+1kqj3dyfh

Wow. This is all not my experience at all. But I work in OI and have noticed that the worst of the worst are all in Tech.

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Post ID: @aw+1kqj3dyfh

@a9 that isn't so much nepotism as the fact the meeting pressures dozens of people to attend who do not need to be there. Having kids in compliance director jobs is in itself a big and endemic problem at Optum. Rather than hiring on bona fides or credible outsiders, they shove some UHC person who needs L30 experience to move back to UHC, etc.

We had a compliance executive for half a year who came here from PayPal. They left immediately after realizing there is no existing compliance management program nor intent to have more than a facade of one.

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Post ID: @ab+1kqj3dyfh

Unfair reality plaguing every field.

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Post ID: @aa+1kqj3dyfh

@OP Had a kid in compliance director job. No kidding - they said at most of the meetings those present - no one talked except her, and she said not one was qualified to be in the role they were hired to do. Friends of friends, recent workmates from other past jobs. So the statement above is sooo true.

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Post ID: @a9+1kqj3dyfh

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