Thread regarding Xerox Corp. layoffs

The Truman Show is over

For anyone who hasn’t seen “The Truman Show”: it’s a story about a man who lives inside a perfect illusion. His entire life is a TV set. The town, the neighbors, even his wife and coworkers… all actors. They know it’s fake. They get paid to keep the illusion running so Truman never realizes the truth.

The employees in Truman’s world were enablers.

They smiled on cue, stuck to the script, and did whatever it took to keep the show believable. Not because they believed in it, but because it was their job. Because it paid the bills.

Sound familiar?

For years, that’s what we, Xerox employees, have done here.

We’ve watched the numbers collapse, the debt balloon, the rhetoric pile up… and we’ve kept performing.

We’ve called decline “transformation,” losses “investments,” and chaos “reinvention”.

We’ve applauded speeches that we knew were hollow, because the alternative was uncomfortable truth.

We weren’t fooled. We were complicit.

Now the walls of the set are falling down.

Let’s stop pretending we didn’t know. We all knew.

We saw the numbers slide quarter after quarter.

We sat through the town halls, clapped like it mattered, then went back to our desks to whisper the obvious: this company’s been dead for years; we’re just managing the c0rpse.

Why?

Because the salary was decent.

Because it was easier to play d-mb than to stand up and say the emperor had no clothes.

Because survival inside a dying machine feels safer than the uncertainty outside it.

Every spreadsheet, every “adjusted” margin, every fake pep talk… we saw it all.

And instead of calling it out, we became the extras in the show.

We smiled, nodded, and sold the illusion that Xerox was turning a corner.

But the truth is brutal: we helped build the illusion.

We traded everything for comfort, and comfort is what leads companies to de4th.

We knew the business model was obsolete, that “Reinvention” was just branding without any substance.

We heard the excuses: tariffs, macroeconomy, delayed orders, COVID (in 2025?)… and pretended those were answers.

Now the curtain’s down.

No plot twist, no surprise ending… just the arithmetic of brutal financials that don’t lie.

The problem isn’t that management lied: the real problem is that we let them.

We built a culture where truth was optional and optimism mandatory.

We rewarded obedience over thinking.

Every time we clapped at jargon, every time we stayed silent while the company hollowed out, we helped build the lie.

Now there’s nothing left to hide behind.

The show’s over.

Stop clapping.


by
| 1725 views | | 11 replies (last November 8) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1k9d199gg

11 replies (most recent on top)

Post from TheLayoff.com

Who me?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gj+1k9d199gg

@ad yes and certainly don't call one of the SLT out for their bad behaviour. That becomes your demise. You really have to be a yes person to still work at Xerox, quite honestly.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gh+1k9d199gg

@db How’s Alfred, Batman?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @gf+1k9d199gg

Please understand there were many of us who stopped clapping after the HCL route of XBS operations personell in 2019. There were GIS leaders who spent decades building the regional juggernauts that xerox paid 10x value for, pleading that this was a path to disaster; and then 1 by 1 they were all expelled for the next yes-man up. Many of us stopped clapping after the ptsd of a "supply chain crisis" - forcing us to explain to our xbs customers that we had no access to devices or parts - even as noncaptive agents and resellers got priority fulfillment from the mothership. Many of us stopped clapping in 2023 when the service departments started giving priority service to Lexmark over our own xerox clients.

When C2 showed us IPAAS, we applied that training internally to illustrate the intractible application ecosystem was that reps were expected to navigate; we were told this was just us being bad apples. But over and over we were given tools and training to solve other businesses business problems, and told to shut off those same critical thinking skills in evaluating the financial and functional performance of our own parent.

Then we were repeatedly gaslit with promises and platitudes that fixes were 6-12 months away... for years... So eventually we used our hands to write our resumes, our communication skills to prove our market value, and found appreciative homes and better roles in plenty of other places. Please do the same.

They arent looking for constructive input, there is no one left with institutional knowledge to recorrect processes anyway. They will always downsize the labor to the balance sheet to maintain the dividend, and they havent cared about client or employee experience in decades. Thats why they will dump them all to reseller channels in the end. Forget fumbling the future, they have eradicated their future - a bunch of bumbling buffoons trying to run a PE playbook and utterly failing because they never cared to understand that the core deliverable has always been about integrity. Save your personal reputation and dont sacrifice yours any longer for these fools.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @g3+1k9d199gg

I took the VRIF in 2017 with some second thoughts. Those second thoughts ended pretty quickly when more waves of layoffs followed. The obvious lack of any competence at the top became abundantly clear once I had a little distance.

Now I teach at the university level. No one in my classes even knows the word Xerox.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @db+1k9d199gg

@bf The current management team (including JV and some others from that group now out) were always meant to be temporary - to do a takeover of / takeunder by HP and sell what Icahn thought were undervalued portfolio items and let HP consolidate the industry. There was never a long-term plan.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @bp+1k9d199gg

Get to the point, no one comes to this site to read a novel

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @bj+1k9d199gg

@ah yes, when JV asked for a person to be fired for asking for his badge, that tells a story.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @bf+1k9d199gg

A nice thought, and a degree of truth. But there were plenty who called out this BS and were sidelined or removed as a result.

This isn't a moral conundrum, it's needing to pay your bills. No one asked to be dumped on from a great height.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @at+1k9d199gg

So blame the victim? Employees cant affect what C level does except maybe speak up and be fired JV was notorious for that. Xerox employees fof years tried to bring great ideas and solutions to the table.

yes its over but the fault lies with many bad CEOs and SLTs

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ah+1k9d199gg

Post a reply

: