Thread regarding Verizon Communications Inc. layoffs

A.I. Results for who to lay off (copy and paste)

As Dan said " you can find the answers on ChatGPT"

Excellent and very relevant question — especially given where telecoms like Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile are right now: mature networks, flattening subscriber growth, heavy debt loads, and Wall Street pressure for cost efficiency.

If a telecom giant announces multi-billion-dollar cost cuts and large-scale layoffs (10,000–20,000+), here’s where they’d most logically focus — and where AI and automation will accelerate the process.


💼 1. Middle Management & Support Functions

Most vulnerable: Managers and directors who are not directly tied to revenue, customer experience, or mission-critical operations.

Why:
Telecoms are layer-heavy. AI and analytics tools now provide real-time visibility and decision-making data, reducing the need for multiple layers of review or reporting.

Examples:

Regional or district-level managers whose teams already report into national dashboards.

Internal communications, reporting, and compliance coordinators.

Project managers overseeing slow, cross-department initiatives that AI can track automatically.

AI Impact:
Generative AI tools and workflow platforms can automate meeting notes, project tracking, and executive summaries — eliminating the “information translator” role many mid-managers fill.


🧑‍💻 2. Back-Office & Administrative Roles

Most vulnerable: Shared services like HR operations, finance, procurement, and legal support.

Why:
These departments have large headcounts and repetitive, rules-based work ideal for automation.

Examples:

Payroll and benefits processing

Invoice auditing and vendor management

Contract review (AI can pre-screen NDAs and agreements)

Recruiting coordinators and scheduling

AI Impact:
AI-powered ERP and RPA (robotic process automation) systems like Workday AI, SAP Joule, or UiPath are already cutting thousands of such positions globally.


☎️ 3. Customer Service & Call Center Roles

Most vulnerable: Tier 1 service reps and retention specialists.

Why:
Verizon and AT&T already deploy advanced virtual agents that can handle account inquiries, upgrades, and even billing disputes.

Examples:

Inbound Tier 1 support

Chat-based troubleshooting

Billing dispute resolution

AI Impact:
Generative AI assistants (trained on customer data) now resolve 70–80% of customer issues without human input — a massive cost reduction opportunity. Humans will remain only for escalations and high-value accounts.


⚙️ 4. Network Operations (Low-Level Monitoring & Maintenance)

Most vulnerable: NOC (Network Operations Center) monitoring staff and certain field dispatch roles.

Why:
Predictive AI can identify and resolve outages or congestion before they occur, and field routing is now fully automated.

Examples:

NOC analysts watching dashboards

Scheduling/dispatch coordinators for field techs

Routine diagnostic engineers

AI Impact:
Self-healing networks, AI-based predictive maintenance, and drones for tower inspections reduce human labor significantly.


🧠 5. Marketing & Sales Operations (Non-Quota Roles)

Most vulnerable: Analysts and coordinators who produce internal reports, pricing models, or campaign tracking.

Why:
AI tools like Tableau GPT or Salesforce Einstein now produce insights, summaries, and predictive forecasts instantly.

Examples:

Sales ops analysts building dashboards

Marketing coordinators producing campaign metrics

Data entry or CRM updating roles

AI Impact:
Automation will let quota-carrying salespeople handle more accounts directly, with AI generating proposals, decks, and pipeline forecasts.


💣 Least Likely to Be Cut (Protected Roles)

Customer-facing field techs (fiber installs, enterprise network repair)

Top-tier enterprise sales reps and BDMs (they drive revenue)

AI engineers, cybersecurity, and network architects (strategic growth areas)

Government relations & regulatory (too high-impact politically)


🔍 Summary — If Verizon/AT&T Targets $3–5B in Cost Cuts:

Area % of Cuts Role Examples AI/Automation Relevance

Middle Mgmt 25–30% District & Ops Managers Moderate–High
Back Office 25–35% HR, Finance, Legal Very High
Customer Service 20–30% Tier 1 Reps, Chat Agents Very High
Network Ops 10–15% NOC, Dispatch Moderate
Marketing & Admin 5–10% Analysts, Coordinators High


If you’d like, I can draft a strategic breakdown for how a telecom could communicate such a restructuring internally (e.g., “efficiency initiative” or “AI transformation plan”) — useful if you’re studying or preparing for leadership discussions.

Would you like that next?


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| 4772 views | | 13 replies (last October 31) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1k8vgtm6v

13 replies (most recent on top)

@ax it makes some sense as a lot of enterprise contracts are wireline services but look at FWA growth in VBG, only segment with FWA growth!
That makes me think, yes parts of VBG like security services, Professional svcs etc need to go as they are neither growing nor directional. Completely selling enterprise business may be a better option ( I bet HCLTech will be ready to buy lol)

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Post ID: @d3+1k8vgtm6v

Everyone talks about AI taking all of these jobs, but who is going to setup the tools? We all know that successful implementation of AI can take a long while before it is accurate and can be relied upon. So it is a safe bet the AI bubble will have long burst before all of this comes to pass.

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Post ID: @d2+1k8vgtm6v

While I see 15% from VBG stated below, we were told to expect closer to 50% and start to wind VBG down for those who are not selected. I’m not sure how that will work with our enterprise contracts but we were told to be prepared. Seems like Dan wants an entirely Wireless company.

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Post ID: @ax+1k8vgtm6v

@ak ahh, that no layoff clause sure is nice right now. Congrats for being all that you can be and needing that title of a "manager". Gosh, you wont even be able to get SNAP benefits when you are outta work.

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Post ID: @av+1k8vgtm6v

@ak eat sh-t

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Post ID: @ar+1k8vgtm6v

AI forgot the Union Crud that should be kicked out the door with a thud!

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Post ID: @ak+1k8vgtm6v

It’s so obvious @a5 @a7 ai responses are pulling info from this very site, which itself is full of unconfirmed rumors and info. Maybe some of it’s true maybe not.

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Post ID: @aj+1k8vgtm6v

@ac you must be confused, didn't you hear our visionary CEO explain that he sees the NEWEST AI models before us proles, and that he tells his wife and kids to 'grok it before engaging him in conversation? Obviously this guy knows what he is talking about and has not taken one too many karate kicks to the dome

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Post ID: @ag+1k8vgtm6v

Having used LLMs, and also produced automation, monitoring, worked with NOC people, etc I'd be highly skeptical of much of that list.

Middle managers? Maybe. If all you're doing as a middle manager is summarizing emails, you deserve to get fired. These roles have been notoriously useless my entire career, so I have the least amount of concern for these jobs getting replaced with... something.

The rest I'd be skeptical of. LLMs are tools not people. If you stick one in front of your tech support call queue, you'd going to likely just have a bunch of people get frustrated that the LLM produces a cr-ppy answer, or worse, hallucinates.

And I've already programmed the "self healing networks" stuff using non LLM tools. Letting my services be controlled by some AI thing that I don't know what it could possibly do sends chills down my spine. We never let the freaking NOC do anything without really calling anyone... why would I let something I have no idea what it'll do control my critical services?

The response sounds like a typical LLM response where it basically doesn't know, and just spouts off the same old speculative echo-chamber answers everyone else is saying.

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Post ID: @ac+1k8vgtm6v

As per grok ( who is reading layoffs)

  1. Middle and Upper Management Layers (Highest Likelihood)
    • Verizon has long been criticized for being “top-heavy” with excessive executive and director-level roles that duplicate efforts across silos like consumer, business, and network ops.  Schulman’s PayPal background emphasizes efficiency, so expect a “full reboot” here—flattening hierarchies, eliminating redundant VPs, and consolidating teams. Employee chatter on sites like TheLayoff.com suggests this could hit 20% of non-frontline roles in the next two years. 
    • Why? To “streamline our operating model” and boost capital efficiency, as Schulman put it.  This is low-hanging fruit for quick wins without directly impacting revenue-generating field work.
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Post ID: @a7+1k8vgtm6v

Also from AI
Under Dan Schulman, the biggest layoffs at Verizon are expected to come from the Verizon Business Group (VBG), particularly in the 5G-focused organizational units. Reports indicate estimates of up to 15% cuts within VBG to reduce costs and fund investments in growth. Additionally, Verizon executed a voluntary separation program in mid-2024 primarily affecting U.S. management, removing about 4,800 employees by early 2025. Schulman’s overall approach includes streamlining legacy businesses and reducing workforce across several areas to simplify and lean out the company, though the most concrete information available points to significant reductions in VBG and management ranks so far ����.In summary, Verizon’s biggest layoffs under Schulman are centered around Verizon Business Group's 5G-focused teams and U.S. management layers, as part of a broader strategy to cut costs and reshape the company.

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Post ID: @a5+1k8vgtm6v

Yikes

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Post ID: @a3+1k8vgtm6v

SVP/VP level.. Sr Director/Director… best place to cut. Will also save ink
On Power Point slides where they create and print taking credit for 1/2 level hard work

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Post ID: @a2+1k8vgtm6v

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