1-7. Intro (Names, Backgrounds, etc.)
-
The story in Langley v. IBM begins four years ago when IBM undertook to reinvent itself in the age of the Millennial.
-
Shortly after Ginni Rometty became Chief Executive Officer of IBM in 2012, IBM embarked on a massive reinvention and rebranding campaign that had two principal and symbiotic objectives: first, to transform IBM into a “Cognitive Solutions” company deeply invested in the Cloud, Analytics, Mobile, Security and Social technology markets (“CAMS”),1 and second, to change the face of IBM by recruiting and retaining “digitally native” Millennials, which IBM defined as the generation born after 1980.
-
At a 2014 conference titled “Reinvention In The Age of The Millennial,”2 IBM expressly linked its success in CAMS to Millennials, asserting that “CAMS are driven by Millennial Traits.” By “reinventing” itself, IBM sought to “leapfrog[] the existing perception of IBM to become a leader in Millennial engagement” and thereby “drive CAMS adoption.” IBM intended to become “exponentially relevant with the Millennial demographic” by “showcas[ing] IBM’s capabilities in CAMS, driven by the digitally native millennials.”
-
Millennials represented a “trillion dollar market” and “billions” of dollars in potential sales for IBM. To capture the Millennial market, IBM had to “become one with the Millennial mindset.” “Mindshare converts to marketshare,” IBM wrote, and IBM’s “leadership in millennial engagement is the ideal value proposition for generating CAMS pipeline, which is driven by Millennial traits.” “[T]he secret to capturing the hearts, minds, and most importantly, wallets of the millennial generation is likely working with you. Your millennial employees are your most valuable and accessible asset when it comes to successfully marketing your business to the millennial generation.”3
-
Also in 2014, IBM published “Millennials: How IBM can effectively attract, engage and retain this emerging generation.” Because Millennials meant big money for IBM and because IBM “face[d] major competition with [other] companies acquiring Millennials, both within the tech sector (i.e., Microsoft, Amazon) and beyond,” IBM developed a “strategy to attract top Millennial talent.”
-
IBM aggressively executed its strategy to attract top Millennial talent on social media. On Twitter, for example, IBM created a Twitter page dedicated solely to Millennials – #IBMillennial – where IBM praised Millennials regularly and regularly features them on the IBM Twitter Jobs account.
-
IBM also instituted an “Early Professional” hiring program targeted solely at young professionals. “The idea is to bring in as much young talent into the workforce with every given opportunity.”4 IBM tells Millennials that they make great sellers because they are – well, Millennials – and therefore they should come sell for IBM.
-
Another part of IBM’s Millennial-driven reinvention was expressed in the creation of IBM’s “Millennial Corps.” IBM’s “Millennial Corps is a group of more than 5,000 IBMers [from] all across the world where Millennial-age and Millennial-minded IBMers come together to share ideas, feedback and suggestions, [and] really try[] to drive change within [IBM] as ultimately [they] are the future leaders of it.”5
-
Recently, IBM launched youIBM, an international branding campaign vividly portraying IBM as a youth-oriented tech company.6
-
On YouTube, IBM calls itself a “new IBM” by which it means a youth-oriented IBM.
-
IBM writes that “[a]n organization’s internal brand tells its story, and, in turn, reveals its true culture…. An organization's career site … should portray the company's internal brand.”8 This is how IBM “reveals its true culture” on its own Career site: 9
-
IBM’s LinkedIn page sends a similar age-based signal:10
-
And when CNBC’s Jim Cramer interviewed IBM’s CEO in June, 2017, IBM ensured she was surrounded by Millennials busily working in the background. 11
-
IBM has devoted countless millions of dollars to its effort to rebrand as a hip, Millennial-centric tech company. The activities and publications described above are illustrative, not exhaustive. IBM complemented them with Millennial-themed seminars, holiday parties, blogs,12 leadership programs, social media initiatives, white papers,13 online videos, newscasts14 and other advertising and public relations efforts intended to shed IBM’s image “as a company composed mainly of aging white guys,” and to substitute in its place a new, cooler, much younger image of IBM comprised of “rock star” Millennials.15
-
Simple. IBM believes Millennials are the most educated, technologically adept and digitally proficient generation of workers alive, making them superior to older employees in the new CAMS markets. Millennials are highly innovative and instinctively collaborative, whereas Boomers are not. IBM also believes that Millennials “speak Millennial,” giving them a fluency in communicating with other Millennials and a special rapport with Millennials who work for companies that purchase IBM’s products and services. Millennials are awesome! Boomers, not so much
-
In 2015, IBM published “Myths, exaggerations and uncomfortable truths – The real story behind Millennials in the workplace,”16 a recruiting tool that flattered Millennials and purported to refute stereotypes about Millennials.
-
Myths, exaggerations and uncomfortable truths expressly compared and contrasted Millennial employees with Generation X and with Baby Boomers. Whereas IBM professed to find many positive traits associated with the Millennial generation, IBM tended to be critical of older workers.
-
For example, older workers were technologically less sophisticated because they were not “digital natives.” Baby Boomers allegedly “place[d] less stock in the advantages [that] data offer[ed] than their younger colleagues” and were comparatively “dubious” of technology. Boomers were also far less “savvy” than Millennials with respect to social media.
-
“Successor generations X and Y are generally much more innovative and receptive to technology than baby boomers,” IBM wrote in another publication.17 “[A]ge is catching up with Baby Boomers,” whom IBM referred to as “gray hairs” and “old heads.”18 Boomers were leaving work in increasing numbers “due to retirement or disability.” Those still working often needed accommodations for “‘wear and tear’ disabilities like hearing and vision impairment [sic] that older people routinely develop.”19
-
Boomer employees were also less likely to admit mistakes at work or collaborate in decision-making, traits that caused friction in the workplace. “Baby Boomers accustomed to making decisions on their own may find it difficult to shift to a more collaborative culture, which can cause tension between older and younger employees.” In a 2015 paper entitled “To buy or not to buy? How Millennials are reshaping B2B marketing,”20 IBM again found that Boomer employees were not motivated to consult their colleagues before making decisions. This was a negative trait because “[f]or leading organizations, a corporate culture of collaboration and consensus building is needed.” To create that culture, IBM recommended that companies “[p]ut Millennials on [their] sales and marketing teams.”
-
In August, 2016, IBM Marketing Manager Erika Riehle stereotyped Boomer employees as contributing to five workplace “dysfunctions.”21 Boomers were allegedly less trusting of their co-workers, less collaborative, less committed, less accountable and less attentive to results. Compared to younger employees, IBM found that Boomers were the least likely to understand IBM’s business strategy, least likely to understand their manager’s expectations of them, least likely to understand what customers wanted, and the least likely to understand IBM’s brand.
-
IBM’s findings about Boomers boded ill for IBM’s Boomer employees because IBM’s “foundational competencies” consisted of traits such as teamwork and collaboration that Boomers lacked.