Thread regarding Teradata Corp. layoffs

Teradata has gone AI First

Welcome to the "AI-First" masterclass, where our CPO and his merry band of visionaries have finally cracked the code: why pay for actual human expertise when you can just sprinkle some AI dust on the office and hope for a miracle? In this brilliant new company math, one prompt-wielder is magically expected to do the work of four seasoned professionals. It’s not a "layoff," everyone—it’s AI-powered efficiency optimization. Of course, the performance ratings are pure comedy; it’s a truly impressive feat to make KPIs impossible to achieve by simply moving them every time someone gets close. It seems the only thing "scaling" around here is the leadership's delusion that deep product context and institutional knowledge are "legacy baggage" that can be replaced by a stochastic parrot that doesn't even understand the roadmap.

I’m sure they’ll have a fantastic realization right around the time the production server catches fire because the code checked in by an "elite" hire who doesn't know the internals couldn't scale, and the IIM Product Manager’s slide deck isn't enough to rescue the business. There won't be anyone left who remembers how the system actually talks to itself, but hey, at least the PowerPoint decks looked sleek, right? It is incredibly draining to watch a leadership team systematically dismantle the very infrastructure keeping the company afloat, like watching a captain celebrate "weight reduction" while tossing the lifeboats overboard.

By the way, there’s a fascinating trend where every new "Director and above" hire seems to share the same IIT (from India) pedigree, while any existing veteran—PM or Engineer—without those specific credentials is being ushered toward the exit via "carefully crafted" negative feedback and impossible goals. Yes there are a couple of hires who are not from here, but watch the broader trend. If it happened to one person, it’s an exception; when it happens across the board, it’s a blueprint for a lawsuit. What these visionaries don't realize is that the momentum for a class action is already building among those who’ve been pushed out. I’m just waiting for that legal spark to materialize so I can join in and sue the heck out of these "geniuses" for wrongful termination. I have every single Workday feedback and "Connect" saved to show exactly how the narrative suddenly shifted the moment the new regime walked in. See you in discovery.


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| 882 views | | 5 replies (last March 10) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kjtz0gk3

5 replies (most recent on top)

@js Teradata set itself up in a lose/lose position with regards to AI. If the demand actually surfaces and it is possible to sell people AI services, we won't be able to deliver anything customers want, and if the demand never surfaces and it's all just a bubble...we'll go down in smoke right along with it.

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Post ID: @19d+1kjtz0gk3

Much like the cloud transition, they latched onto a buzzword, and decided we need to be all in. The problem is, they dont actually have a plan to do it, so the legacy customers will suffer, we wont bring in any new customers, and further down the tubes the company goes.
Though it makes me laugh a little more every article I read about how Microsoft cant even drive AI adoption, and that the vast majority of CEOs arent seeing returns from AI spending, but Teradata will definitely come out ahead, Im sure of it.

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Post ID: @js+1kjtz0gk3

Certainly interested in this thread and the comments.

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Post ID: @j1+1kjtz0gk3

Received my annual serving of “carefully crafted” negative feedback and a thoughtfully curated set of stretch goals this week — this after blowing it out of the ballpark in 2025.

So now it should be smooth sailing, since everything is clearly within my control… lol.

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Post ID: @f3+1kjtz0gk3

Teradata HR is very careful to ensure they cannot be sued for discrimination. Good luck though.

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Post ID: @a9+1kjtz0gk3

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