Thread regarding Verizon Communications Inc. layoffs

Verizon’s Recent Outage Exposes a Deeper Problem: Treating Operations as a Cost Instead of an Asset

Verizon’s Recent Outage Exposes a Deeper Problem: Treating Operations as a Cost Instead of an Asset

Verizon has long positioned itself as a leader in network reliability and resilience. However, the company’s most recent network outage has raised serious questions about internal priorities—particularly following Verizon’s decision to lay off approximately 13,000 employees last month, many of whom came from operations and technical organizations.

While Verizon has not officially attributed the outage to workforce reductions, the connection cannot be ignored by those familiar with large-scale telecommunications operations. Network outages are rarely caused by a single failure; they are the result of systemic conditions that develop over time. Staffing decisions—especially within operations—are one of those conditions.

Verizon’s Network Runs on People, Not Just Infrastructure

Telecom networks do not exist as static systems. They are living environments that require constant monitoring, tuning, and intervention. At Verizon, this responsibility falls primarily on operations teams—network operations engineers, field technicians, escalation specialists, and incident managers.

These teams are not peripheral to Verizon’s business. They are the business.

When experienced operations staff are reduced, remaining teams inherit:
• Larger spans of responsibility
• Slower response windows
• Reduced redundancy in expertise

Over time, this weakens the network’s ability to absorb and recover from disruptions.

The Overlooked Consequence of Verizon’s Layoffs: Talent Disengagement

The impact of Verizon’s layoffs did not end with the employees who were let go. Among those who remained—many of them high performers and subject-matter experts—a different effect emerged.

Fear.

Highly skilled operations professionals began reassessing their future:
• Some actively started searching for new roles
• Others secured positions elsewhere and left quietly
• Many stayed, but with divided attention and growing uncertainty

These are often the individuals who carry critical institutional knowledge—people who know how Verizon’s network behaves under stress, how legacy systems interact with newer platforms, and how to prevent minor issues from escalating into outages.

When these individuals become distracted or disengaged, network reliability suffers, even if headcount numbers appear sufficient on paper.

Operations at Verizon: Viewed as a Burden Instead of a Strategic Advantage

A broader issue underlies this situation. Like many large corporations, Verizon has increasingly treated operations as a financial burden rather than a strategic asset. Operations are often categorized as “non-revenue generating,” making them frequent targets during cost-cutting initiatives.

This mindset is fundamentally flawed.

At Verizon:
• Operations prevent revenue loss
• Operations protect brand trust
• Operations ensure service continuity for millions of customers

Without strong operations, every other investment—5G, fiber expansion, edge computing—rests on unstable ground.

Why Outages Become More Likely After Cuts

Network failures are rarely instantaneous consequences of layoffs. Instead, they emerge after:
• Knowledge gaps widen
• Response teams become understaffed
• Early warning signs go unnoticed
• Decision-making slows under pressure

By the time an outage occurs, the root cause is often months old.

For Verizon, the recent outage should not be viewed as an isolated technical event. It should be understood as a predictable outcome of deprioritizing operations.

A Critical Moment for Verizon

Verizon remains one of the most capable telecom companies in the world. But long-term reliability depends not just on technology investments—it depends on the people who design, operate, and protect the network every day.

If Verizon wants to uphold its reputation for reliability, it must reassess how it values operations—not as a cost to be minimized, but as a core asset to be strengthened.

Because in telecommunications, operations are not overhead.

They are the backbone


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| 1201 views | | 5 replies (last January 16) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kf161m99

5 replies (most recent on top)

They want AI work even now as goal in NW team when spoke to a NW-manager today. Good luck to find AI that can RCA issues like this, where you don’t want to even add “space”, if you don’t know 110% sure,,, or else sh-t show like this will continue. Not all part of business are for AI, only good for DEMO, that’s it. When reality hits, AI is out the door… hatchet Man knows all but this.

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Post ID: @bn+1kf161m99

@a8 Ironically, calling something “AI BS” without addressing a single point is about as automated a response as it gets.

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Post ID: @ap+1kf161m99

Dan calls the network an asset, but manages it like a liability.

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Post ID: @ac+1kf161m99

OP stop with the AI BS please...

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Post ID: @a8+1kf161m99

Red still operates on a 1980 style business model that sees manpower as an operating expense instead of an asset. They have zero measurements on place for the value that any individual contributor brings to the business only how much they cost.

Most innovative businesses have long since moved past this. Dan needs to sit down with Virgin Mobile executives to have a wake up call. They have and encourage everyone to embrace the value they bring and don't have employment costs as a blind expense without that.

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Post ID: @a4+1kf161m99

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