Thread regarding CDW layoffs

Think like an owner. OK, here we go.

As an owner, I know this is a good company with kind, and capable people who are victims. The teams are carrying a huge burden, and living in fear, but the real issue is leadership. The company has become top heavy with expensive SVPs, slow to act, disconnected from customers and value, and incapable of executing with clarity or urgency or even working together. And whenever we hire a new person to lead, strategy shifts and we start all over, or worse they come up with the exact same plan that the old team did, but that leadership were too blind or paralyzed to execute on. For the last 5-6 years, there has been almost no meaningful customer context at the executive level, and even now there is a visible disconnect between leadership’s new direction and what CDW actually does in the market to create value.

Proof? The Overall messaging is weak. The company struggles to articulate or sell new solutions with confidence. Marketing has become performative instead of effective. Internal politics, favoritism, and executive empire-building are rewarded while execution suffers. Consultants swarm the business looking for problems to solve while accountability disappears, and we are slowed down. Teams compete internally instead of aligning externally against the market. Fundamental operational discipline, blocking and tackling has largely vanished. Stock is a perfect reflection of reality. We were given the shot.

An equally concerning problem is that too many leaders are learning the business while running it. A top strategy executive from a bloated fire alarm company with stock performance almost as bad as CDW’s. A CMO from a car dealership with no meaningful B2B expertise. A former C level executive from a second rate department store. A sales leader from an HR leadership role. A Bain person running partners and acquisition integration, now c suite strategy. And it goes on, throughout the organization. Customers can feel it. Employees can feel it. The market can feel it. Partners scratch their heads and wonder when it’s going to implode. You people literally have no respect in our market. We apologize for you on every call. Now, we are losing credibility by even working here. Destination workplace? .

At some point, there have to be consequences and structural change at the top instead of another round of resets and reorganizations.

Here is what should happen, thinking like an owner:
• Name a new CEO immediately, even on an interim basis. Anyone would be better than a stock in freefall with no plan. Alternatively, appoint a President with full operational authority from a competitor, or internally, who knows how we create value, is respected and has run these businesses. The organization needs visible leadership and accountability now, not eventually.
• Any executive who cannot hold a credible customer conversation about the company’s core business and solutions should be visibly removed in a layoff. We are better off knowing you were fired, in order to regain respect for you leaders and ourselves. This is not an academic exercise. If leaders do not understand customers relative to our CDW value, they should not be leading any customer-touching organizations.
• Standardize technical and AI enablement across the company using actual vendor ecosystems, proven customer conversations and market platforms just like our peers, not internally manufactured abstractions disconnected from reality created by the burglar alarm team. Everyone should know the stacks, the tools, and the customer use cases. Everyone should be able to prove it.
• Align sales compensation to strategic outcomes, not just individual revenue extraction. The current model rewards personal economics over company transformation.
• Stop socializing executive compensation across broad leadership layers. Compensation should be tied directly to measurable departmental outcomes and execution quality. If I am doing well, don’t penalize me for a weak link i cannot control. Or I will leave, like many other effective leaders have.
• Expand equity participation broadly across employees instead of concentrating upside only at the top. The people doing the work should share in the value creation. They will be loyal and work harder, and be able to actually hold each other accountable as owners. And we will do better as a whole.
• Reduce consultant dependence dramatically, or to zero. If the business cannot operate without armies of external advisors, leadership has already failed.
• Re-establish operational fundamentals: accountability, execution speed, customer intimacy, and cross-functional alignment. Reduce red tape at all costs. AI isn’t enough. Mentality has to shift.

Finally, leadership credibility and employee loyalty requires you make shared sacrifice right now, and it should also be very public. If performance, growth, execution, and customer confidence are all materially off-track, CEO and EVP compensation should reflect that reality. That’s CEO, CFO, COO, CHRO, CCO, CSSO. Accountability cannot only exist for the people lower in the organization. No pay until we are fixed. If you don't like it, please leave or don't expect any respect. Step up and lead.


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| 21 views | | 17 replies (last 12 days ago) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1krccbvm6

17 replies (most recent on top)

@OP One single downvote. Must be Leahy or her CoS.

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Post ID: @2tn+1krccbvm6

Best post I’ve seen hands down. Lays it all out. No chance that inept Sr leaders like MD , MC, AR (and most of the PPM group) will be laid off or that they will forgo pay or even portions of their bonus. But great ideas here that real leaders would implement if we had any.

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Post ID: @va+1krccbvm6

CDW’s current situation in song format would be a mix between Metallica’s “Sad But True” & Britney Spears’ “ Hit me Baby More Time” . Total disaster of complete incompetence at the top. First line workers & customers deserve better. Have a heart and retire in Malibu with your millions and save yourself & your coworkers some respect before it’s too late.

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Post ID: @sa+1krccbvm6

@OP OP for President. Let’s go.

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Post ID: @mj+1krccbvm6

@OP OP is describing how a meritocracy works. That's not where CDW is or how it's even built and that then makes me wonder if there was any DEI inflation reflected in the stock price. I believe in diversity of experience as a competitive advantage, but not without merit. CDW was the poster child for DEI in the early 20's when the market rewarded for it, and people were looking for places to put money. Don't shoot the messenger, just wondering out loud. Yes, OP for CEO.

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Post ID: @kz+1krccbvm6

@kj me too - I will follow a great leader

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Post ID: @kx+1krccbvm6

@kj OP for CEO, lol. If this were the government we could overthrow the dictator!

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Post ID: @kv+1krccbvm6

@OP I want to work for you!

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Post ID: @kj+1krccbvm6

Seems the Chief Growth Officer hired 5 years ago and all the people she brought in didn’t drive sustainable growth.

Of course, countless others ended up paying for that failure…and still are.

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Post ID: @ex+1krccbvm6

Great points. We really care about how you feel. We will hire friends... I mean a consultant to help us dig into this and then never share the results minus one or two out of context pieces we cherry pick to make us look good.

People matter most.. just not you people. We mean us people at the top. You all down there are replaceable by our lovely friends in India. GTM was our first steps to getting customers unfamiliar with their reps. Next step will be they can't even pronounce their names.

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Post ID: @er+1krccbvm6

you mean to tell me the "International Executive of the Year" award that she purchased for herself didn't actually help anything? What about that expo where all the execs had CDW branded Jordans?

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Post ID: @ds+1krccbvm6

@OP looks like either MD, MC or AR downvoted this. Don’t want the gravy train to end.

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Post ID: @dr+1krccbvm6

@b2 not to mention all the failed acquisition implementations that should have boosted our market cap.

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Post ID: @dn+1krccbvm6

@b1 our board doesn't care, go look at them, all in CL's circle of trust.......

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Post ID: @dm+1krccbvm6

When Christine Leahy became CEO in 2019, CDW’s market cap was roughly $14–15B.
As of May 9, 2026, CDW’s market cap is about $13.4B , including buybacks, despite:

  • years of earnings growth,
  • aggressive share buybacks,
  • and significantly higher EPS.
    Translation: most of the shareholder return since 2019 came from financial engineering and per-share optimization and dividends rather than overall enterprise value expansion.
    NSIT for comparison is up about 50% in the same timeframe and their CEO was fired for it. 7 years, zero value. Even the Larry F effect can’t keep this stock propped. Sad thing is, CL and other execs net worth ballooned in the same time period. Look it up- these are the .01 percenters. How did you do?
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Post ID: @b2+1krccbvm6

Send this to the Board. Now.

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Post ID: @b1+1krccbvm6

Bo-m. Mic drop. Well said!

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Post ID: @az+1krccbvm6

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