While I know that businesses must always adapt to an ever changing market I just wonder how Crown hopes to change the business model that the C level employees sc--wed up by getting rid of our former CEO and the people in the field who do all of the hard work.
I do agree with the removal of the former CEO but why not remove the rest of the C level management who advised JB?
This company is so top heavy that it is a joke. VP’s reporting to other VP’s with no direct reports.A VP’ getting promoted to SVP’ a week before they announce layoffs. How about getting rid of the executive id--ts who make these decisions. Change has to start from the top down.
You started with the CEO but left the rest of the C level executives in place. How does that make any sense? They are the ones who made and continue to make the decisions that destroyed the company.
Getting rid of some field employees and a few District Managers is not going to change the irresponsible behavior that got Crown into this mess. The people who were laid off are not the people who were irresponsible in the way that they managed the financial aspect of the company, all of these poor financial practices came from the top down.
People like to brag about the dividend that Crown pays compared to other REIT’s but you never hear them mention the over 60% decline in shareholder value. If you are going to make irresponsible statements about the dividend then tell the whole story about the value of the company. I am not aware of any other REIT that lost so much of its value.
I truly wish that the SEC would look into Crown’s books, accounting practices, and misleading reporting on financial statements. I am sure that would clear out the C level personnel responsible for the state of the business.
Plenty of other companies are very successful in the Fiber and Small Cell business. Irresponsible business practices such as putting millions at risk for potential projects and fiber builds that cost more money than the build would ever generate are the only reasons why Crown is failing in those two areas of the business. Yes, higher interest rates hurt Crown but they hurt all of the other companies that compete with Crown just as bad and they are not laying people off. That should say something about upper management at Crown.
Crown decided to spend a fortune leasing and building out new offices right after COVID. Three years later they are closing a bunch of those offices. More financial mismanagement, decisions that were made at the highest levels. Crown executives wanted to micromanage their employees so they built all of these offices so people could “collaborate”. These offices were never more than half full and employees were able to “collaborate” just fine during COVID. Not to mention the fact that a great deal of this collaboration took place on Teams because the employees on some of these teams were in different states. The Crown executives are the ones that need to be micromanaged.
Just my thoughts on the destruction of this company and the people responsible for it.