Thread regarding IBM layoffs

Voice of IBMers Series – Your stories and feedback are kindly requested

The author wishes to thank those who replied to previous posts. Their feedback is incorporated into a fully-revised version of Part 1. Substance-wise, a new discussion of Palmisano’s Model (roadkill 2015) is included in Part 1. Also, the word ‘concentration’ has been stricken from the document. The author apologizes for unnecessarily offending anyone.

For expediency sake, please include your replies where the articles are published so the author can quickly make any corrections. You may also reach the author by sending a private message to ValueVeracity@gmail.com

The purpose of the Voice of IBMers series is to rally IBMers adversely impacted by a catalogue of schemes designed to unlawfully ‘push out’ long-service IBMers, who I have a tremendous amount of respect for. Colo is but only one tool for pushing out workers. Many are familiar with other tools such as certain ‘early-retirement’ packages (that you kinda have to take); gerrymandered sales territories; so-called skills deficiencies, retroactive adverse PIPs based on last year’s quotas (as opposed to current year performance), and many other insidious tools.

The author’s Call to Action is to get people to file EEOC charges or join class-action lawsuits. IF you do NOT wish to participate, that is your prerogative, but please do not leave cynical comments about those who choose to exercise their rights as American citizens. IBM’s policy of Age Discrimination is a violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967. That is the law. The United States is a nation of laws, not of men.

The author lives in sunny Southern California—he is quite happy with his situation as well as his separation from the Company. This is his happiest and healthiest time in years. Although the author was RA’d (soft layoffs, not official RA) twice in 3 years, he voluntarily separated the Company on mutually agreed terms. That said, the author strongly believes in the values espouse by Thomas Watson, Sr. and Thomas Watson Jr., and for these beliefs, the author believes it his duty to use his voice and encourage his fellow IBMers to use theirs as well. Thank you for offering your editorial feedback to the author—sometimes, we need practice using our voice effectively.

Please see links below for articles in the Voice of IBMers series. I’m signing off for the next week. Wishing you all the best—the author.

Voice of IBMers (part 1): IBM’s failed ‘Model,’ a ‘New Way of Work’ means Mass Layoffs, Age Discrimination, Disrespect, and Loco Colo-Millennial Camps

  • on Medium - https://medium.com/@B_C_Gobin/summary-ibms-new-way-of-work-means-mass-layoffs-discrimination-colocation-concentration-8df15290dd6c

  • on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ibms-new-way-work-means-mass-layoffs-bryan-gobin/

Voice of IBMers (part 2): Rage against the Machine—No Trust for IBM Watson Marketing Hype, Mr. Death Panel & Cancerous Corporate Governance

  • on Medium - https://medium.com/@B_C_Gobin/rage-against-the-machine-no-trust-for-ibm-watson-marketing-hype-morally-conflicted-board-of-dir-e2d2b0b9a1de

  • on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/voice-ibmers-part-2-rage-against-machineno-trust-ibm-watson-gobin/

Voice of IBMers (part 3): What is IBM’s Loco Colocation Scheme? Backgrounder on how Colo fits into IBM’s ‘Project Chrome’ global layoff

  • on Medium - https://medium.com/@B_C_Gobin/what-is-ibms-loco-colocation-background-briefing-this-part-of-ibm-s-project-chome-global-layoff-d7edc2171ed7

  • on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/voice-ibmers-part-3-what-ibms-loco-colocation-scheme-background/

Voice of IBMers (part 4): IBMers sign Open Letter asking CEO to Restore Trust & Equity

  • on Medium –https://medium.com/@B_C_Gobin/voice-of-ibmers-part-4-ibmers-sign-open-letter-asking-ceo-to-restore-trust-equity-c9d7205ee2ee

  • on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/voice-ibmers-part-4-sign-open-letter-asking-ceo-restore-bryan-gobin/

Part 5 (forthcoming): The Second Time I got a Layoff Notice from IBM – The ‘Urgent’ Phone Call from New York.

by
| 1751 views | | 4 replies (last October 18, 2018) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+VDO5xvE

4 replies (most recent on top)

@ALL - author cancelled the series (deleted posts), noting that Lee Conrad @WatchingIBM had done something similar. Thinking of new angles for change.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @4pec+VDO5xvE

@Country Club story above - thank you so much for sharing. By the time I arrived in 2010, the Company had already shed tons of workers--during the great recession and throughout 2010 to 2016, and of course, Gerstner had done the largest layoff in corporate history back in 1992. Still some dead weight, but not a tiny fraction of what you describe as the country club days. I'm so deeply saddened though that so many outstanding people got whacked in the last 6 years.

@All - Medium links above are eliminated. Linked in links below. the author rewrote and substantially shortened Part 1. All the best.

Voice of IBMers (part 1): IBM’s failed ‘Model,’ a ‘New Way of Work’ means Mass Layoffs, Age Discrimination, Disrespect, and Loco Colo-Millennial Camps

  • on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/ibms-new-way-work-means-mass-layoffs-bryan-gobin/

Voice of IBMers (part 2): What is IBM’s Loco Colocation Scheme? Backgrounder on how Colo fits into IBM’s ‘Project Chrome’ global layoff

  • on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/voice-ibmers-part-3-what-ibms-loco-colocation-scheme-background/

Voice of IBMers (part 3): IBMers sign Open Letter asking CEO to Restore Trust & Equity

  • on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/voice-ibmers-part-4-sign-open-letter-asking-ceo-restore-bryan-gobin/

@

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @2hbl+VDO5xvE

I worked at IBM for a short time, maybe 25-30 years ago. They were working on a large government project where the implementation was in silicon valley, but the original development was on the east coast.

I was hired in silicon valley as a new employee, as they were trying to now hire people locally. I had some experience as a developer, but hadn't been out of college very long at that point. I'd been a good developer at my previous job and I enjoyed writing and designing software. I wanted to work at IBM because I had heard that they were great at providing training to employees and paid for external classes and stuff like that.

I was assigned a couple of different "buddy" programmers while I was there. The first one knew absolutely nothing and literally did absolutely nothing all day. The second one was a woman who painted her fingernails on the job and brought in her mail from home to open at work and take care of it there. She was going to study astrophysics, which I actually knew something about. IBM was going to pay for her college, which was nice. I asked her if she was good at math, since that's basically was astrophysics is, it's just applied math. She said "No". She didn't know what that would have to do with astrophysics. LOL.

I learned absolutely nothing from them.

At one point the plan was to set up some test facility for the new developers in silicon valley, but it never really worked. There was some training provided, but the training covered only very simple things and could never really be used to test the bugs that I was assigned.

It was a hopeless disaster. I did fix a couple of bugs, but the system was very difficult to work with, and no one seemed to know what they were doing.

At one point the developers on the east coast put out an entirely new release, erasing all work that had been done in California.

There were a couple of other new developers like me, but not a lot of us. Most of the people who were there were from the east coast. IBM was paying for their rent and food. The lady who was going to study astrophysics, left at about 3 in the afternoon every day in her little convertible.

There was a meeting at one point where the developers, both east coast and west coast, were supposed to get together to evaluate the manager. One of the east coast people suggested that we give the manager a high rating since he didn't make them do anything.

I was frustrated. I actually like development, but after a while it was clear that the people there really weren't doing much. I left.

A few years later I ran into another of the new west coast guys that I had worked with, at another company. He said "Wasn't IBM really screwed up? They had no idea what they were doing, did they?". I nodded agreement, but I had some doubt about just how screwed up they were. It was clear they didn't work too hard at all.

Being a good developer and enjoying that type of work, I have a difficult time understanding why anyone would want to "work" and be paid for doing nothing. But, I have to say, that there are people who will try to do that. They will arrange work with other people so that they are able to do absolutely nothing if they can get away with it.

I could never do that, wouldn't want to, and it's even hard for me to see people as doing that deliberately. However, I do think that that happens, maybe more often than I can imagine.

I suspect now, many years later, that the entire team liked their vacation time in California and weren't going to be replaced by new employees easily. I suspect that that is the real reason behind what appeared to be incompetence.

Upper level management may have wanted to move development to California, but if the employees don't want that to happen, then, they can do a lot about it. They can make it not happen.

Then I think back on my time at IBM... the woman who was so good at her little girl act when she wanted someone to do work for her.... and her leaving at 3 in the afternoon fairly regularly. The guys who appear to be a--holes to people outside their group, to keep people away from looking at what they are really doing. Some of the other comments on this site about people doing nothing and the comment that recruiters call IBM the "Country Club".

These are all interesting to me. Being a good developer and being pushed out of the area I was in, maybe because of jealousy, or maybe they just wanted to keep working in the country club and didn't want anyone else messing that up. Seems possible to me.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @2snn+VDO5xvE

OP keep up the good work

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @1nqx+VDO5xvE

Post a reply

: