uacabaca
uacabaca t1_jed74jg wrote
Reply to comment by ElysiumSprouts in CEOs are quietly backtracking on remote work—and more companies could follow by ethereal3xp
The vast majority of big tech are severely under-staffed, with a lot of activities put on hold because of lack of personel, and engineers working well above 8 hrs per day, just to make things move. So it's not "right sizing", it's "firing" to meet the quarterly financial goals that look good for their stock value.
uacabaca t1_jed4vq4 wrote
Reply to comment by ElysiumSprouts in CEOs are quietly backtracking on remote work—and more companies could follow by ethereal3xp
Right sizing? You mean "firing"?
uacabaca t1_ja9qgmk wrote
Reply to I have a high amount of anxiety surrounding the future of my job and AI by Business_Pin4533
You are not a software engineer, you are a self taught web developer.
uacabaca t1_ja95aiu wrote
Reply to comment by Ground2ChairMissile in Nokia changes logo, cements strategy shift away from phones by HRJafael
It's no Kia bad
uacabaca t1_jeecmld wrote
Reply to comment by UNSECURE_ACCOUNT in CEOs are quietly backtracking on remote work—and more companies could follow by ethereal3xp
Mmm no. Rates are increasing and so cost of money. This means less "free" money to borrow for growth, so less growth. When you foresee less growth your shareholders will demand job cuts, otherwise the stock would tank. Then you start cutting projects and firing people. The ones that remain are overburdened by the tasks that were done by the ones that were fired. So they have to work more, under the pressure of being fired like their former colleagues. In other words, workers are paying for those stocks.
How you all are believing the narrative that they are "trimming fat" is beyond me. Google, for example, made profits into the billions (1 billion can feed 10000 families for a year) and still fired.