Ask HN: Company is going through layoffs, but still interviewing me. Red flag?
I'm interviewing at many places, and some are beginning to do layoffs, often large (20% in one case).
How would you approach this situation if you were job hunting?
How would you approach this situation if you were job hunting?
30 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 80.5 ms ] threadAre they closing one of the products and those people can't be reassigned? They decided to get rid of sales team because they weren't as effective?
There is a huge bubble of layoffs nowadays BUT they all are not equivalent in nature. An example: layoffs have been a normal thing in financial companies for over few decades (performance based).
I'd also just ask them, although of course it's hard to trust any answer you get completely.
It is important to consider your own preferences, don't listen too much on others :) For example, some people thrive in companies that are doing extremely well, have lots of money for experimentation, there's not much financial pressure, etc. Some others (e.g. myself) like being dropped into crisis situations because they're interesting, you can learn a lot about people and every decision matters. Also, being a contrarian can help you to opportunities that you'd not get during 'peacetime'.
You can ask about job security during an interview. Many interviewers will be honest, and if they're not, you can still guess based on their reaction.
In terms of work/life balance, the stress was definitely higher afterwards, but we were very clear that reduced headcount meant that we simply could not do the same amount of work we were doing before and that working long hours would have no meaningful impact on what we could realistically get done. Leadership handled this well, and it helped that we had a sharp enough break that it was clear that we couldn’t just “buckle down” and continue as before. Can’t say working hours didn’t increase at the margins, and it definitely took more head space than before, but both the freedom to operate and the ability to make an impact made the work more enjoyable for me. It also helped that I worked from home, though - some colleagues worked from the office, and having to be in the room with the kinds of negativity that come with crisis would’ve made my experience much worse.
I’d definitely ask during the interview and get a sense of the company, but I wouldn’t necessarily write them off. Some depends on you as well - I was 3 months in at the company and did not get laid off, while others on my team/in my vicinity did.
One other thing to consider is your own personal risk tolerance - one reason I stuck around was because I was new to the field and considered it an opportunity to learn, and I could take the risk of finding myself unemployed again. If you’ve got a visa situation or a health situation or low savings and a family, that’s a different situation, but I’m a healthy single guy with savings, so I could take the risk for the right opportunity.
The problem with this attitude is that it is hard to transition to peacetime, normal stuff doesn't seem important (e.g. it is very hard to take a normal product decision that seriously if you've seen deep existential crises before).
Did any of them send you a signed offer? If yes, do you know for sure that latter one is going through a large layoff?
Spoiler: You won't reply or respond with no.
Edit: OP, thanks for the instant downvote (which I forgot to put as the third spoiler option).
Yes, I know they are going through large layoffs, and know the % in two cases.
I didn't vote on your answer, just saw it now and replied.
https://www.trueup.io/layoffs
The one thing I would be concerned about is the ~2 months after layoffs are pretty rough morale wise.
- People lost their friends and are upset about it
- Systems start breaking and the knowledge of them was lost
- Team restructuring means learning how to work with new people
- Adjusting expectations for the new velocity of the remaining engineers takes time
I personally would not join a company that recently did layoffs because socially its going to be awkward for awhile.
Say you're a manager who just lost 20% work force and want a hedge against the next round, what do you do? - hire someone, anyone, to throw under the bus when the time comes
If the company stack ranks regularly, this means a couple of things.
1. They have a problem in their hiring process, because why would they need to lay people off?
2. Even if you are new, any group you come into there is going to be a pecking order for promotions, raises, etc.
My company desperately needs people but also instituted a hiring freeze. We're not canceling any existing interviews and will treat those candidates like normal. I would suspect they have a much higher chance of acceptance given that it will be the last opportunity for teams to increase headcount for a while.
This to me reads as "it's you not me" type of mentality and I personally wouldn't join such an organization.