How is Google avoiding any layoffs? I know their structure is such that stockholders supposedly can’t force any changes, but it’s hard to justify being the only company without any cuts. Their stock is falling and they still have a single cash cow for over 80% of their revenue despite over a decade of attempts to diversify.
There is nothing to justify though. Stock prices are external opinions based on market factors, and other companies making staff cuts is their own problem.
If the voting majority of the google board is happy with the revenue/profit/growth/staff then why would they cut
They're going to. The new performance process is clearly teeing people up to get the axe. They'll just say it's part of their new process rather than a layoff.
There is a new system that has annual reviews rather than biannual reviews. It slightly changes the expected rating distributions and introduces a "meets most" rating that is between the old "needs improvement" and "consistently meets expectations" ratings. There is no expected PIP rate. It was developed in 2021 and rolled out early in 2022. The ratings changes were small compared to process changes, which are intended to make the entire system take way less time for everybody. The rollout and tooling was a disaster but it will hopefully improve over time.
People then leap off a reasoning cliff and assume that this means that everybody who is rated "not enough impact" or "meets most" in February will be fired. This would have required some pretty legendary economic foresight by the execs and it would require them to have done a lot of unnecessary work to redo the entire performance review process rather than just changing the ratings system.
I have no idea if Google will do layoffs. But the idea that GRAD was created to facilitate layoffs is fucking stupid.
I've been managing a team at Google for like six years now. I'm doing GRAD ratings literally today (spending too much time avoiding it on HN). I have not been told of an expected PIP rate either explicitly or through innuendo. In fact, I have never PIPed a single report in my entire time here and I've never even got a whiff of people being concerned about that.
From what I've heard - It's been changed to a yearly (instead of twice a year) and apparently there's been pressure to rate people at a higher standard with a simple 5 level impact score. 'Not enough impact'. 'Moderate impact'. 'Significant impact'. 'Outstanding impact'. 'Transformative impact'. This feels kind of like something akin to a bell curve with the peak in Significant. I assume the culling will be from the 'Not enough' and possibly 'Moderate' bins. For a complete picture we would also need to understand the old performance process. A Googler could fill us in as this change has happened only this year.
Google perf ratings have always been this bizarre thing where "Meets Expectations" was considered a bad review and you better get your act together. (Shame on you for just doing your job.) That curve doesn't sound too different, just new names for same old same old. Like a 1-5 where you'd be disappointed with anything below 4 but the names always had euphemistic cheerful names even when it was a shit review.
Pretty sure we'll see it happen this year. But they may be hoping just to avoid it through attrition, by slowing hiring drastically and turning up the heat in performance reviews and goal setting.
I am not there anymore, but I hear perf process has been drastically reformed there. I always hated it, but one thing it did offer was a thorough paper trail and process and gave low performers many opportunities to improve their game. I understand now a lot of the red tape has been cut and the process is more intimate with the manager and their report. This would have been good for me and people I knew, at times, but I can also see it being a good way to just sort of quietly push people out.
My observation was that in many areas, productivity was super crappy during at least the initial stages of COVID. I think many companies suffered from this. There will be long-term fallout from that.
Anyways that single cash cow continues to be a money printing machine. When ad revenues drop significantly many quarters in a row, then you'll know there's trouble brewing.
Amazon did a lot of stuff. Most of the engineers weren't really fungible, they were more specialized. The robotics project set was really hard hit, and frankly that's good for the industry as now there's more talent floating around. Robotics has been super dry for a long time.
Most of the tech companies are letting a mix of recent hires, corporate middle management and in amazon’s case some logistics warehouse workers and specialty project engineers were let go. It’s a pretty eclectic, diverse group of people so its not as hard as it sounds to reabsorb into other companies. If they were all engineers or all HR there might be issues but in an already over-employed economy already 17k jobs won’t even make a dent in just about any sector right now.
I disagree there’s simply not enough FANG level high paying jobs to fill all these employees into. Many will end up at startups and other industries with a paycut. Few companies are willing to pay a HR or Recruiter 300k/year comp.
The contraction in unavoidable. Mania is never good. At some point heads have to come back down to Earth. The further we go into space the harder they crash back to Earth.
Even the current state is still ridiculous. There is still high demand but back to normality is preferred. The quality of highly-paid/low-experience-knowledge-quality engineers was toxicating the market and I’d say hurting the good ones instead.
If they are not really into tech (and just making money, which is fine by its own right), then they’ll land somewhere else.
If we had regulations to ensure jobs and roles. Obligated a company to give a four month parachute if laid off or fired it would making companies hire better talent as to avoid too much loss.
Prevent artificial unavailability of jobs. When you release 17k people into the work force you can be sure Amazon will be slow to fill the gap it created. So it holds up hiring. Then those 17k people are going to flock to whatever available role can be acquired. This will extend the interviewing processes and make it harder.
Tech companies and unfair hiring practices are what are leading to our financial collapse.
I just wanted to point out that probably 2000 of us (in robotics/AI) were "laid off" in Q4, but were paid through the end of the calendar year "To find an internal position". Almost none did, and I don't think that was really the intent, but what do I know. They're in this batch. I expect a Q2 announcement of all those people who in Q1 were "transitioning to new positions" that were eliminated before they could move.
Back in the day they managed to avoid 'layoffs' by transferring thousands of people from Fire Phone -> Alexa. They somehow avoided layoffs from shutting down Prime Air (drones, not 767s), even though that had a lot of employees.
They're pretty good at getting people to leave without doing 'layoffs'.
Heck, if you believe that they've always had 5-10% 'unregretted attrition' targets, which I do, and apply it to the whole company, that's 50-100k employees per year!
> There are zero openings. How does this prove it’s not shutdown?
Since when does having zero openings mean that a team is shut down? Sometimes teams are staffed enough to not need more people at the moment, so they will post a job opening whenever there is a need for it.
A specific personal example: my org had a period of a couple of months with no openings in late second half of last year, simply because we didn't need more people at the time, and then we posted more openings later. We were nowhere close to being shut down.
> Heck, if you believe that they've always had 5-10% 'unregretted attrition' targets, which I do, and apply it to the whole company, that's 50-100k employees per year!
This came up last time the Amazon layoffs were on HN, but: the URA target (which was 2-6% when I was there) is for people, not positions. That is, the intent is that departments are continually removing their worst performers, but replacing those people as soon as possible. This is an elimination of 17,000 positions who will not be backfilled.
Whether you agree with the URA target approach or not (I suspect most do not), 6% URA is fundamentally different from 6% layoffs.
Do you have a feel for if they might start hiring SDE's again before the end of the month? I was looking into them because it's right up my alley: I'm an aerospace engineer (aeronautics, flight test) turned software engineer who's worked a lot in rotorcraft.
I don't, unfortunately, that's above my paygrade ;-). It's likely going to be a function of the larger hiring situation at Amazon (we're currently in a corporate hiring freeze), rather than something Prime Air specific.
Sounds like you've got a perfect background for Prime Air though! Hopefully we'll be hiring again sometime this year - feel free to reach out (email in profile) if you want to chat more about it.
Yes, I totally agree. The whisper quiet vans driving safely and unhurriedly up and down the street where my kids play are a much better solution. I hope that your plans to legislate the status quo into permanence are successful.
I may have a stale understanding of the laws regarding drones in the U.S. But my understanding is they can basically hover around / over your property without your consent.
That's very different from vans driving on public roads and (when I've ordered something) parking in my driveway.
Working from home since the start of the pandemic I hear delivery trucks honking on reverse and backing into my driveway (granted I'm at the end of a cul-de-sac but I'm in a pretty remote area) 3-4 times a day. I also see trucks backing into empty driveways to stage unloading, as well as trucks convening in the cul-de-sac to do package transfers.
I don't mind these things, but they do utilize my property and impact my little neighborhood. I'm not convinced some buzzing above is worse. How much do we own the air above us? Is that somehow not public?
I mean planes and satellites also flyover your house without your consent. Do you think you own all the airspace from your house to the edge of the atmosphere?
I don’t work at Amazon, just curious about your reasoning.
Somehow, I'm guessing the altitude makes a bit of a difference. A drone over your house might be visible and even hearable, while a satellite barely is.
Why do you believe Prime Air is shut down, when it just started making actual drone deliveries to customers in College Station TX, and Lockeford, CA [1]?
I'm not following the article. It makes a point of distinguishing between 'corporate workers' and warehouse/delivery/logistics/etc folks. Then it claims the reason for this rif is because they expanded to meet the demands of the pandemic, most of which would be in the warehouse sector, and now that that demand is gone, they need to reduce the workforce. If so, why are they reducing the corporate workers?
Plus the warehouse has insane voluntary turnover, so they can reduce pretty quickly just by slowing down hiring, while the corporate jobs are a bit cushier and need to actually be let go.
> When demand started to wane with customers moving back to shopping in stores, Amazon initiated a broad cost-cutting review to pare back on units that were unprofitable
Waning demand triggered cost-cutting, which focused on unprofitable orgs.
It's crazy that AMZN announces this and the stock goes up in after hours trading. People are losing their livelihoods yet rich people only care about the potential higher profits.
This is very disconnected from reality, amzn needs consumers to buy their products. If layoffs keep piling up higher and deeper something is going to break and hello recession!
Laying people off reduces one of the biggest costs to an organization, thus making it more profitable (even if in the short term), thus the stock price rises. Stocks are always forward looking and investors believe that by cutting down costs and re-focusing will make amazon worth more in the future.
The workers aren't the source of profits in all cases.
Eg, a musician is a worker, but once they've written a song that you now iwn, you can sell infinite licenses to it, regardless of whether the musician is still being paid
But if you hire that musician, you can create more products you can license. The worker generates more revenue streams for you. This is why streaming companies are leasing soundstage space, to create more stuff to license themselves.
But not all types of music are equally in demand. If consumer tastes change, it would obviously make sense to layoff musicians trained to make music for a genre that nobody wants to buy anymore.
That's one way of thinking which IMO is a cold way to look at the world. I would say its just simply nicer to retrain your staff to meet your goals versus cutting them off and finding new staff all the time. Too bad nice typically goes against profits in this economy.
Seems like a better solution would have been to shift that labor to more productive uses that can generate revenue, than to throw some of the oars off your boat to go faster.
Not everyone is fungible. How can you repurpose recruiters effectively when you're not recruiting? How can you repurpose well-paid robotics engineers when you've realized you have over-invested?
In general layoffs especially when they are proactive, which in this case they seem to be, show investors that the company is being fiscally responsible. This isn't an indication that Amazon is going to increase profitability it's a sign to investors that they are taking in recession indicators and adapting accordingly. It doesn't seem malicious it seems perfectly reasonable and sane. Of course it's Amazon so there is another layer of context, but this is a rational and normal investor response.
I don't understand how its rational unless you assume staff have negative value. They don't, they have positive value, nothing gets done without staff. More staff means you output more work and make more money. Staff should be the last thing to cut.
A $10 bill has positive value as well. Nevertheless, buying them in bulk for $15 each is a bad idea. (Merely having positive value is not enough to make something a good purchase.)
Staff has negative value when demand growth doesn't meet a companies forecasts. You are right there should always be positive output from staff, but it doesn't mean that there is a demand for said output.
I think when you say value you aren't speaking fiscally. If that's the case then I would say I'm not trying to minimize the output of workers being laid off. I'm just saying that the value of their output isn't marketable to consumers, so from a capitalist perspective a company should rationally make adjustments.
If the value of their output isn't marketable, put them on a project that is. Having the workers suffer from their manager's decision makings for these divisions is cold and cruel.
That isn't the way a business works. There is no intrinsic value to "staff", positive or negative. The value comes from the way staff (or any other resources) is utilized. Building twice as many widgets by building and staffing a second factory could have a huge negative value if there is no demand for twice as many widgets in the market, for example.
Staff does have a negative intrinsic value- they are paid salaries. If (and only if) the business can deliver on some arbitrary stated goals, it’s more valuable if it can do so with fewer people on staff.
I was obviously referring to the net change in business value. Additional employees can be result in a net negative or a net positive return on investment depending on how they are utilized. That was what I was trying to communicate.
So then the solution is to not fire people, but manage them better on something more profitable. What makes you more money in this pet example you've set up: having 1 widget factory, or two factories producing different widgets that are both in demand? The latter, obviously, or else amazon would still be entirely in the business of selling books today.
> but manage them better on something more profitable.
Well, yeah. I mean the entire endeavor of operating a for-profit business is to find the combination of resources/effort/ideas that creates value. The problem space is enormous though and more often leads to failure than success. If you see a successful combination though, stop posting here and start your own business!
if the employees that were cut were working on a product that was losing money, then its more akin to liposuction. Its not about the employee's skills either, it's the business unit. If you start cutting database or network engineers on the AWS team, now we're talking about cutting off limbs.
Put another way, lots of startups are failing or are going to fail in this environment. Layoffs are like killing "internal startups" that aren't moneymakers.
Why is it better to lay people off than to just put that labor on something more profitable? If labor isn't productive that's not a labor issue, thats a management issue from them mismanaging their labor. It's a shame these workers have to suffer from being mismanaged.
>If labor isn't productive that's not a labor issue, thats a management issue from them mismanaging their labor
You're assuming that any group of talented people can have a 100% track record of success. Some startups (or projects) just fail and it has nothing to do with the talent.
You gotta take bets on new products/markets and sometimes they don't pan out. Sometimes it's just a market issue. There's not always a way to know if it was going to fail beforehand either. If we want innovation, then unfortunately I think these types of sh*tshows are part of the deal, although a 17,000 layoff is pretty gnarly.
Amazon is one of the largest online retailers, and one of the largest vendors of compute capacity to other companies. They are better positioned to see a downturn coming than almost anyone else. What makes you think they got it wrong?
I don't think they got it wrong, I just think layoffs are foolish because staff generate the profits for your business. Does Amazon really need to cut costs? For 2022, revenue was up 15% year over year. The only thing bad going on with Amazon in this economy currently is their stock price, not their profitability or how much cash they have or how many workers they are able to afford.
People are acting like workers are belly fat, I see them as bone and muscle and organs. A business cannot generate a profit without its workers performing profitable work. If the workers aren't doing something profitable, look at your managers dictating that work, not the labor that is along for the ride.
Also, it's worth remembering that the number of Amazon shareholders, and the number of people impacted by Amazon's stock price as a component of index funds, is vastly larger than the number of Amazon employees.
> It's crazy that AMZN announces this and the stock goes up in after hours trading.
No it isn't. It is quite typical for a companies stock to spike up after a layoff announcement especially when the number was higher than initially reported.
Meta especially went up because their biggest problem is mark going rogue. Investors have no control over him and he’s been continuously signaling over the last year that he has no interest in listening to them. The layoffs were a token that showed he hadn’t totally turned his back. A bit of a unique situation.
Market analysts often view cost cutting measures like layoffs as a favorable sign for near term growth. While it makes a lot of sense to view this as an indicator of trouble, it's more often spin as an indicator of a well led company that recognized the problem and is already on the way back up.
Synically, an argument can be made that those largely driving the markets are looking for any reason to make money. It doesn't actually matter much what the news is, just get ahead of the market movement then start turning dials and pushing sentiment.
But the sum of all people who aren't "rich" don't own very much stock (as a proportion.) And 99% of the ones that do own that stock indirectly through a fund with added management costs and management risk.
To put the current situation in perspective, the last unemployment rate reading was 3.7%, a level so low that it was never hit in the entire period 1970-2018.
The funny thing is like 8 months ago amazon was hiring engineers with 4 years of experience for 350-400k. These people aren’t even good programmers. And now they need to cut.
You can make it to L5/6 without being a good engineer. I interviewed several Uber/Amazon engineers and they couldn't solve a simple problem (very easy problem that most bootcamp grads could do).
A lot of them get there by being interviewed by other bad engineers, and just float when the market is strong, or use politics to get in a good position.
A guy at my company just merges library upgrade PRs blindly. That's all he does. He fought getting dependabot up on Github, but he finally conceded. He hasn't done a commit since. I've reported it to management, but I was told it wasn't our team's responsibility.
There are tons of dark corners to hide in at big companies.
He didn’t say that L5’s at Amazon are stupid. He said that there are lots of L5’s at Amazon who are bad engineers. It doesn’t even have to be a majority rather than a noticeable minority.
Eh, it's a big enough minority that it paints all of us (as someone that used to be an Amazon L5 who constantly received microaggressions from others for being "stupid" because I worked at Amazon) poorly.
> I interviewed several Uber/Amazon engineers and they couldn't solve a simple problem (very easy problem that most bootcamp grads could do).
I don't know you personally, and I don't want to start a flame war here, but if there's one thing FAANG senior engineers are good at, it's solving simple coding problems in interviews
If you're saying they can't actually proactively get useful work done on their own, or quickly ship quality products, or talk to customers, I could understand. But basically the only thing that you can be 100% sure of is that almost everyone at those big companies passed some arbitrary coding tests
If you've moved up from L4 to L6 at a faang, chances are that you haven't spent a lot of time solving simple interviewing coding problems. You've likely spent time on the interviewer side, but the number of problems you're interacting with is small.
At some point, a faang engineer was good at solving those, but that might not be their current state
This runs contrary to my firsthand experience. Have been disappointed by Amazon engineers who couldn't solve simple level-1 problems in an interview. I know there are smart people there. Somewhere. Else.
One time the candidate had a bunch of video games out in plain view (Switch and Xbox, IIRC). Apparently couldn't be bothered to put them away for the remote interview. They proceeded to flail and scored a zero on every question. What are people thinking in these scenarios? -_-
You generally only get good at interview problems when you're entering the door. After that, interview questions generally have nothing to do with your job.
Also, as you move beyond entry level positions, political skills, communications skills and connections becomes more and more important. Unless you happen to be at some massive growth teams at the right times, it's basically impossible to move beyond ICT4 or L5 unless both you and your boss have very good grasp of politics.
Depends on how long you've been in a position, and if you've had time to practice.
5 years out of college, worked in a single place all those years, without ever touching data structures or algorithms under the hood? Yes, I can absolutely see even experienced programmers stumble on relatively "easy" questions.
But that's just the gatekeeper to get them inside the door. You could be a good engineer without knowing how to find the optimal solution to some niche problem, on the spot.
> I interviewed several Uber/Amazon engineers and they couldn't solve a simple problem (very easy problem that most bootcamp grads could do).
That's probably why you're interviewing them. I doubt the ones who are good at their job are leaving as much as the ones who aren't. This is like reverse survivorship bias.
I know where the real Amazon talent is at there. However I won't say. Most of the talent isn't great and just fills the void of too much work for one person to do so that the amazing talent can have a weekend.
For one thing, if by your own analysis, these companies' interviewing processes aren't effective, there's logically a conclusion that yours also aren't, given that interview processes are fairly similar among big tech companies. I've even also heard of an interviewer trying to tell a director with a straight face that a high level IC candidate (L6/L7 IIRC) from a prestigious big tech couldn't solve a "simple" problem at one of those companies. Leetcode style questions aren't even necessarily good proxies for whether an engineer is actually effective at their job or not (and yes, a good number of FAANGers openly admit here and elsewhere that they needed to grind leetcode to pass interviews at these companies).
Another thing is that Uber and Amazon are fairly competitive w/ other more prestigious FAANGs in terms of compensation. A decent staff eng at Uber isn't going to be very interested in grinding leetcode for a equivalent role at Google, the compensation delta is just not appealing[0]
I agree to an extent. When Amazon goes on a hiring spree, they really do open up the floodgates. I suppose they rely on their infamous PIP-and-fire process to weed out those who shouldn't have come through. "Hire first, evaluate later."
They just solve a few leetcode problems. The company is constantly failing to launch good tech due to technical debt and lack of ability of the engineers
My favorite interview question was "Do you know Leetcode?". I said yes and prepared my brain for the problem-solving portion of the interview. But no. That was the question with no follow-up. One of the two got sent back to the offshore team and even eventually to the offshore's offshore team, and the other guy got sent back but then somehow returned to the onshore offshore team.
In ~2020 there were about ~67k software engineers at Amazon (aka had access to the source-control posix group), so unless you don't want Amazon to exist anymore I don't think that's plausible.
> As of December 31, 2021, we employed approximately 1,608,000 full-time and part-time employees. Additionally, we use independent contractors and temporary personnel to supplement our workforce.
It's really not difficult to imagine how ~1 in 10 can be chopped while still surviving.
Here’s a thought that has been percolating in my mind for a bit since these “market adjustments” began a month or two back.
Somehow at some point, in what perhaps could be blamed on the ever-hated mass produced MBAs - companies got really comfortable with the “it’s not personal, it’s just good business” of letting go of their employees for a slightest reason, or sometimes for no reason at all - just to make it look to their investors like they got their shit together.
We are seeing a bit of a market downturn - but it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it? Are they in danger of running out of money? What happened to “people are our most important resource”?
And this brings me to my main point - I think years of this has had an unexpected side-effect the companies never signed up for: people started treating companies they way companies treating people and we are starting to see the results - quiet quitting, oft bemoaned lack of loyalty, job hopping, etc. Now I am not saying it’s all new, but at least in my observation it’s peaking now and my thesis is these things are connected.
They got sucked into the "new normal" that never was, and was never going to be.
We are seeing a massive return to the old normal, which means people are going back to offices (not WFH) people are going back to shopping in person not online, people are going back to eating in restaurants not using Grub Hub or ordering online. etc etc etc
I think you are wrong. Not completely, but I think you missed the massive change in attitudes that took place the past few years. WFH is likely going to stay in some shape or form since it is clear it can work ( and heavens know emplopyers full remote positions have their pick of qualified candidates ) and likely some RTO will follow ( with another round of - likely muted due to recession - resignations ), but I would hesitate to conclude that good old days are here again. I am not going back.
WFH and ft remote was always a thing. It was not invented for COVID.
So of course some WFH positions will still exist but based on my alerts for different roles the number of full time WFH jobs have dropped off the cliff back down to what I would consider precovid levels
Do they really need to "try" by laying peole off? Why is this the standard move despite the business and finances still booming? It's a weird MBA monkey mimicry game.
I dislike Amazon yet continue to order stuff at the same rate. How many non-government entities have a base like this? Seems like an enviable position.
How many layoff announcements have you seen where the company says "We'd love to keep pursuing this but we flat out can't afford to pay you, we are out of money"? I've seen zero. I understand some of this is prudent financial planning, especially for SMBs, but SFDC and AMZN.. they must be using different calculus.
Amazon appears less dependent on the nearly-free-money-gravy-train compared to most businesses, especially VC and startups.
Companies, especially tech companies, invest in their future. Sometimes those bets don’t pay off, sometimes it’s because of external factors. That doesn’t mean those were bad bets necessarily, they just got unlucky. It does mean investors want them to move on to something else though, even if the company as a whole isn’t in a crisis.
If your best guess for what the market is going to be in 3-5 years is now half what you were guessing last week, surely that means you make some changes, and past a certain point you want to make a bigger change than what's going to happen by just freezing hiring and waiting for natural attrition. I'm no fan of companies doing this, but the logic makes sense.
So true. Which company predicted there would be a global pandemic starting at the end of 2019? None. Impossible to predict. Which company predicted 9/11? None. Shit happens, and nobody is a prophet.
Amazon and all of these companies are laying people off based on future forecasts, not based on the current economy. Regardless of if people are first, no company wants teams sitting around not doing anything. I've been laid off, it sucks, but just because Amazon is making money today doesn't mean it will be tomorrow.
What’s unusual about this cycle though is that it’s the fear of a recession due to fed policy that is causing companies to cut back. In past cycles fed policy caused a recession nobody predicted and companies suddenly found their earnings in the toilet and made enormous cuts in head count, R&D spending, etc.
Something about this cycle and these cuts feels I dunno, manufacturered or something. Like are 7k high paying jobs at a salesforce indicative of an economy collapsing while the overall labor market is still extremely tight and you’re not hearing about similar layoffs throughout all industries?
All of these cuts seem to be follow the leader because we’re worried and I would not be that surprised to see the reality in the overall economy be much better than feared and these same companies hiring again before year end. It probably doesn’t hurt from the c level perspective that Wall Street tends to welcome job cuts at least in the short term. Although it can certainly do lasting damage to morale within a company.
There’s preliminary data that shows a recession is currently underway. This is reactionary. if the fed cuts rates and stop’s quantity tightening then sure, Amazon will likely u-turn. But that’s due to a situational change.
I think a great deal of this situation is narrative based. People are generally terrible at predicting earnings six months out as well as recessions and if we get a major recession it would easily be the most widely anticipated recession in history.
First it starts with higher than expected CPI followed by hawkish fed policy. People learned their lesson last cycle and became worried that rate hikes as in past cycles would cause a deep recession and began adjusting immediately rather than wait for a recession. This is evidenced by the fact that the S&P peaked about four months before the Fed even hiked one time.
That’s a very important point that I think many overlook. When you are completely ignorant of impending danger you are most susceptible to damage. When you’re terrified of getting punched in the face you’re going to take drastic measures to protect yourself and in the process likely not get punched at all.
Meanwhile rates have moved very little in 3 months indicating (to me at least) that the bond market believes rate hikes are ending very soon.
When the fed commits to hiking rates to slow the economy, it almost always leads to recession. You'd have to be a hyper optimist to not plan for a recession, as an individual, or a business.
Someone tell Apple there was a "Great Recession". A little thing called iPhone made that irrelevant for them.
I started my career during the Great Recession. Wasn't a problem for me. A recession is an aggregate, but during every economic condition there are both losers and winners. You don't want to overreact to every shift in the wind.
They have very little credibility currently because of past miscues beginning in 2018. The fed has to talk tough because if they were to say “we probably aren’t going to hike much more” markets would likely rebound, easing liquidity and making their job of reducing inflation harder if not impossible.
The problem is that it seems the bond market sees through this and isn’t buying the tough talk. I think most people believe the fed and buy into the popular narrative that taking rates from zero to 4.5% will decimate the economy (even though 4% is actually very normal historically and anything under 4 was considered quite low).
Watch what happens with fed policy if CPI comes in well beneath expectations next Thursday.
Exactly and this is because unofficial fed policy is to follow the popular narrative. When it shifts to they have to stop hiking believe me, they will stop hiking.
Tech has been one of the most affected by the grow at all costs mentality that is untenable when capital is not essentially free.
In other words, tech saw the largest and fastest inflationary valuation period in decades under loose fed policy. It’s now seeing a similarly fast contraction.
The reason we’re not seeing similar cuts across the board (or at least as significant) is that they also didn’t grow as significantly in the years prior.
That’s true and a lot of enterprise customers are similarly cutting spending in anticipation of the recession which I’m sure is having impacts on these companies now. But again I believe that is based on fear as opposed to a strict need to cut spending.
"It's a recession when your neighbor loses their job. It's a depression when you lose yours."
I think this is just availability bias. Ordinary people - the ones who aren't glued to CNBC or the WSJ - tend to measure the strength of the economy by the job market for their friends and neighbors. The job market, right now, is pretty strong for ordinary people. Hence it "feels" like boom times, and that all the chicken littles are nuts.
Here in Silicon Valley, working for a FAANG, it's definitely recession time. And interestingly, it seems like the higher you get up the corporate ladder, the more you're worried. The ordinary employees basically just do their jobs and gripe about how bonuses are smaller this year, holiday parties are wimpier, and travel budgets have been cut. Managers complain about how we have to stack-rank employees and fret about whether we'll eventually have to execute a layoff. Directors worry about how their headcount and budgets have been cut. Our CEO seems visibly anxious.
I've learned that it's a bad sign when the people with the most information are the most worried. My cue to stock up on toilet paper pre-COVID was when I heard a leak that the CDC had told all their own employees to make sure they had at least a 3 month stock of everything. I realized the Ukraine war was serious when Biden snapped "We're trying to avoid WW3 here" while the official party line was that this was a regional conflict that would be over in a couple weeks. I'm a bit worried about this Bay Area storm going on right now because the meteorologists seem more freaked out than the general public. Similarly, it's worrying when CEOs are more anxious than their employees about economic conditions.
The popular narrative is that these are just a bunch of bloated tech companies laying off surplus employees that don't do anything useful. I don't buy that. I think the American populace has no idea what's about to hit them, and the economy's going to go straight off a cliff in 2023H1.
I agree with the rationale overall ( people at helm being worried as a signal ). I try to look for similar clues.
Still, as far as tech goes, for some companies that relied on cheap money, the ride may well be over ( I think of weird products like Peleton, which is a niche product, but was scaled as if it was going to become a thing in every house ). I am not sure it translates to everything going out with a bang.
Today's news were that job market[1] is still fine despite clear attempts to make it employer's market again.
> The popular narrative is that these are just a bunch of bloated tech companies laying off surplus employees that don't do anything useful.
Wrong. not only surplus employees but surplus elites.
in recent years, big tech paid bloated compensations to people producing little or no economic value. saw first hand professional managers dont understand tech get hired by friends and collectively engage in empire building and building head count. easy promotion game.
engineers create complexity for smallest problem and launch new services. get promoted. then they get hell out and move to new team. managers willingly accept tech debt to justify more head count hire more managers and engineers under them.
you tell us what innovation come out of amazon fire alexa kindle. same thing they sold 5 years ago same hardware maybe little bit better speaker. why pay for increasing army of engineers? and me just discussing amazon devices.
how many engineers you need to run website? has shopping gotten better in 5 years? No! it way worse, too many ads.
this a massive grift. Most value amazon gets is these people don’t start their own company and threat amazon with competition.
big tech took advantage of cheap or free money from US Fed and created class of elites. Now the game ending for now anyway
> Something about this cycle and these cuts feels I dunno, manufactured or something.
It's absolutely manufactured to the extent that the Fed is intentionally trying to slow demand (aka: cause a recession) in order to stop inflation. The problem is, a large portion of inflation (some indicators are half) is simple price gouging, which Fed measures won't impact, and another large portion is simple ongoing supply chain problems, which the Fed also can't really fix. All they can do is force a recession.
What I mean is that in past cycles companies suddenly found themselves in distress they did not expect.
This time however, everyone is calling for a recession so are battening down the hatches while earnings are still very strong. It’s unprecedented and shows how societies adapt as they learn and focus on new factors.
When the yield curve and the relationship between fed policy and the economy was little known and ignored and instead most people focused on trends in earnings or real estate or whatever the hot thing of the day was, the significance of fed policy and rates was huge. Now everyone is laser focused on the fed which changes behavior which changes outcomes.
The worst recessions blindside virtually everyone and are so severe precisely because people are taking the most risk when things are most dire. Think the lead up to 1929, 2000, 2008, the Florida real estate boom of the 1920’s, etc.
The Fed is trying to trigger a recession, although they'll never come out and say it, because they want to increase the unemployment rate. Increased unemployment will put a stop to both price and wage inflation. At this point the Fed is trying to prevent a wage price spiral and a resetting of expectations among the public towards more inflation.
> The Fed is trying to trigger a recession, although they'll never come out and say it
Oh, they are not shy about it, it's just a little obfuscated by the jargon they use. One of the Fed's explicit goal is to lower "consumer demand", i.e. make people buy less stuff. Employment numbers are a function of demand, and the Fed has no means of directly tweaking employment numbers, but they can nudge demand (indirectly) by raising or lowering interest rates.
Nah it’s more complicated than that. The fed is saying that because it’s currently a populist view. However their will to actually cause widespread distress and a severe recession will be tested when the populist view shifts back which we are likely not far from.
If you look at this fed from 2018 on it’s readily apparent that everything they do is to appease the popular narrative. Economy needs rescuing from covid? Okay let’s take rates to zero and pump in liquidity until we’re told to stop.
Fast forward to end of 2021- okay stop stop stop! Inflation is getting out of control! Sure, no problem we will raise rates until you tell us to stop, just signal to us before each meeting exactly how much to do.
That sounds silly but does nobody find it at all odd that every fomc rate decision is entirely arbitrary whether they go 25, 50, 75 or more and yet cnbc predicts the exact rate decision every time? Believe this fed has a modicum of independence at your own peril.
Besides, the Fed’s actions don’t align- if they really wanted a recession why the gradual hikes from 25 when inflation was spiking? Why not a sudden move to say, 7%? It’s been almost a year since the first hike and over a year since they first announced they would be hiking and we’re still sub 5%. The rate hikes they’re doing are way overblown in terms of driving the economy into recession given the tailwind of liquidity we had. Most companies aren’t cutting back because their short term borrowing costs went up 100 bps in six months.
> That sounds silly but does nobody find it at all odd that every fomc rate decision is entirely arbitrary whether they go 25, 50, 75 or more and yet cnbc predicts the exact rate decision every time?
That's because the Fed communicates what their next steps are likely to be beforehand. And if circumstances change and predictions are no longer correct, the Fed leaks information before their meeting to make them correct. That's what happened with the first 75 hike in this cycle.
In my recollection the fed actually ruled out a 75 bps hike back in the summer for basically no reason which many thought was a huge mistake then quickly reversed course when cpi came in much higher than expected and did hike 75. Yet another reason why they have very little credibility.
Fed funds futures predict what they will do -> cnbc talking heads use fed funds futures in their predictions -> the fed does what everyone thinks they will, rinse and repeat
Both parties treating the transaction as simply a business transaction is a good thing for society.
Pretending that there is some value to "loyalty" in a vendor/customer relationship is silly, and only hurts you.
Job hopping is a good thing for price discovery, and keeps wages for skilled workers going up as inflation eats away at them. Layoffs in downturns are an expected consequence of workers getting more expensive (ie capturing more of their economic value in their paychecks).
> We are seeing a bit of a market downturn - but it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it? Are they in danger of running out of money? What happened to “people are our most important resource”?
Companies plan for where the market is going, not last quarter’s results. It’s fully clear to everyone that the economy has shifted dramatically. They are adjusting as appropriate.
Also, these people will be laid off with severance. They were compensated toward the top of market (considering all tech companies) while they were employed. They have Amazon on their resume, which makes future job easier than average. I’m really not concerned about laid off (with severance) FAANG employees relative to the people earning literally 1/10th their comp who are losing jobs without severance.
> people started treating companies they way companies treating people and we are starting to see the results - quiet quitting, oft bemoaned lack of loyalty, job hopping, etc.
I really don’t think this is an appropriate comparison. The whole “quiet quitting” thing isn’t going to hurt companies like Amazon because they’ll just PIP the person out and replace them with the tens of thousands of qualified people wanting to get hired at Amazon and do good work. When some “quiet quits” it’s usually their peers who pay the price because the absentee coworker isn’t get their part of the team project done. Makes more work for everyone else, makes groups projects late, and potentially brings down performance reviews of people depending on their work to get their own work done. It’s not fair to write “quiet quitting” off as only affecting the company, because the company is going to be fine. It’s the coworkers who bear the brunt.
(Source: Had some “quiet quit” team members over my career, suffered greatly during those times)
the parent comment talks about "these companies". what happens when less prominent companies take a cue from fangs and start booting people out, only with crappier severance and crappier resumes? this is far from the last layoff.
In my whole career it was very rare that someone from my network helped. All calls for help would be met with a polite "sure" and then went missing. Some give me a lecture on how to lower my expectations or something else.
My “network” includes external recruiters. I’ve met them for lunch, in their office etc.
Mostly boutique shops. I only dealt with local recruiters in my former city (Atlanta) before remote work got to be big. I haven’t looked for a job post Covid.
Hopefully, I will never have to look for a job again. When I leave my current job - hopefully by choice - I will be semi-retired and doing consulting gigs (not staff augmentation).
Ironically, I work for the very company that this article is about. But, I work in the consulting department at AWS. There is a direct easy to measure metric of how much my work contributes to the bottom line compared to my compensation - I’m a billable consultant.
I think people have differing opinions on what a "network" means.
Some people define their network as professionals they know, even casually. That type of network isn't particularly useful. Other networks are people that you've provided some value to in some way so they know you're a valuable resource. Often, this means going out of your way to show value when there's little in it for you. That type of network is much more valuable because you've formed a relationship that goes beyond just "knowing a guy."
> They were compensated toward the top of market (considering all tech companies) while they were employed.
Yea but no. This isn’t about Amazon, it’s about business culture writ large. Also not everyone at Amazon is a software engineer, and therefore it paid crazy amounts.
> When some “quiet quits” it’s usually their peers who pay the price because the absentee coworker isn’t get their part of the team project done
Quiet quitting is simply doing your job but not being a “try-hard” and not trying to get ahead or go above-and-beyond. It’s a lack of loyalty and treating your job as a trade of exactly 8hrs with a paycheck. If your coworker wasn’t doing their work, they didn’t quiet quit.
> It’s the coworkers who bear the brunt.
Sounds like a manager (company) treating workers poorly. If a factory had people quit and expected everyone else work extra hours, it’d be a labor violation. If they’re doing that to knowledge workers we say it’s laziness?
Conversely, if you had a coworker who worked 8 hours a day, did their job, and didn’t try to give extra, you shouldn’t fall behind unless management had exploitative expectations.
(Source: I have a soul and work. Managers tried to make me suffer greatly at times).
>If a factory had people quit and expected everyone else work extra hours
Extra hours to cover is fairly common in factory work. What differentiated it in my experience is there was a union to ensure people were adequately compensated for overtime.
And that means that companies are incentivised to hire adequately. Whereas companies see no immediate (and attributable, this is important) problems when exempt employees are pushed to work overtime.
The idea behind quiet quitting is based around the idea of shooting for a 3 on a scale of 1-to-5 instead of shooting for a 4 or 5: AFTER management has dropped the ball and failed to acknowledge their efforts. People have twisted this to mean "I am going to do the bare minimum without getting fired" -- these people very quickly end up on PIPs or equivalent at many other companies, not just stricter employers like Amazon.
As an aside, it doesn't really make sense to quiet quit as a SWE for the sole reason of there still a ton of career upside for those who do good work[1]. If you're thinking of quiet quitting you probably just need a better employer.
[1] "Good work" as in people who actually get stuff done and produce good software, not those who merely just grind long hours to impress founders.
"I have six bosses bob, my only real motivation is not to get hassled that and fear of losing my job. But here's the thing bob, that gets someone to work just hard enough to avoid getting fired." - Office Space
Thank you for this sentence that helps to correct my perspective.
Not everyone is aiming high, some just want to go home and tend e.g. to their garden or walk the dog.
Isn't getting PIP'd and then fired not, "bare minimum to not get fired" though?
Sounds like those folks are doing much less than required not to be fired.
My understanding of "quiet quitting" was
a) it's a stupid term made up to give people a sense that they're in control of something they're not - needing to work to survive and;
b) you were explicitly not trying to climb any ladder and merely doing your job as it was described, not shooting for promotions or accolades of any kind.
"Quiet quit" team members are 100% fine to have around IMO, as long as they stay out of the way of the folks trying to take on the larger/harder problems. That's the thing I reject about modern workplaces: this idea that everyone has to be "progressing" or "climbing" all the time.
It's totally cool to punch in/punch out 9-5, it just needs to be clear that's what the role is, and how much that reduces your ability to determine what it is you work on during those hours.
I’m pretty sure I first saw “quiet quitting” coming from, like, the productivity fetishist LinkedIn set, or something along those lines (although I could be wrong, this was not allocated a high-priority sector of memory). Which is to say, I think it is a term originally intended to shame employees who are simply fulfilling their responsibilities. I
guess it has been reclaimed or something, though?
> Companies plan for where the market is going, not last quarter’s results. It’s fully clear to everyone that the economy has shifted dramatically. They are adjusting as appropriate.
It goes both ways. If you planned so poorly and hired so fast that a minor perturbation in the market causes you to fire 17,000 people, you're still communicating that you putting profits above people.
17K people is about 1% of total employees. While each of these job losses matters a lot to the people involved, a 1% reduction in the face of what is surely more than a 10% change in medium-term projections is hardly proof of crazy over-hiring or terrible planning.
There’s no doubt that Amazon puts profits over people. They’re a profit-seeking enterprise (and a fairly effective one at that).
It's only one product that does one thing: shows videos. It's huge and great but I still think we should replace it with AirBnb, which also has high salaries, in the acronym.
The number of products produced by a given company has never been part of the definition of FANG. And the exact companies in the acronym don't really matter anymore anyway; the overall 'vibe' of it is simply top-tier tech companies, i.e. those that pay the most. Agreed that AirBnb should also qualify, but the exact companies that fit are fluid and it doesn't make sense to keep changing the acronym all the time as the constituent companies change, as the overall idea doesn't change. E.g. consider the Dow Jones index; the constituent companies have changed over time but the name of the index doesn't.
So FAANG is defined by nothing more than tech + high salary? Why wouldn't, say, a high paying fintech be included?
I think the real answer is that those companies were all high growth/high cap stocks. The guy who originally coined the term (Jim Cramer) has dropped Netflix from the list because their capitalization hasn't kept pace. (He also changed the acronym when Facebook was changed to meta)
It has a life of its own way beyond Jim Cramer these days (also Jim Cramer is pretty terrible at being a pundit overall).
As for fintech companies, it's just a different field, with different norms, expectations, and overall pay structure. It's also a much smaller field in total.
Or maybe the MBA graduates are just fixing the sinking ship that engineering teams created with over-promising technology and demanding growth for their teams so that they could get bigger budgets: VR, meal delivery, AI, etc. ?
I have an MBA man I wish I was one of these master of the universes deciding to hire and fire 17,000 people at a company. Do you need the Stanford MBA, Harvard, Wharton? Does Berkeley suffice these days or do you still need the private Ivy League degree first?
This was covered in ArsTechnica [1] and it seems like they are laying off a large portion of the Alexa team because it doesn't make a profit. I bought the Alexa when it first came out and it had and still has a great UI. When the Alexa launched I made a skill on the platform which I don't think anyone really downloaded. What confused me the most was Amazon never allowed for paid skills (which I really think was an extremely bad move) and it appears they just internally justified it as a loss leader but no developer would touch it from a ten foot pole. Cutting something that is a cost center is pretty much standard if you aren't showing as much growth that is expected for you. Therefore, cutting something that costs you ten billion dollars sounds pretty justified to me when they could have profited from it instead.
EDIT:
Guess I didn't do my research about paid skills...
Alexa is a bit of a mystery. The plan apparently was:
1. Sell millions of devices at cost. Unrelenting sales on Echo devices
2. ???
3. Profit
And Step 2 was never filled in. Maybe it was "if people can re-order paper towels by shouting at Alexa, we'll sell more paper towels". But that plan has its limits.
What's the mystery? It was to get in on the device platform game: walled garden, app store, ads, subscriptions, control, etc., same as Google, Apple, Meta, and even Microsoft and Sony.
??? was "monetize skills" to which they could take a cut of it.
The problem was that it was rather difficult to do for a while and the "here's a great ecosystem of games and tools" never materialized for echo devices.
Part of that is that people really don't know how to to do voice interfaces well.
Another part is that it has to run on AWS which has all the AWS sizing and billing problems that need to be solved by programmers (we're programmers - not SREs - and its really easy to rack up a too large bill on AWS).
As such, in order to try to monetize a skill (which wasn't possible at first) you needed to commit to spending some AWS money to try to get it. Discovery of Alexa skills was poor at best. Free skills normally end up costing money (and not just time) for the programmer.
And so, a possible revenue stream for Alexa has never realized.
> Part of that is that people really don't know how to to do voice interfaces well.
Maybe that'll change now with ChatGPT. The problem I have with voice interfaces is you need something at the level of AGI to make it compelling. I could have an hours-long engaging voice-only conversation with a real person, but what the hell am I going to do with a dumb "smart" speaker that will be even a fraction as engaging as, say, a videogame? 99% of my smart speaker use cases are: Setting timers/alarms, querying the weather, turning on/off the lights, playing songs/podcasts/videos. For anything more interesting/interactive than that, you need more intelligence than existing systems actually have.
I believe that GPT is an enormous step forward for the voice interface. My favorite example is to give a csv of hourly weather data and it comes back with a human-esque interpretation of it. Not just the rules engine approach that you get from websites...
Summarize the following weather forecast for tomorrow
12 am, 2° F, clear, 15 mph
1 am, 2° F, clear, 15 mph
2 am, 1° F, clear, 14 mph
Tomorrow's forecast will be cold and clear with temperatures dropping from 2°F to 1°F and winds of around 15mph decreasing to 14mph.
That's a small token example - give it the full 24h and its right on.
Give it the proper data in a machine reasonable format and as it to make it into a human summary, and that's where its strength appears to be.
The problem is that GPT would be too expensive for Amazon Alexa right now.
I always thought Alexa was just a play to get more data, especially data about apps/services outside Amazon's ecosystem. Every time you tell Alexa to play a song (on Spotify) or turn up the temperature (on the smart thermostat), Amazon is analyzing that data. Maybe they'll start showing you ads for sweaters since they know you're always cold. LOL
Also, the more you ask Alexa a question, the less you search on Google. And that's gotta be worth a bunch to Amazon. At least I thought it was.
Being able to easily lay off employees means that the companies are much happier hiring, too. Most of those fired will likely land another job soon, precisely because their new employer does not have to treat their hiring as a multi-year commitment.
Europe, which makes it very hard to let an employee go, tends to have significantly higher unemployment than the US, which is much more cavalier about layoffs. My 2c.
Yeah, there could have been a lot more substance but to be honest a disappointingly large number participants here don't seem to understand that very basic principle when they engage in discussions here.
To be clear, the parent to my comment seemed to completely understand TANSTAAFL. My comment was very obliquely directed at other participants in the larger conversation who seem to think that there is no legitimate reason for an employer to ever let a single employee go because any competent business will work like an oracle and make perfect business decisions always. Any unexpected outcome must be because they are greedy corporate monsters that don't care about their employees. (my apologies for the exaggeration but you should have seen what I wrote and deleted previously :-)
Also Australia. From the outside (and this could well be the wrong take), it seems as though “at will employment” leads to cultural problems. People are afraid to speak their mind, and hierarchy becomes dominant.
I like that Australia is a bit more egalitarian, and people can “speak truth to power”.
Having worked salary jobs in tech in both countries, I can tell you that hierarchies are a much bigger thing in Germany than in the U.S. In tech companies as well as in academia, FWIW. Her Professor, Herr Direktor, these are actually still a thing in Germany.
You might want to rephrase that because the way you stated it just seems kinda silly, as if somehow titled-obsessed idiots don't exist in US companies or something...
I have worked in UK/Aus and for US owned/run and French owned/run (from aus) and aus owned/run (and others, I’m getting old). There definitely seemed to be a cultural difference with US based employees being much more reluctant to say anything negative (but this may have been nothing to do with at-will). I had assumed this was because they were afraid of losing their jobs by pissing off the wrong person, but it may well be something else entirely causing that.
In Australia, you have the opposite problem of randoms going “that’ll never work” to a CEO (which is not exactly endearing).
Wages for SWEs are lower than other comparable countries in Europe, Canada, and APAC (SG, AU, NZ) and Japanese fluency (not a PR requirement but still needed to live in Japan) is hard to acquire. Why deal with the headache of learning a hard to learn language not spoken outside of a handful of islands in the Northern Pacific with a very insular culture when you can become a German or Canadian national for much less effort.
The things you complain about do not equate to a "hostile immigration policy that is against permanency".
SWE wages are lower than the US, yes, but not Europe in my experience. Japanese fluency is not needed for PR or even citizenship (you do need a little ability for naturalization). You don't need to be fluent to live in Japan; most of the expats I know are not fluent at all.
German is also a very difficult language to learn, and you won't go far in Germany without it. It's much easier to be English-only in Japan than in Germany, in my experience.
I'll copy an earlier comment I made on a separate thread specifically with South Asia in mind, but I've seen similar dynamics in ASEAN as well. Also, I think you are an L1 Japanese speaker. If you're L1 is Indo-European, other Indo-European languages tend to be easier to learn.
Why go to Japan (in reality only Tokyo) where median software TC is around $60k [0] when you can go to Canada where median software TC is around $90k [1] and English speaking, let alone other English speaking and relatively easy to immigrate Western countries with large South Asian communities like the UK (95k) [2], Netherlands (87k) [3], Germany (77k) [4], Australia (100k) [5], Norway ($74k) [6], or Singapore (73k) [7].
I don't see a huge difference between $60k and $77k for instance, and it all depends on your actual job offers.
Regardless, while I don't disagree with your facts, the original claim (not by you) was that Japan had a "hostile immigration policy that is against permanency". This is false, and sounds like a lie in fact, unless the OP just woke up from cryo-sleep after being frozen in 1985. Sure, there are real challenges to working and living in Japan if you're a native English speaker (which I am), but my whole point here is that legally, immigration here is actually very easy, contrary to the anti-Japan posts like the OP's that I frequently see on forums like this one. Immigration policy here is far, far more inviting than the US which claims to be open to immigration, yet has severe limits on visas and green cards and is legally extremely difficult and expensive to emigrate to.
Agreed that GP's comment is innacurate on that point, but...
Are you White? That's the differentiatng factor. If you're of South Asian or Chinese or SE Asian origin (not even nationality, origin), you face much less microagressions in other countries than you do in Japan. In general, factoring in CoL and the insular culture, Europe and other Asian countries tend to make sense. Heck, when I was backpacking out in Isan, while a number of people did go work in assembly lines or pick mushrooms in Japan on the JET visa, they preferred South Korea and Taiwan due to a (relatively) less insular culture than Japan, though Germany, the US, and Australia was the more popular option. This is reflected in diaspora demographics as well.
"Microaggressions"? Asian people in the US are getting physically attacked, brutally, in the streets. That doesn't happen in Japan.
Anyway, I don't know why you keep talking about this kind of thing. I'm addressing ease of immigration, not how welcoming people are in particular countries. The whole thread was started because someone outright lied about immigration laws, and you keep talking about culture, which has nothing to do with the discussion.
You can get rid of 20 people for next monday if you want to, you’ll just pay the due amount as defined in the contract and the law. It’s also not some astronomical amount, worst case scenario I think it’s around 6 months of pay, which isn’t that far from what you’d pay for a non compete for instance.
PS: also unemployment is a complicated figure, it’s hard to tell how much any specific variable impacts it. Unemployment rate goes up and down while laws stay mostly the same, so singling out labor laws is mostly an opinion at this point.
Yes. Companies having that choice is also interesting in that they get to decide if it's worth to have people come and go, as a replaceable resource.
For some company it totally works and they plan their staffing in 6 months spans (seen a small web agency basically having an "on" and "off" season, with half of the staff during the dead part), removing or adding people as they see fit. For others it's more difficult and they're pretty happy to have staff that can't just disappear within a month if they decide to go tour the Silk Road on a bike.
I’ve worked professionally since 1996. There has never been a day in my professional career that I thought of any job as any more than a means to support my addiction to food and shelter
I have no opinion on the MBA bit, but I think you're spot on about people starting to treat companies the way the companies are treating them.
~10 years ago, when I got my first job, I was in the minority, pretty much the only person cynical about big companies' claims how "people are our most important resource", how important is the company "culture" and all of that corporate kumbaya. And, at that point, the vast majority of people around me cared and wanted to do a good job, going up and beyond.
Fast forward to now, and pretty much everyone has the attitude of "f**k these guys", doesn't want to be there and will do the bare minimum to get by. And that's exactly what companies have demonstrated that they deserve.
People are tired of job hopping to get market pay, dealing with bulls**t, and being thrown under the bus at the slightest hint of an economic downturn.
Some companies operate differently too. Obviously they still watch the bottom line, but some aren't as reactionary and are willing to take more pain to keep employees because they understand the value of that goodwill. More commonly private companies with a strong-willed founder/leader.
Agreed. I work for a privately held company and am a bit less jaded about it. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t think the company is my friend or anything… but I know how much the owner hates layoffs on an emotional level and have seen the company do things like shifting everybody to 4.5 day weeks temporarily to avoid the need for layoffs. So I respect that.
I don't even think "pain to keep employees" is the right word here - Amazon for instance is still highly profitable, it's just that the profits went down a bit (which is to be expected if the economy is worse). But they're still laying off people just to make the bottom line look even better...
That's assuming the downturn is 100% explained by employees underperforming. It's more likely that market forces outside of these employees control caused the downturn.
The correct wording is “Amazon will do anything they deem necessary to make their shareholders happy, no matter if it’s profitable or not.”
I am convinced they have zero data indicating firing these people will be profitable on the long run, only that short term it is, and that’s all that shareholders are interested in.
I’m a big fan of any measure making stock exchange less volatile, like some form of tax on every transaction, to slow down the machine, make short term investments (speculation) less rewarding. This may help in reducing the appetite of shareholders for such short sighted measures.
Your argument is flawed. Reactionary firing tends to be inefficient, but makes shareholders happy on the short term.
Should a company prioritise shareholder happiness over efficiency is the real question here. Their losses don’t originate from these employees nor initiatives; it originates from market conditions.
I think it has more to do with the fact that @i_have_an_idea's blinders fell off. Also, at the same time, due to COVID and consequently mandatory WFM, many other people had the same epiphany, leading to so-called quiet-quitting.
Honestly I also feel there's another factor of a lot of depression as people look around and see that cynical view was the truth all along.
I see this too. The Covid restrictions led to people seeing through a lot of the false or thinly veiled assumptions that we live under. After that you are left with a more cynical and apathetic view of the world.
Could be also an age thing. I don't know how old you are but maybe ten years ago most of your colleagues were twenty somethings and now they are in their thirties or forties?
> ~10 years ago, when I got my first job, I was in the minority, pretty much the only person cynical about big companies' claims how "people are our most important resource"
eh what? even 15 years ago it was common knowledge to just jump around every few years to advance your career. maybe it wasn't all out "f* these guys" but we definitely had no illusions about employer "loyalty" lol.
An interesting thing that I have experienced is that a lot of recruiters and companies don’t care about your experience. All they care about is the exact experience they are looking for. In a world where most people stay in a position for a while, it’s only natural to gain a lot of experience and responsibility but not necessarily broad experience. So in that case, it would be very hard to switch jobs, industries, etc.
So what I am curious about is, did companies used to hire in less myopic ways?
Definitely yes. Over 25 years ago I started a second career, in tech. After 6 months in a Microsoft academic program I got hired by a Big Six accounting firm to do desktop support. My previous education was completely nontechnical (a BA and MA in history, and a JD), as was my experience (10 years as a trial lawyer). No way was I the most qualified on paper for that job, but the people who hired me saw something and acted. A year later I was able to move into a new job with better pay at a Fortune 200 company, originally hired to do applications analysis but shortly after found myself a lead desktop engineer and later a Unix sysadmin. At every turn I was fortunate to have hiring managers that looked beyond my resume to see the potential there.
Sure, in 1997 an HR person told me they needed someone with at least 5 years experience in Windows NT, but in general most interviews I had in the late 90s and early 00s were way less myopic. I'm not sure I'd have the same experience if starting out today.
You would think so but too many people get really comfortable and never expand their skills beyond the minimum required to do their current job. Last year I had an SRE position open I had to interview over three dozen people before I found one guy who could explain anything he had done in any detail. Everybody else was probably in the room when someone else did something, but could not give details of what was done, why it was done a particular way, or what they might do the same or differently if they did it again.
Some of the people I had to be honest with - if they are paying you the kind of money you say to reset passwords and stare at the wall, you should stay where you are and make sure that wall never leaves your sight.
You've been reiterating this across a few threads this month, right?
Perhaps it IS the widespread case that a lot of us are getting paid as SRE for much less than you believe an SRE should know. Ultimately, where you've set the bar is arbitrary
I always wonder how people who are only in the room when things happen have any pride in their work and aren't embarrassed at their lack of production. A couple jobs ago was people who put most of their effort in to making sure their group of shitty engineers wasn't found out. It was a lot of work! Since they were all about quantity of people over any quality, they had to keep hiring more people, so there was a lot of time and effort in to interviewing to make sure they only hired other shitty engineers of their same ilk. I was hired outside of their scheme so we weren't best of friends lets say.
I’ve never understood the people who make no effort to better themselves - they work in technology, everything has a 3-5 year engineering life, they should always be preparing for the next thing.
People often can’t control what technologies their employer uses, but if they have solid fundamentals and I can tell they have tried to learn things on their own, more often then not I’ll give them a chance, and it usually works out because they are doing what they really want to do, and they are always looking for ways to build upon and improve what they’ve worked on.
Agreed. I personally have seen divorces and breakdowns of entire families and friend groups of my colleagues, but what is most important is making sure that they stay up-to-date with the latest technologies and look to further improve themselves for the company.
Most definitely! There is nothing more glorious than sacrificing your health, soul, and personal relationships to perfect that CRUD application your users are forced to use to keep their job.
Some people have a family, or otherwise time consuming personal lives, which does limit the ability to learn new things outside of work. I wouldn’t really blame them for not ”bettering themselves” if they don’t get to do that on paid company time.
I have never had an engineering (or really any!) job where learning on company time was absent. A lot of people like to grow and a lot of people don't. And a lot of the latter realize their waning usefulness and how they're one algorithm update away from being obsolete so they put time and effort in to masking that.
I enjoy being the dumbest person in the room. Others find it threatening.
And for those who are so busy outside of work that they can't grow inside of work, I feel for them because that sounds like an exhausting life.
True, but what percentage of software engineers work on those?
The only pool of software that both employs a large number of engineers, has an engineering life measured in decades and isn't rewritten every 3-5 years to a large degree is enterprise software, in my experience. Think C/C++/Java/.NET middleware type stuff.
And I imagine 90% of HN actively runs away from those jobs :-)
I wouldn't know. But I imagine there's an availability bias.
I've worked in more 'traditional' engineering fields (manufacturing, energy, healthcare, aerospace) and the vast, vast majority are long tenured systems built for dedicated uses. I've worked on many systems that are older than me. For those in SV, I imagine it's the opposite. Like you said, HN may be biased to a specific type of development which often leads to biased claims. Tbf, my main issue is with the "everything" modifier in the OPs claim.
Sure there's a market for cheap disposable stuff hastily thrown together by people who barely know what they're doing because they're always using the latest tools for the first time to pad their resume.
But there's also a place for durable things of lasting value, built by people who enjoy perfecting their skills, technique, and craftsmanship with mature tools to solve problems well, learn the domain well, and build lasting relationships with customers who are big spenders.
It's kind of naive to assume that those people are making no effort to better themselves just because they're not always chasing after the latest hot new thing.
Nope. 30+ years of experience here working for different software companies in 5 different countries. I still use most of the knowledge today that I learned 30 years ago.
Software development fundamentally changes very rarely. However software development fashion changes all the time. But the latest fashion is just a slightly different implementation of the same underlying fundamental things I already understand. It is just a slightly different flavour of ice cream.
> People are tired of job hopping to get market pay, dealing with bulls*t, and being thrown under the bus at the slightest hint of an economic downturn.
So it's cool for employees to quit and job hop to get better pay, leaving their former employers with the effort and expense of replacing them, but not cool for companies to lay off employees to save money when markets contract?
yes, it is cool for employees to do so because of balance of power.
Companies have more power than employees when thinking about the size of the event:
they can fire you unexpectedly (with/without severance) so for your life (and probably your family) this is the main event happening.
But if you leave for a company that is usually a minor event that will probably not have any effect (or very limited) on their "life" (income/profit/culture ...)
Nearly 20 years ago, when I was trying to find HR for my first day, there was an older man talking with them already. He said, and I quote, 'Fuck you all, I got your exit interview right here' while grabbing his crotch. He turned to walk away, smirked at me, and said 'what? I'm retired now.'
Point being, I don't think you were the only one who didn't love the company 10 years ago.
Plenty of folks didn't, but even in the 90s and 2000s there was still a good reason to play ball, esp. if you were in a white collar STEM field.
Dude might have grabbed his crotch on the way out, but he probably made $$$$$ for 20-30 years. Modern hires deal with just as much BS but often for lower pay and less long-term stability.
> Modern hires deal with just as much BS but often for lower pay and less long-term stability.
New hires in tech these days make much much higher wages, inflation adjusted, than ever in the past. Stability is down, granted, though it was never great.
Or...the strongest survive. Amazon being one of the strongest, obviously. That is, and MBAs thinking longer term would know, it's not a downturn. It's opportunity. Opportunity to come out the otherside even strong.
Jeff is saying "save your money." Amazon is saying "we're cutting." It's self-fulfilling. And once it's over Amazon rein will be even further solidified.
Bro Ive been on some "business is business, it's strictly financial..." energy with employers since day zero. I pity the fool that never took a financial relationship for anything more than what it is.
When I was a kid my dad said "companies won't think twice about dumping you, don't worry about dumping them."
But he worked in the same place for forty years. Sometimes he was treated well, sometimes he wasn't.
It occurs to me what a relic that world is but also how it sounded bizarre when my dad said that to me in the early 00s. At that time there were still "lifers" all over that place. Or people who spent 10-20 years working up in the same company.
That's all gone now. Everything is more ephemeral, more disposable. I'm not sure if it's a good thing but I'm pretty sure signing up to be a "company man" wasn't, either.
Replaceable cogs, yes, that's been the push regarding programmers since the 80s? Earlier? Plenty of articles and rants online to read about the phenomenon as it specifically relates to programming going back to the 90s, also probably earlier, too.
The reason you have to pay for a cloud of virtual chickens, is because you can’t get decent bandwidth on a few free range beef & dairy cattle.
A single well tended rack in a closet on-site, with a few single cpu servers hosting multiple applications, a SAN, and a fat data pipe could replace hundreds of Kubernetes clusters — if there wasn’t a cartel on network speed.
For me I've decided to avoid US companies as much as I can.
It does not help our societies to facilitate the siphoning of our local wealth to enrich foreign companies. Especially ones that have such disregard for their own, imagine their view of the rest of us.
I believe that there is a power swing about to happen where talented individuals may get a lot more powerful and influential in relation to institutions and corporations.
I liken it to how MANPADS allow individual soldiers to overpower tanks for far cheaper, flipping the script on 100 years of war.
It hasn’t fully come to pass yet but corporations hire way too many “credential dead weight.”
In my career I have often been completely outraged at how bad credentialed people are in the pure talent department. Some of the most credentialed people who automatically get top roles really are not that smart versus some of the other people I know.
Corporations and institutions favor credentials. Individuals who have talent are very different and hopefully will go much further in current market.
MANPADS is for shooting down aircraft ("ADS" = air defense system). You're thinking of the Javelin and NLAW anti-tank weapons. Anti-tank rockets have been around for many decades; they're nothing new, but the latest ones are just more effective and have better range. IIRC, the Javelin itself was designed and first deployed back in the 1990s, so it's not exactly new either. What's new in the Ukraine conflict is that Russians apparently don't know how to (or just can't) properly operate tank battalions.
Back to MANPADS: man-portable anti-aircraft weapons aren't new either. The US was giving Stingers to the Mujahideen in Afghanistan back in the 1980s to shoot down Soviet aircraft.
I am in the Ukrainian army. Sometimes, for fun, we shoot MANPADS at the tanks because we already took down all the jets. It’s super fun you should try enlisting.
Having been on both sides of the table, credentials are shortcuts for expected minimum knowledge base for technical understanding.
One should likely never use credentialing to substitute or proxy as a marker for creativity or capacity. Credentials only show a snapshot of knowledgebase at a specific point in time.
> but it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it?
I'm not sure if this is the way a company thinks, even if they wouldn't have pressure from investors or worries for future survival (they would, BTW). Instead, some companies, likely Amazon too, view such cut as necessity for two reasons: bloated organizations slow everyone down, while diluting the company's culture; it's a great chance to trim the low performers. Not saying this is good or bad, just trying to explain the underlying logic.
> people started treating companies they way companies treating people and we are starting to see the results
Reid Hoffman wrote a book, The Alliance, which advocates that employees and companies are not family, but for an alliance. When they both have the right goal, they work towards the goal. When they don't, they part ways. Similarly, Netflix's Reed Hastings advocated that companies are like professional sports teams. A professional sports team is brutal when it comes to trading its players, but it does not mean the players will not pull their weights. I personally think the two views are more realistic and help employees advance their careers.
Most workers at large companies are seen as fungible cogs. Even the engineers. What you describe feels, unfortunately, like an antiquated idea from the 1900s.
I think we need more unions, more automation, and more social security. We are racing towards a future where there simply won’t be enough “jobs” for everyone and the companies sure as heck aren’t going to look out. Companies have no soul and the humans that run them have worked hard to insulate themselves from that being responsible for the actions of that lack of soul they instilled.
I disagree. What you describe is Western Europe with depressed wages and less innovation and dynamic economy. You can’t regulate/unionize into prosperity.
What's "prosperity"? I feel much better off with a decent work-life balance and the assurance that I won't arbitrarily lose my job than I would with a larger number in my bank account but none of that protection.
> you can literally start a company with the coworkers you would have unionized with and created security for yourself and them.
I can, but we'd still be taking on a bunch of risk - we'd have to put the capital into the company, as owners we would no longer be eligible for unemployment insurance if the company did fold, we have the possibility of one of us kicking another out so internal politics suddenly matters - when the whole point of the exercise was to get stability even at the cost of some upside.
Have we been in a bubble so long that people have forgotten that the raison d'etre for publicly traded companies existing is not to simply exist, but rather make profit and ideally continually expanding profit for share holders?
For a startup runway and growth of whatever nature are all that matter. You need to exist long enough for the exit event, and grow in a way that makes this more possible. If you have a two year runway, you have two more years to win your investors back their money and more. But this is not true for publicly traded companies. Simply surviving or, even worse, slowly burning reserves is not enough.
I know so many post-IPO startup employees that dismiss layoffs because "the company has tons of cash!"
Do you invest in a company because you think it won't go out of business for a decade? No you invest because their profit margins are healthy and you think they'll continue to grow in a sustainable, net revenue positive way.
I still remember the dotcom bubble, which was much shorter than what we've been in, and the public debate among investors was about the "new economy" and claims that "things are different now". However those old fuddy-duddies that kept arguing that companies need to make more than they spend were proven right in just a few years.
Today I see CEOs and executive leadership at companies genuinely surprised that they're being asked to prove that they can be profitable. I see generations of tech workers sincerely confused about the very idea of what it means to run a successful business.
Amazon is doing massive layoffs because they need to show investors that the know how to create value, and become more profitable. At least Amazon has shown periodically that they can make profit. There are plenty of post-IPO startups that have never proven that they are even capable of not running at a loss.
> “the raison d'etre for publicly traded companies existing is not to simply exist, but rather make profit and ideally continually expanding profit for share holders”
Should be noted the ideology that the purpose of a corporation is to maximize the profits for shareholder above all else is a modern obsession, and always takes a short term view. Starving a company just for a few good years of share prices is is dumb but often what that ideology leads to. Making profit is part or what a corporation should do, maximizing it above all else is not.
Similarly HOAs are supposed to maximize house value but funny how some of the highest property values are places like Palo Alto that aren’t known for HOAs.
The goal is to maximize shareholder value, which is not the same as maximizing short term profits.
Amazon famously did not turn a profit for years as its stock price rose. It was able to do so because the market largely trusted the management.
The reason why the stock market demands profit from most companies is that many, many managers and directors are bad at their job. Demanding profits is a way to keep management disciplined and focused, and avoiding years long boondoggles and fiascos. This is important since they are playing with other peoples money.
No problem hiring and firing. Hiring for no reason. Setting a random employee growth target and then hiring to that level to only then fire the same amount of people a couple of years later. It is irresponsible growth targets followed by irresponsible cut backs.
It makes me throw up every time I see corporate messages
speaking of family and employees being their most
important resource.
I have been around for long enough and I have learned
that a job is just a contract between parties and it
exists for as long as both parties can benefit from it.
Don't get caught up in the whole companies family kind of bs
or get too emotionally and culturally attached to your employer.
Always be on the look up for opportunities and take them.
Never stop learning and investing in yourself. Knowledge and experience
are your most important asset, keep nurturing them.
Also, I wanted to believe that a good chunk of these layoffs
should have seen this coming. One must be aware at all time of
how valuable (if at all) are for their employer.
What message does that send to the employees who stick it out who are expected to "give a part of their lives" for the company? Sacrifice, go the extra mile, "what can you do for the company versus what can the company do for you"?
I hate to break this to you, but the decline of company-employee loyalty started 40 years ago, and even before that it only existed as a result of unprecedented post-war prosperity and lack of global competition.
This doesn't mean that it's all downside for employees though. Amazon grew a huge business and paid their corporate employees top of market with huge upside over the last 20 years due to their phenomenal growth. It was a very good deal for those who worked in Amazon corporate over the last 20 years—a lot of people got richer than their parents ever could have gotten in the previous generation of more stable corporate jobs.
But make no mistake, Amazon is not a magic pot of gold, they still have a P&L like any other company. 17,000 employees are not cheap. Amazon grew from 800k employess to 1.3m and then 1.6m at the end of 2019, 2020 and 2021 in response to the pandemic. It is to be expected that their forecasts were not completely accurate in light of the generational event and tech sea change that the pandemic brought. The fact that people are scandalized by this is indicative of how insane the 12-year bull run for tech really was.
Simple growth does not indicate that Amazon's quarterly reports are "all good" - Amazon like all other companies are valued based on their future earning potential. Amazon in particular has given very soft revenue and growth guidance compared to what they were earlier expecting, hence, they are one of the worst performing tech stocks right now. In absolute terms, both Amazon and Apple are first place for evaporating 800 billion dollars in market cap EACH over the last year.
Amazon in particular has a longstanding problem of ops costs rising quickly giving the constant potential to eat into profit margins. If a company does not have a path to profitability, at the scale to justify it's market cap, it will continue to lose investor money.
TL:DR; - reducing an earnings report to "sales grew, all good" is wildly misleading.
> In absolute terms, both Amazon and Apple are first place for evaporating 800 billion dollars in market cap EACH over the last year.
In relative terms, Apple is in first place for the largest market cap in the world of any company, and Amazon is in fifth place.
They're totally fine.
Think of it this way: Amazon is still more than twice as valuable now as it was 5 years ago. Short-term investors will live by the sword or die by the sword, but long-term investors are fine.
The main problem is that everyone went nutty during the pandemic. The pandemic valuations were nutty, and the pandemic hiring was nutty. You could call it "irrational exuberance". Now they're coming back to reality.
> Short-term investors will live by the sword or die by the sword, but long-term investors are fine.
Well, and also some of the employees there, regardless of their length of service. This whole thread is more from the POV of the tech workers getting laid off than investment performance.
Net profit margin is down 21% and diluted EPS is down 10% though. Increased revenue with decreased profit/earnings would indicate a loss of efficiency. I imagine layoffs are one signal to shareholders that they’re trying to get that efficiency back.
> We are seeing a bit of a market downturn - but it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it? Are they in danger of running out of money?
That's not the logic we should expect from companies in a competitive market economy. Companies that think like that will eventually pile up so many bad decisions that they will fail -- and then everyone gets laid off!
>Somehow at some point, in what perhaps could be blamed on the ever-hated mass produced MBAs - companies got really comfortable with the “it’s not personal, it’s just good business” of letting go of their employees for a slightest reason, or sometimes for no reason at all - just to make it look to their investors like they got their shit together.
Financial services (banks, investment firms, etc.) have been doing this for decades. It might feel revolutionary to a comfortable recent tech company existence, but I'm afraid to say this is the norm. Companies can hire quickly when they think they'll grow, and fire en masse when the tide turns.
I have an MBA and I actually agree. I currently only have some anecdata to back it up ( most of my younger coworkers have a more combative if not ronin-like approach to employers ). Personally, I get it. I had company decide to close doors in our state and I was forced to looks elsewhere, but the management there did make a difference ( acceptable severance based on seniority, help with finding new jobs and so on ) and certainly did see some uncool behavior in my career.
That said, I had some minor hopes for the current post-Covid world, because it, however briefly, looked like employees understood what standing together meant and that WFH is something that can easily be done in some positions ( and is artificially dosed as a reward to special ones ).
For better or worse, the coming recession will confirm whether I had hoped for too much.
FWIW, I am staying mostly remote ( as is most of my team now ). I already told no HR once. I am getting more and more comfortable daily with more otherwise uncomfortable situations despite clearly changing winds and better corporate propaganda ( they did learn from initial fiascos ).
> We are seeing a bit of a market downturn - but it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it? Are they in danger of running out of money? What happened to “people are our most important resource”?
People are an important resource, certainly for a company like Amazon, and probably the most expensive too. But I don't understand the argument -- you don't just throw money around like that on any other resource.
Certainly up until this year it was a seller's market in tech and I saw a lot of movement to chase bigger salaries (which is fine and people should try to get what they want while the getting's good).
> And this brings me to my main point - I think years of this has had an unexpected side-effect the companies never signed up for: people started treating companies they way companies treating people and we are starting to see the results - quiet quitting, oft bemoaned lack of loyalty, job hopping, etc. Now I am not saying it’s all new, but at least in my observation it’s peaking now and my thesis is these things are connected.
I'm not sure it is, and I'm not sure if you can assign the "blame" (if there is any) to one side.
I think as I said the workers have had a red hot run for quite a few years and it was those peaking conditions that drove the peak in their dissatisfaction. Conditions are going the other way now and people will try to hold their jobs a bit more I expect.
And what started the trend from people being lifetime company men to almost no loyalty? I doubt the ruling class one day got together and decided they'd stop treating workers well. It's surely a lot of factors on all sides. People have far more generational wealth including the investment in education, than in the early 1900s, and there are at least some social safety nets, so job loss might be considered less risky. It has become increasingly easier to advertise, search, apply, recruit for jobs outside the local region with telephone, fax, then internet, email.
I'm not sure what you'd prefer. Certainly people shouldn't be tied down to companies. Should corporations be made to keep people on long after they're costing more than they're producing? When you look at government and places with undue union power (police comes to mind), you get a lot of incompetence, corruption, and just poor organizations where crap floats to the top and they could never compete without enforced monopolies. Unfortunately it never turns places into egalitarian utopias.
Both parties should see the relationship as bi-directional and symbiotic. Sometimes you have to find a different symbiotic relationship after the one you have has run its course.
It does not need to be interpreted as adversarial where you want to get as much out of them as you can for as little effort as possible and neither should they see it as an opportunity to suck the employee dry. It only works while your goals align with the company's goals.
There should be a mutual understanding --a meeting of the minds. I give you this for that. But, yes, ultimately, the company is not your friend. HR is definitely not your fiend. You should have friends outside the company. At work you have colleagues and co-workers. It's not to say you cannot cultivate friendships at work that last beyond your time there, but don't presume it to be your source of friends.
> it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it? Are they in danger of running out of money? What happened to “people are our most important resource”?
Amazon just had to take out an $8B unsecured loan to be paid back in a year to cover operating and capital expenses. Despite what the government is telling you, things are really bad and about to get a lot worse. The lowest hanging fruit/the least valuable employees get cut first. That's how they stay in business. That's the smart business move unless they can pivot.
Companies can't just borrow and spend anymore they actually have to be sustainable. Amazon gets loans to buy inventory and equipment and pay employees so they can stock their warehouse and then they pay back those loans later after it's sold. If they don't sell that inventory because consumers have no money they still have to make loan payments so it becomes more costly to them over time and if they want to break even they have to raise prices. This is inflation.
The Fed raising interest rates makes borrowing money to do this more expensive so they don't do it or do it less. Money in the economy evaporated in November 2021 with the announcement of Quantitative Tightening and the end of Quantitative Easing. That means getting loans and free money became expensive and private investment in the markets/companies evaporated. This forces inflation to come down because they can't keep borrowing and inflating. They have to stock just what they can easily sell or they find themselves imploding as they can't pay back their loans. Pretty much every industry is going through this, hence all the industries collapsing. You will see a lot of companies that have been struggling go out of business.
Why is this happening? Free money basically. Our government pandered to political interests (voters and cronies) and overspent for decades, kicking the can down the road and we're now at the end of the road.
The US debt to GDP ratio has been over 120% since 2020 which by IMF definition is an economic death spiral. That means the US is underwater, we don't produce enough money as a nation to pay our bills. By 2028 that death spiral will become irreversible, meaning the payments we make on our loans for all that free money --the bailout money, stimulus checks, the entitlements, that omnibus, the inflation reduction act-- will only go to the interest and no longer the principal. That sets us on track to be insolvent by 2042.
Yeah I know, crazy right? But why? Because when this happens all those companies and private investors that poured money into stocks and venture capital can't rely on them for profits so they instead buy government bonds. They don't give as high of a return but it's guaranteed money in a down economy so they do it. The result is the governmnet receives the money they need to pay their bills and all the those living off free money get a reality check and have to live and operate within their means.
And balance is restored to the universe. Unless people try to cash out their bonds and find the government is bankrupt. This is why government spending is bad folks. They manipulate the economy to prop it up and print money until the Ponzi scheme fails. Rinse and repeat or pass a balanced budget amendment and demand our government stop spending money on pointless wars and entitlements that buy them votes or kickbacks. As long as there is government debt, as long as the government exists, the cycle will repeat. We'll just have to wait and see if we survive this time. Where we are at the end of the road is unprecedented. This has been building since we got off the gold standard which is what allowed them to overspend money we don't have.
Historically this is when there's a world war or a collapse of civilization/Dark Age because most nations are in the same boat. Decadence gets the better of us and lack of restraint (dare I say, conservative behavior) leads to this moment in history once more.
This is the story that will be told to support austerity which will be used by a small cohort to accumulate even more wealth at the expense of everyone else and cause a generation of misery. What this story misses is that the government controls the money. The US Government can't go "bankrupt," it is the bank. The US Government doesn't have to "live within their means" - it is the means. The US Government can't "overspend money [they] don't have," because it has all the money, and the money printer. Sovereign nation 'debt' doesn't work like any other debt, and it's so incredibly useful on it's own that it makes sense to make a lot of it. This idea that the US Government has to pay back its debt is a fiction that has no utility any more.[1]
I will agree with you that most military spending is inefficient at best, and that we should shift our focus and values to something more productive rather than something literally destructive.
There is an interesting exchange in Bourdains "Parts Unknown" [1] that he did in Montana where he's talking to a former labor leader and politician from Butte where he says "the company is a son of a bitch, but they were our son of a bitch" (very much worth watching the entire show, but in particular the Butte segment). I grew up in a union family and that held true of the union as well. Something changed in my lifetime (I'm 40 years old) and I really do think it was NAFTA and free trade in general, but also it was the US reaching a terminal state of resource extraction, or at least the level of resource extraction we were willing to tolerate. The two of these weakened unions and worker solidarity and slowed the profit momentum that we had become accustom to and gave carte blanche to corporations to seek local profits in remote places. I think this fundamentally changed the dynamic of being a worker across all industries and, as you allude to, the focus on organizational optimization (coupled with quarterly earnings focused business culture) only heightened the alienation of workers and now the chicken is coming home to roost for the entire American project. Aside from deindustrialization and optimization, I think much of this can be laid at the foot of the stock market and our collective fixation on it as a barometer for societal success.
In the 90's the Democratic party abandoned the labor movement because they thought they could get more votes from moderate republicans if they spew the same free market and free trade ideology. And Clinton did that and won, so since then there's been a cohort of political leaders on the left that firmly believe that this is the right and correct path. Literally the same people, they've been in power for 30-40 years. What they miscalculated was that Clinton won the presidency because of his insane charisma and also the Ross Perot spoiler on the right, not the free market stuff. But it was enough cover to dismantle the long-term alliance of the labor movement and the Democratic party.
> but it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it? Are they in danger of running out of money?
Stock price crashed. This effects the bonuses/equity of a bunch of employees, some of whom are on the executive levels. Cutting on employment is a very effective method to raise profits and help the stock price. It sucks but that's what the market (investors) like. This is just capitalism ...we've all signed up for this (I guess?).
> We are seeing a bit of a market downturn - but it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it?
Um, yes?
Honestly, I'm not sure how one could sincerely make this statement.
Amazon's net income for Q3 '22 is roughly a third of its net income Q4 '21. If losing 2/3rds of your revenue isn't considered hitting the pocketbook, I don't want is.
Now you could yada yada yada they're still profitable, but that's a different argument.
Amazon was seeing 20-30% growth of its revenue. Their expenses were also growing at a similar base. Now that top line revenue isn't there, they need to address how to address bottom line growth.
When times are good (new technology being invented / adopted / marketed) nobody asks tough questions: the corporate structure somehow orchestrates production, new goods or services are being created, value is added, everybody participating in a meaningful way in the bonanza is "happy".
These periods don't last too long: Technologies are tried but discarded, or are too easy to reproduce and lead to saturation, or competition reaches fierce levels etc.
In "stable" or lean times the corporate structure becomes a ruthless spreadsheet optimisation exercise that focuses on exploiting every possible arbitrage (e.g., tax regimes, employee loyalty, overseas labor cost differences etc) to maintain the monetary profitability projections. This leads to endless corporate restructurings, financial engineering and other zero or negative sum games.
The lifecycle of a human being, the social and emotional needs to belong, contribute, feel appreciated and helpful, to create value when young and able, in order to receive value when old and frail. These things are not part of the corporate structure contracts. Neither is in any sense a sustainable planet (but thats part of another rant).
Honestly I think it has a lot to do with a hot market, at least to this point. You get a lot more pliant if you don’t think you can find another job easily (one reason why some tech executives don’t actually mind this downturn too much even though it costs them money).
I guess this is a new target for the anti-woke axe grinding - corporate CFO's. Never thought I'd see it honestly.
I think it's an interesting synthesis of the corporate-skeptical populist ideology with the non-white skeptical racialist ideology, so I guess we should be expecting far more of this in the next two years. Thankfully, I think most people this is just kinda weird culture war BS.
I understand you find Brian O’s racism and funding of terrorists who shoot black kids to be normal — even something that you’re proud of. And that you find it strange people would object to that.
I think you’ll be surprised that outside your bubble, most Americans don’t support CFOs funding terrorists that murder children.
Again, I think this points to a clear lack of morals from you.
Yes — I understand you tried to dismiss the CFO funding the terrorists who gunned down Antonio Mays Jr from total ignorance. To you, the death of a black teenager is a topic that it’s okay to bullshit about and dismiss out of hand.
Most people would have looked up the murder I was talking about before trying to dismiss it — but triggered bigots often get ahead of themselves.
It's fair that you edited out the confused commentary, but I'll leave this note that cash is an immediate/near-term asset and long-term debt is a long-term liability. Duration mismatch is important for a company that attempts to maximize free cash-flow.
Yesterday Jan 3, Amazon borrowed another $8B at 0.75% plus SOFR (which is basically Fed Funds rate at ~4.3%) through a short term credit facility.
Also, Amazon has ~$69B in long term lease liabilities. That’s about ~3x the combined long term lease liabilities of Walmart and Costco (~$20B combined). Walmart and Costco are the world’s #1 and #3 retailer, Amazon being #2.
From the beginning when Jassy took the job, the problem has always been the cost of the excess warehouse capacity. Once they realized the true demand from this holiday season, they can now rightsize capacity for 2024 and beyond. Until then, they need to tighten the belt. Just like if you realized you swallowed a bigger mortgage than you can handle.
“The last issue relates to our fixed cost leverage. Despite still seeing strong customer demand and expansion of our FBA business, we currently have excess capacity in our fulfillment and transportation network. Capacity decisions are made years in advance, and we made conscious decisions in 2020 and early 2021 to not let space be a constraint on our business.”
>Also, Amazon has ~$69B in long term lease liabilities. That’s about ~3x the combined long term lease liabilities of Walmart and Costco (~$20B combined). Walmart and Costco are the world’s #1 and #3 retailer, Amazon being #2.
Long term lease liabilities are next to meaningless for any kind of analysis because it's the sum of rent due at any point after the next 12 months. Could be at the 13th month. Could be at the 13th year. I am not an accountant but I believe you could sign a 50 year lease at $1m/year, that can be terminated at any time by paying a $1m penalty, and it would still show up as a $49m long term "liability".
Instead of your speculation, let me be the expert to explain your speculation is wrong.
1. ASC 842 states that lease liabilities should be measured by lease terms that are non-cancellable. In this case, these are Amazon’s non-cancellable leases.
2. The average lease term remaining is ~9-11 years for Amazon.
3. Lease liabilities are present value calculations, ie. They are not as you suggested 50 years x $1M/yr. They represent the present value of the discounted cash flows. The discount rates are disclosed.
Yes, but the stock price is based on using that money efficiently, and building an engine which can (at least if desired) generate profits. And when 50% of corporate employee comp is RSUs... a stock price collapse is a huge pay cut for the rest of your workforce.
Is it good to give 100% of your corporate employees a 25% pay cut, to avoid 5-10% layoffs? I think that's a less clear-cut value call.
"Amazon's income dipped toward the end of 2022 as the economy took its toll. The tech giant spent billions doubling the size of its fulfillment network during the pandemic, a play that served it well initially but that proved to be short-sighted.
Amazon was forced to shut down or delay plans for over a dozen facilities as e-commerce sales last year grew slower than expected. Another headwind - soaring energy prices - impacted Amazon's business in a major way, with the company's spending on shipping climbing 10% to $19.9 billion in Q3 2022.
To cut costs, Amazon plans to reduce its workforce in early 2023, reportedly by as much as 10,000 employees."
"In October, Amazon disappointed Wall Street with a holiday season forecast that woefully missed analysts' expectations. The company's stock fell about 50% last year.
Like Jassy, a number of other tech founders and CEOs have since admitted they failed to accurately gauge pandemic demand."
May 15, 2021 - "The question, in view of these results, is what kind of world we are heading for after the pandemic. The company's vision points to a major consolidation of e-commerce as we adopt new habits brought about by the pandemic, to the point of becoming a trillion-dollar industry in the United States."
August 24, 2020 - "The questions that IBM's report aims to answer is how much of this pandemic-fueled online spending is a temporary shift and to what extent is it impacting longer-term forecasts? The answer, at least in this estimate, is that this pandemic pushed the industry ahead by around five years. The shift away from physical stores was already underway, but we've now jumped ahead in time as to where we would be if a health crisis had not occurred."
The fed generated money like Germany in WW2. Unfortunately people at tech companies don't understand the so called laws of supply and demand and just hired people with no logical thinking at all.
I don't think that's a fair assessment. The root reason is a lot of tech companies believed that the growth in users from the pandemic would be more sustainable ("buying the dip", as it were): after all heads you win, tails you have to lay off 17,000 people. This is, of course, the tails side of this.
Based on what evidence do you suggest that they hired people with "no logical thinking". You are part of the problem. I'm sick and tired of engineers being ultra skeptical about the skills of other engineers. It leads to constant peacocking.
In the teach world, if you didn't blog about it you don't know it.
I have interviewed with Amazon several times. Every time I don’t make it through because I realized the people in many of the roles were (a) not the best people (b) I seemed to know way more than many of them about their domain (c) they kept trying to offer me horizontal transfer (d) they wanted to pay me less than I know I am worth.
My impression is Amazon is a factory tuned to hire and churn a sort of middle of the road white collar worker with no creativity who can sort of plug into some pre designed module and churn away and be yelled at to “go faster.”
Some of the people I met at Amazon we’re ultra talented but all the ones I ever interviewed with seemed like total morons.
I never understood why. Maybe I just interviewed with the wrong teams
I haven't worked there, but I got the impression going back decades that Amazon is a terrible place to work. That said, I have a friend who worked there and had really only positive things to say. And he quit the valley startup where we both worked when things became rocky there, and went back to a different job at Amazon. So YMMV it seems.
>I haven't worked there, but I got the impression going back decades that Amazon is a terrible place to work. That said, I have a friend who worked there and had really only positive things to say.
I've heard the same thing about them. I think it's a place where certain kinds of people like to work, for a while, because it pays well and looks great on a resume, and they don't mind working long hours to do that kind of work and earn that kind of pay. But it's not for everyone.
When I worked there, it was a hell of a lot less stressful than the startups I'd worked for before that, where the company was always just a couple of months away from disaster. Once I picked up Financial Independence habits, my life was a breeze (even though the job itself was a techno-bureaucratic nightmare straight out of a Dilbert strip)
yeah, I'm just worried that someone is going to avoid Amazon because they think their $120k startup job is less stressful
To be fair, the startup jobs I had weren't that stressful either. I was in a comfortable indoor environment with a nice computer and reasonable work-life balance. Way nicer jobs than working at a restaurant or something
There are brilliant devs at Amazon. There are poor devs at Amazon. The quality of the dev has very little bearing on promotion and hiring from what I can tell. Story telling and document writing appear to be the only things that are graded on a scale, everything else is pass/fail.
This is my experience with most people coming from FAANG in general. Started using it as a signal for people to avoid hiring instead of as a good signal.
I applied to Amazon several years ago before I started my own company. I got to the final round of interviews and I cannot express how almost every single person I interviewed with that day (8 fucking interviews in a single day, in person) seemed to not give a shit about what I was saying. It was a draining process and by the end I just wanted to leave. I didn’t get an offer.
So you didn’t make it through the interview because the interviewers are idiots? Not everyone at Amazon is an amazing dev but I can assure you Amazon isn’t the largest cloud provider because it’s stocked full of idiots.
Employers and employees now treat each other like card sharks treat each other: assumed worthless scumbags, to be exploited to whatever extent possible, and treated nicely only as an investment in future extraction.
> He added that the majority of the cuts are on the retail and recruiting areas of Amazon.
How large would their recruiting organization be, and what percent do companies cut when they foresee that they won't need to proactively recruit for a couple years (because there will be enough job seekers who will apply to listed positions). I assume they'll still need people to process candidates, but that won't be as many as when they were reaching out to people and trying to woo them.
What does retail mean? Is this a reference to Alexa? Or is this about their storefront operations?
Some of their product teams are massive and they don't need to be. Some product teams are so large it just adds too much feature creep putting development teams into development hell. One of the various reasons I left Amazon.
That kind of depends on what exactly you are talking about. From a financial statement perspective, Amazon chooses to only disclose revenue from AWS separately from the rest of the business. That's more to do with reporting regulations regarding what needs to be reported once those earnings reach a certain threshold of the entire business - which AWS passed (previously to this threshold being reached, they did not even separate AWS in their earnings reports).
Internally, Amazon structures their teams into divisions. There is a retail division, and part of that division works on Alexa (mainly, the shopping skills and shopping experience, trying to make shopping on Amazon with Alexa as easy as possible) - but the main Alexa organization is not under "retail" at Amazon, which includes the actual device development, hardware teams, ML related to voice processing, etc. Same story with Prime Video.
This is worrisome - joined Amazon ~4 months ago because it seemed like the most sensible thing to do considering my immigration status. Have one last attempt left at the H-1B lottery; PERM is underway but no hopes of getting it finished before STEM OPT runs out. Was thinking of getting married to my girlfriend soon, but not too sure about that anymore (she's in the 3rd year of her PhD so she cannot really move with me) if I'm going to get axed considering the job market isn't the best either. Not hyped about the prospect of moving to my home country since I have not lived there since I was 9. F*k, life just hasn't been kind these last couple years.
FWIW, it does not seem like an uncommon reaction. My wife had a similar questions bordering on disbelief, when I was giving her a glimpse of current US immigration system based on my experience alone.
The way the current immigration system works is not taught at all in schools. Maybe if you’re lucky you get taught about the Ellis Island days where all you had to do was prove you had enough money not to starve and not have any signs of infectious disease like tuberculosis.
It's pretty wild. I'm a US citizen, and getting my Japanese wife a green card took years and thousands of dollars. I wish people understood how ridiculous the system is before they went out and voted about it.
Stuff like how the government would just randomly send me a letter and say "Hey, asshole, give us another $800." In my case it's like "OK" but for most Americans living paycheck-to-paycheck that would be a catastrophic event
US doesn’t give out a permanent residency based on how long you lived in the country. There’s only a few common paths to immigration: employment sponsored (2-20 years), marriage based (1-3 years), other family based (2-20 years), investor based (1-3 years). Student or tourist years don’t matter.
With industry-wide layoffs, are you really that confident you can find a new job? The hiring process is already a crapshoot, and now you have much more competition.
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[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 313 ms ] threadIf the voting majority of the google board is happy with the revenue/profit/growth/staff then why would they cut
People then leap off a reasoning cliff and assume that this means that everybody who is rated "not enough impact" or "meets most" in February will be fired. This would have required some pretty legendary economic foresight by the execs and it would require them to have done a lot of unnecessary work to redo the entire performance review process rather than just changing the ratings system.
I have no idea if Google will do layoffs. But the idea that GRAD was created to facilitate layoffs is fucking stupid.
Do you say that as at least a senior manager or based on what the company told you as an individual contributor?
I am not there anymore, but I hear perf process has been drastically reformed there. I always hated it, but one thing it did offer was a thorough paper trail and process and gave low performers many opportunities to improve their game. I understand now a lot of the red tape has been cut and the process is more intimate with the manager and their report. This would have been good for me and people I knew, at times, but I can also see it being a good way to just sort of quietly push people out.
My observation was that in many areas, productivity was super crappy during at least the initial stages of COVID. I think many companies suffered from this. There will be long-term fallout from that.
Anyways that single cash cow continues to be a money printing machine. When ad revenues drop significantly many quarters in a row, then you'll know there's trouble brewing.
FWIW Google's still beating the S&P 500 since pre-COVID (+19% vs +14%)
Amazon wasn't doing that.
The contraction in unavoidable. Mania is never good. At some point heads have to come back down to Earth. The further we go into space the harder they crash back to Earth.
If they are not really into tech (and just making money, which is fine by its own right), then they’ll land somewhere else.
Prevent artificial unavailability of jobs. When you release 17k people into the work force you can be sure Amazon will be slow to fill the gap it created. So it holds up hiring. Then those 17k people are going to flock to whatever available role can be acquired. This will extend the interviewing processes and make it harder.
Tech companies and unfair hiring practices are what are leading to our financial collapse.
Back in the day they managed to avoid 'layoffs' by transferring thousands of people from Fire Phone -> Alexa. They somehow avoided layoffs from shutting down Prime Air (drones, not 767s), even though that had a lot of employees.
They're pretty good at getting people to leave without doing 'layoffs'.
Heck, if you believe that they've always had 5-10% 'unregretted attrition' targets, which I do, and apply it to the whole company, that's 50-100k employees per year!
[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20220506053517/https://www.busin...
Since when does having zero openings mean that a team is shut down? Sometimes teams are staffed enough to not need more people at the moment, so they will post a job opening whenever there is a need for it.
A specific personal example: my org had a period of a couple of months with no openings in late second half of last year, simply because we didn't need more people at the time, and then we posted more openings later. We were nowhere close to being shut down.
This is not a claim that anyone made. The claim was that an ad for zero openings doesn't prove a team hasn't shut down.
If that's what the argument actually was trying to say, then I fully agree with it, makes perfect sense.
This came up last time the Amazon layoffs were on HN, but: the URA target (which was 2-6% when I was there) is for people, not positions. That is, the intent is that departments are continually removing their worst performers, but replacing those people as soon as possible. This is an elimination of 17,000 positions who will not be backfilled.
Whether you agree with the URA target approach or not (I suspect most do not), 6% URA is fundamentally different from 6% layoffs.
Can't post too many details, but we are actively delivering to customers in test markets today. A publically released video from a few months ago: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bDyeUiWL3M&ab_channel=amazo...
Source: I'm an SDE at Prime Air.
I saw this recently?
=> I work at Amazon but far away from prime air
Sounds like you've got a perfect background for Prime Air though! Hopefully we'll be hiring again sometime this year - feel free to reach out (email in profile) if you want to chat more about it.
That's very different from vans driving on public roads and (when I've ordered something) parking in my driveway.
I don't mind these things, but they do utilize my property and impact my little neighborhood. I'm not convinced some buzzing above is worse. How much do we own the air above us? Is that somehow not public?
I don’t work at Amazon, just curious about your reasoning.
[1]: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/12/amazon-begins-drone-...
So, the separation isn’t completely clean.
> When demand started to wane with customers moving back to shopping in stores, Amazon initiated a broad cost-cutting review to pare back on units that were unprofitable
Waning demand triggered cost-cutting, which focused on unprofitable orgs.
This is very disconnected from reality, amzn needs consumers to buy their products. If layoffs keep piling up higher and deeper something is going to break and hello recession!
Eg, a musician is a worker, but once they've written a song that you now iwn, you can sell infinite licenses to it, regardless of whether the musician is still being paid
```Amazon initiated a broad cost-cutting review to pare back on units that were unprofitable```
I think when you say value you aren't speaking fiscally. If that's the case then I would say I'm not trying to minimize the output of workers being laid off. I'm just saying that the value of their output isn't marketable to consumers, so from a capitalist perspective a company should rationally make adjustments.
Well, yeah. I mean the entire endeavor of operating a for-profit business is to find the combination of resources/effort/ideas that creates value. The problem space is enormous though and more often leads to failure than success. If you see a successful combination though, stop posting here and start your own business!
If you can think of better projects, you can become their competitor and hire their staff away.
Put another way, lots of startups are failing or are going to fail in this environment. Layoffs are like killing "internal startups" that aren't moneymakers.
You're assuming that any group of talented people can have a 100% track record of success. Some startups (or projects) just fail and it has nothing to do with the talent.
You gotta take bets on new products/markets and sometimes they don't pan out. Sometimes it's just a market issue. There's not always a way to know if it was going to fail beforehand either. If we want innovation, then unfortunately I think these types of sh*tshows are part of the deal, although a 17,000 layoff is pretty gnarly.
No it isn't. It is quite typical for a companies stock to spike up after a layoff announcement especially when the number was higher than initially reported.
And as always totally expected.
The craziness encompasses the entire system
Systemic insanity
P.S. Ex-Meta who got impacted by the layoffs
Synically, an argument can be made that those largely driving the markets are looking for any reason to make money. It doesn't actually matter much what the news is, just get ahead of the market movement then start turning dials and pushing sentiment.
But the sum of all people who aren't "rich" don't own very much stock (as a proportion.) And 99% of the ones that do own that stock indirectly through a fund with added management costs and management risk.
To put the current situation in perspective, the last unemployment rate reading was 3.7%, a level so low that it was never hit in the entire period 1970-2018.
Do you have a 401K or retirement account of any type? Chances are you are one of the "rich people" that impact that stock price.
A lot of them get there by being interviewed by other bad engineers, and just float when the market is strong, or use politics to get in a good position.
A guy at my company just merges library upgrade PRs blindly. That's all he does. He fought getting dependabot up on Github, but he finally conceded. He hasn't done a commit since. I've reported it to management, but I was told it wasn't our team's responsibility.
There are tons of dark corners to hide in at big companies.
I don't know you personally, and I don't want to start a flame war here, but if there's one thing FAANG senior engineers are good at, it's solving simple coding problems in interviews
If you're saying they can't actually proactively get useful work done on their own, or quickly ship quality products, or talk to customers, I could understand. But basically the only thing that you can be 100% sure of is that almost everyone at those big companies passed some arbitrary coding tests
At some point, a faang engineer was good at solving those, but that might not be their current state
One time the candidate had a bunch of video games out in plain view (Switch and Xbox, IIRC). Apparently couldn't be bothered to put them away for the remote interview. They proceeded to flail and scored a zero on every question. What are people thinking in these scenarios? -_-
You generally only get good at interview problems when you're entering the door. After that, interview questions generally have nothing to do with your job.
Also, as you move beyond entry level positions, political skills, communications skills and connections becomes more and more important. Unless you happen to be at some massive growth teams at the right times, it's basically impossible to move beyond ICT4 or L5 unless both you and your boss have very good grasp of politics.
5 years out of college, worked in a single place all those years, without ever touching data structures or algorithms under the hood? Yes, I can absolutely see even experienced programmers stumble on relatively "easy" questions.
But that's just the gatekeeper to get them inside the door. You could be a good engineer without knowing how to find the optimal solution to some niche problem, on the spot.
That's probably why you're interviewing them. I doubt the ones who are good at their job are leaving as much as the ones who aren't. This is like reverse survivorship bias.
For one thing, if by your own analysis, these companies' interviewing processes aren't effective, there's logically a conclusion that yours also aren't, given that interview processes are fairly similar among big tech companies. I've even also heard of an interviewer trying to tell a director with a straight face that a high level IC candidate (L6/L7 IIRC) from a prestigious big tech couldn't solve a "simple" problem at one of those companies. Leetcode style questions aren't even necessarily good proxies for whether an engineer is actually effective at their job or not (and yes, a good number of FAANGers openly admit here and elsewhere that they needed to grind leetcode to pass interviews at these companies).
Another thing is that Uber and Amazon are fairly competitive w/ other more prestigious FAANGs in terms of compensation. A decent staff eng at Uber isn't going to be very interested in grinding leetcode for a equivalent role at Google, the compensation delta is just not appealing[0]
[0] https://www.levels.fyi/?compare=Uber,Google&track=Software%2...
Quoting the last 10-K filing[1]:
> As of December 31, 2021, we employed approximately 1,608,000 full-time and part-time employees. Additionally, we use independent contractors and temporary personnel to supplement our workforce.
It's really not difficult to imagine how ~1 in 10 can be chopped while still surviving.
[1] https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1018724/000101872422...
Somehow at some point, in what perhaps could be blamed on the ever-hated mass produced MBAs - companies got really comfortable with the “it’s not personal, it’s just good business” of letting go of their employees for a slightest reason, or sometimes for no reason at all - just to make it look to their investors like they got their shit together.
We are seeing a bit of a market downturn - but it hasn’t hit Amazon pocketbook now, has it? Are they in danger of running out of money? What happened to “people are our most important resource”?
And this brings me to my main point - I think years of this has had an unexpected side-effect the companies never signed up for: people started treating companies they way companies treating people and we are starting to see the results - quiet quitting, oft bemoaned lack of loyalty, job hopping, etc. Now I am not saying it’s all new, but at least in my observation it’s peaking now and my thesis is these things are connected.
They got it wrong and overhired. There's ample evidence of that, and of cooling demand - now and in the future.
We are seeing a massive return to the old normal, which means people are going back to offices (not WFH) people are going back to shopping in person not online, people are going back to eating in restaurants not using Grub Hub or ordering online. etc etc etc
So of course some WFH positions will still exist but based on my alerts for different roles the number of full time WFH jobs have dropped off the cliff back down to what I would consider precovid levels
I dislike Amazon yet continue to order stuff at the same rate. How many non-government entities have a base like this? Seems like an enviable position.
How many layoff announcements have you seen where the company says "We'd love to keep pursuing this but we flat out can't afford to pay you, we are out of money"? I've seen zero. I understand some of this is prudent financial planning, especially for SMBs, but SFDC and AMZN.. they must be using different calculus.
Amazon appears less dependent on the nearly-free-money-gravy-train compared to most businesses, especially VC and startups.
Edit: dkrich's comment states it better than I can in every way: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34254450
Something about this cycle and these cuts feels I dunno, manufacturered or something. Like are 7k high paying jobs at a salesforce indicative of an economy collapsing while the overall labor market is still extremely tight and you’re not hearing about similar layoffs throughout all industries?
All of these cuts seem to be follow the leader because we’re worried and I would not be that surprised to see the reality in the overall economy be much better than feared and these same companies hiring again before year end. It probably doesn’t hurt from the c level perspective that Wall Street tends to welcome job cuts at least in the short term. Although it can certainly do lasting damage to morale within a company.
First it starts with higher than expected CPI followed by hawkish fed policy. People learned their lesson last cycle and became worried that rate hikes as in past cycles would cause a deep recession and began adjusting immediately rather than wait for a recession. This is evidenced by the fact that the S&P peaked about four months before the Fed even hiked one time.
That’s a very important point that I think many overlook. When you are completely ignorant of impending danger you are most susceptible to damage. When you’re terrified of getting punched in the face you’re going to take drastic measures to protect yourself and in the process likely not get punched at all.
Meanwhile rates have moved very little in 3 months indicating (to me at least) that the bond market believes rate hikes are ending very soon.
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/03/29/federal-reserve-rec...
Someone tell Apple there was a "Great Recession". A little thing called iPhone made that irrelevant for them.
I started my career during the Great Recession. Wasn't a problem for me. A recession is an aggregate, but during every economic condition there are both losers and winners. You don't want to overreact to every shift in the wind.
The problem is that it seems the bond market sees through this and isn’t buying the tough talk. I think most people believe the fed and buy into the popular narrative that taking rates from zero to 4.5% will decimate the economy (even though 4% is actually very normal historically and anything under 4 was considered quite low).
Watch what happens with fed policy if CPI comes in well beneath expectations next Thursday.
Citation for above: https://twitter.com/NorthmanTrader/status/161072868776647475...
In other words, tech saw the largest and fastest inflationary valuation period in decades under loose fed policy. It’s now seeing a similarly fast contraction.
The reason we’re not seeing similar cuts across the board (or at least as significant) is that they also didn’t grow as significantly in the years prior.
I think this is just availability bias. Ordinary people - the ones who aren't glued to CNBC or the WSJ - tend to measure the strength of the economy by the job market for their friends and neighbors. The job market, right now, is pretty strong for ordinary people. Hence it "feels" like boom times, and that all the chicken littles are nuts.
Here in Silicon Valley, working for a FAANG, it's definitely recession time. And interestingly, it seems like the higher you get up the corporate ladder, the more you're worried. The ordinary employees basically just do their jobs and gripe about how bonuses are smaller this year, holiday parties are wimpier, and travel budgets have been cut. Managers complain about how we have to stack-rank employees and fret about whether we'll eventually have to execute a layoff. Directors worry about how their headcount and budgets have been cut. Our CEO seems visibly anxious.
I've learned that it's a bad sign when the people with the most information are the most worried. My cue to stock up on toilet paper pre-COVID was when I heard a leak that the CDC had told all their own employees to make sure they had at least a 3 month stock of everything. I realized the Ukraine war was serious when Biden snapped "We're trying to avoid WW3 here" while the official party line was that this was a regional conflict that would be over in a couple weeks. I'm a bit worried about this Bay Area storm going on right now because the meteorologists seem more freaked out than the general public. Similarly, it's worrying when CEOs are more anxious than their employees about economic conditions.
The popular narrative is that these are just a bunch of bloated tech companies laying off surplus employees that don't do anything useful. I don't buy that. I think the American populace has no idea what's about to hit them, and the economy's going to go straight off a cliff in 2023H1.
Still, as far as tech goes, for some companies that relied on cheap money, the ride may well be over ( I think of weird products like Peleton, which is a niche product, but was scaled as if it was going to become a thing in every house ). I am not sure it translates to everything going out with a bang.
Today's news were that job market[1] is still fine despite clear attempts to make it employer's market again.
[1]https://www.cnbc.com/2023/01/04/jolts-report-november-2022.h...
Wrong. not only surplus employees but surplus elites.
in recent years, big tech paid bloated compensations to people producing little or no economic value. saw first hand professional managers dont understand tech get hired by friends and collectively engage in empire building and building head count. easy promotion game.
engineers create complexity for smallest problem and launch new services. get promoted. then they get hell out and move to new team. managers willingly accept tech debt to justify more head count hire more managers and engineers under them.
you tell us what innovation come out of amazon fire alexa kindle. same thing they sold 5 years ago same hardware maybe little bit better speaker. why pay for increasing army of engineers? and me just discussing amazon devices.
how many engineers you need to run website? has shopping gotten better in 5 years? No! it way worse, too many ads.
this a massive grift. Most value amazon gets is these people don’t start their own company and threat amazon with competition.
big tech took advantage of cheap or free money from US Fed and created class of elites. Now the game ending for now anyway
It's absolutely manufactured to the extent that the Fed is intentionally trying to slow demand (aka: cause a recession) in order to stop inflation. The problem is, a large portion of inflation (some indicators are half) is simple price gouging, which Fed measures won't impact, and another large portion is simple ongoing supply chain problems, which the Fed also can't really fix. All they can do is force a recession.
This time however, everyone is calling for a recession so are battening down the hatches while earnings are still very strong. It’s unprecedented and shows how societies adapt as they learn and focus on new factors.
When the yield curve and the relationship between fed policy and the economy was little known and ignored and instead most people focused on trends in earnings or real estate or whatever the hot thing of the day was, the significance of fed policy and rates was huge. Now everyone is laser focused on the fed which changes behavior which changes outcomes.
The worst recessions blindside virtually everyone and are so severe precisely because people are taking the most risk when things are most dire. Think the lead up to 1929, 2000, 2008, the Florida real estate boom of the 1920’s, etc.
Oh, they are not shy about it, it's just a little obfuscated by the jargon they use. One of the Fed's explicit goal is to lower "consumer demand", i.e. make people buy less stuff. Employment numbers are a function of demand, and the Fed has no means of directly tweaking employment numbers, but they can nudge demand (indirectly) by raising or lowering interest rates.
If you look at this fed from 2018 on it’s readily apparent that everything they do is to appease the popular narrative. Economy needs rescuing from covid? Okay let’s take rates to zero and pump in liquidity until we’re told to stop.
Fast forward to end of 2021- okay stop stop stop! Inflation is getting out of control! Sure, no problem we will raise rates until you tell us to stop, just signal to us before each meeting exactly how much to do.
That sounds silly but does nobody find it at all odd that every fomc rate decision is entirely arbitrary whether they go 25, 50, 75 or more and yet cnbc predicts the exact rate decision every time? Believe this fed has a modicum of independence at your own peril.
Besides, the Fed’s actions don’t align- if they really wanted a recession why the gradual hikes from 25 when inflation was spiking? Why not a sudden move to say, 7%? It’s been almost a year since the first hike and over a year since they first announced they would be hiking and we’re still sub 5%. The rate hikes they’re doing are way overblown in terms of driving the economy into recession given the tailwind of liquidity we had. Most companies aren’t cutting back because their short term borrowing costs went up 100 bps in six months.
That's because the Fed communicates what their next steps are likely to be beforehand. And if circumstances change and predictions are no longer correct, the Fed leaks information before their meeting to make them correct. That's what happened with the first 75 hike in this cycle.
Link for reference: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/unhinged-markets-followed-...
Fed funds futures predict what they will do -> cnbc talking heads use fed funds futures in their predictions -> the fed does what everyone thinks they will, rinse and repeat
Pretending that there is some value to "loyalty" in a vendor/customer relationship is silly, and only hurts you.
Job hopping is a good thing for price discovery, and keeps wages for skilled workers going up as inflation eats away at them. Layoffs in downturns are an expected consequence of workers getting more expensive (ie capturing more of their economic value in their paychecks).
Maybe. But not when Healthcare is on the line. That part still need to be fixed.
Companies plan for where the market is going, not last quarter’s results. It’s fully clear to everyone that the economy has shifted dramatically. They are adjusting as appropriate.
Also, these people will be laid off with severance. They were compensated toward the top of market (considering all tech companies) while they were employed. They have Amazon on their resume, which makes future job easier than average. I’m really not concerned about laid off (with severance) FAANG employees relative to the people earning literally 1/10th their comp who are losing jobs without severance.
> people started treating companies they way companies treating people and we are starting to see the results - quiet quitting, oft bemoaned lack of loyalty, job hopping, etc.
I really don’t think this is an appropriate comparison. The whole “quiet quitting” thing isn’t going to hurt companies like Amazon because they’ll just PIP the person out and replace them with the tens of thousands of qualified people wanting to get hired at Amazon and do good work. When some “quiet quits” it’s usually their peers who pay the price because the absentee coworker isn’t get their part of the team project done. Makes more work for everyone else, makes groups projects late, and potentially brings down performance reviews of people depending on their work to get their own work done. It’s not fair to write “quiet quitting” off as only affecting the company, because the company is going to be fine. It’s the coworkers who bear the brunt.
(Source: Had some “quiet quit” team members over my career, suffered greatly during those times)
the parent comment talks about "these companies". what happens when less prominent companies take a cue from fangs and start booting people out, only with crappier severance and crappier resumes? this is far from the last layoff.
Mostly boutique shops. I only dealt with local recruiters in my former city (Atlanta) before remote work got to be big. I haven’t looked for a job post Covid.
Hopefully, I will never have to look for a job again. When I leave my current job - hopefully by choice - I will be semi-retired and doing consulting gigs (not staff augmentation).
Ironically, I work for the very company that this article is about. But, I work in the consulting department at AWS. There is a direct easy to measure metric of how much my work contributes to the bottom line compared to my compensation - I’m a billable consultant.
Some people define their network as professionals they know, even casually. That type of network isn't particularly useful. Other networks are people that you've provided some value to in some way so they know you're a valuable resource. Often, this means going out of your way to show value when there's little in it for you. That type of network is much more valuable because you've formed a relationship that goes beyond just "knowing a guy."
resumes.LastOrDefault();
Yea but no. This isn’t about Amazon, it’s about business culture writ large. Also not everyone at Amazon is a software engineer, and therefore it paid crazy amounts.
> When some “quiet quits” it’s usually their peers who pay the price because the absentee coworker isn’t get their part of the team project done
Quiet quitting is simply doing your job but not being a “try-hard” and not trying to get ahead or go above-and-beyond. It’s a lack of loyalty and treating your job as a trade of exactly 8hrs with a paycheck. If your coworker wasn’t doing their work, they didn’t quiet quit.
> It’s the coworkers who bear the brunt.
Sounds like a manager (company) treating workers poorly. If a factory had people quit and expected everyone else work extra hours, it’d be a labor violation. If they’re doing that to knowledge workers we say it’s laziness?
Conversely, if you had a coworker who worked 8 hours a day, did their job, and didn’t try to give extra, you shouldn’t fall behind unless management had exploitative expectations.
(Source: I have a soul and work. Managers tried to make me suffer greatly at times).
Extra hours to cover is fairly common in factory work. What differentiated it in my experience is there was a union to ensure people were adequately compensated for overtime.
As an aside, it doesn't really make sense to quiet quit as a SWE for the sole reason of there still a ton of career upside for those who do good work[1]. If you're thinking of quiet quitting you probably just need a better employer.
[1] "Good work" as in people who actually get stuff done and produce good software, not those who merely just grind long hours to impress founders.
[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IwlZQJyKZ2A
(I am pedantic, but also I just watched Office Space two days ago.)
Yet all of these companies overhired, which led to the current problem.
> It’s fully clear to everyone that the economy has shifted dramatically.
I don't think that's fully clear.
Sounds like those folks are doing much less than required not to be fired.
My understanding of "quiet quitting" was
a) it's a stupid term made up to give people a sense that they're in control of something they're not - needing to work to survive and;
b) you were explicitly not trying to climb any ladder and merely doing your job as it was described, not shooting for promotions or accolades of any kind.
"Quiet quit" team members are 100% fine to have around IMO, as long as they stay out of the way of the folks trying to take on the larger/harder problems. That's the thing I reject about modern workplaces: this idea that everyone has to be "progressing" or "climbing" all the time.
It's totally cool to punch in/punch out 9-5, it just needs to be clear that's what the role is, and how much that reduces your ability to determine what it is you work on during those hours.
It goes both ways. If you planned so poorly and hired so fast that a minor perturbation in the market causes you to fire 17,000 people, you're still communicating that you putting profits above people.
There’s no doubt that Amazon puts profits over people. They’re a profit-seeking enterprise (and a fairly effective one at that).
What are you defining as a "minor perturbation"? Because if they're responding to the last 12 mos., the NASDAQ is down 33%. Definitely not minor.
Quiet quitting are people doing their job. If you suffered, it's because you were expecting slave labor.
I think the real answer is that those companies were all high growth/high cap stocks. The guy who originally coined the term (Jim Cramer) has dropped Netflix from the list because their capitalization hasn't kept pace. (He also changed the acronym when Facebook was changed to meta)
As for fintech companies, it's just a different field, with different norms, expectations, and overall pay structure. It's also a much smaller field in total.
I have an MBA man I wish I was one of these master of the universes deciding to hire and fire 17,000 people at a company. Do you need the Stanford MBA, Harvard, Wharton? Does Berkeley suffice these days or do you still need the private Ivy League degree first?
EDIT: Guess I didn't do my research about paid skills...
[1] https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2022/11/amazon-alexa-is-a-co...
Knowing Amazon, they probably needed people to handle the holiday stress, and now they’re laying off more people.
1. Sell millions of devices at cost. Unrelenting sales on Echo devices
2. ???
3. Profit
And Step 2 was never filled in. Maybe it was "if people can re-order paper towels by shouting at Alexa, we'll sell more paper towels". But that plan has its limits.
The problem was that it was rather difficult to do for a while and the "here's a great ecosystem of games and tools" never materialized for echo devices.
Part of that is that people really don't know how to to do voice interfaces well.
Another part is that it has to run on AWS which has all the AWS sizing and billing problems that need to be solved by programmers (we're programmers - not SREs - and its really easy to rack up a too large bill on AWS).
As such, in order to try to monetize a skill (which wasn't possible at first) you needed to commit to spending some AWS money to try to get it. Discovery of Alexa skills was poor at best. Free skills normally end up costing money (and not just time) for the programmer.
And so, a possible revenue stream for Alexa has never realized.
Maybe that'll change now with ChatGPT. The problem I have with voice interfaces is you need something at the level of AGI to make it compelling. I could have an hours-long engaging voice-only conversation with a real person, but what the hell am I going to do with a dumb "smart" speaker that will be even a fraction as engaging as, say, a videogame? 99% of my smart speaker use cases are: Setting timers/alarms, querying the weather, turning on/off the lights, playing songs/podcasts/videos. For anything more interesting/interactive than that, you need more intelligence than existing systems actually have.
Give it the proper data in a machine reasonable format and as it to make it into a human summary, and that's where its strength appears to be.
The problem is that GPT would be too expensive for Amazon Alexa right now.
Also, the more you ask Alexa a question, the less you search on Google. And that's gotta be worth a bunch to Amazon. At least I thought it was.
Europe, which makes it very hard to let an employee go, tends to have significantly higher unemployment than the US, which is much more cavalier about layoffs. My 2c.
TANSTAAFL / TINSTAAFL
"There ain't no such thing as a free lunch."
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/t/tanstaafl.asp
Also, if I may add: I wish there were more substance in your comment. This non-sequitur was disappointing.
To be clear, the parent to my comment seemed to completely understand TANSTAAFL. My comment was very obliquely directed at other participants in the larger conversation who seem to think that there is no legitimate reason for an employer to ever let a single employee go because any competent business will work like an oracle and make perfect business decisions always. Any unexpected outcome must be because they are greedy corporate monsters that don't care about their employees. (my apologies for the exaggeration but you should have seen what I wrote and deleted previously :-)
I like that Australia is a bit more egalitarian, and people can “speak truth to power”.
In Australia, you have the opposite problem of randoms going “that’ll never work” to a CEO (which is not exactly endearing).
Why are you spreading lies? Permanent residency is really, really easy to get in Japan, unlike the US where you have to win a lottery.
SWE wages are lower than the US, yes, but not Europe in my experience. Japanese fluency is not needed for PR or even citizenship (you do need a little ability for naturalization). You don't need to be fluent to live in Japan; most of the expats I know are not fluent at all.
German is also a very difficult language to learn, and you won't go far in Germany without it. It's much easier to be English-only in Japan than in Germany, in my experience.
Why go to Japan (in reality only Tokyo) where median software TC is around $60k [0] when you can go to Canada where median software TC is around $90k [1] and English speaking, let alone other English speaking and relatively easy to immigrate Western countries with large South Asian communities like the UK (95k) [2], Netherlands (87k) [3], Germany (77k) [4], Australia (100k) [5], Norway ($74k) [6], or Singapore (73k) [7].
[0] - https://www.levels.fyi/t/software-engineer/locations/greater...
[1] - https://www.levels.fyi/t/software-engineer/locations/canada
[2] - https://www.levels.fyi/t/software-engineer/locations/united-...
[3] - https://www.levels.fyi/t/software-engineer/locations/netherl...
[4] - https://www.levels.fyi/t/software-engineer/locations/germany
[5] - https://www.levels.fyi/t/software-engineer/locations/austral...
[6] - https://www.levels.fyi/t/software-engineer/locations/norway
[7] - https://www.levels.fyi/t/software-engineer/locations/singapo...
Regardless, while I don't disagree with your facts, the original claim (not by you) was that Japan had a "hostile immigration policy that is against permanency". This is false, and sounds like a lie in fact, unless the OP just woke up from cryo-sleep after being frozen in 1985. Sure, there are real challenges to working and living in Japan if you're a native English speaker (which I am), but my whole point here is that legally, immigration here is actually very easy, contrary to the anti-Japan posts like the OP's that I frequently see on forums like this one. Immigration policy here is far, far more inviting than the US which claims to be open to immigration, yet has severe limits on visas and green cards and is legally extremely difficult and expensive to emigrate to.
Are you White? That's the differentiatng factor. If you're of South Asian or Chinese or SE Asian origin (not even nationality, origin), you face much less microagressions in other countries than you do in Japan. In general, factoring in CoL and the insular culture, Europe and other Asian countries tend to make sense. Heck, when I was backpacking out in Isan, while a number of people did go work in assembly lines or pick mushrooms in Japan on the JET visa, they preferred South Korea and Taiwan due to a (relatively) less insular culture than Japan, though Germany, the US, and Australia was the more popular option. This is reflected in diaspora demographics as well.
Anyway, I don't know why you keep talking about this kind of thing. I'm addressing ease of immigration, not how welcoming people are in particular countries. The whole thread was started because someone outright lied about immigration laws, and you keep talking about culture, which has nothing to do with the discussion.
You can get rid of 20 people for next monday if you want to, you’ll just pay the due amount as defined in the contract and the law. It’s also not some astronomical amount, worst case scenario I think it’s around 6 months of pay, which isn’t that far from what you’d pay for a non compete for instance.
PS: also unemployment is a complicated figure, it’s hard to tell how much any specific variable impacts it. Unemployment rate goes up and down while laws stay mostly the same, so singling out labor laws is mostly an opinion at this point.
For some company it totally works and they plan their staffing in 6 months spans (seen a small web agency basically having an "on" and "off" season, with half of the staff during the dead part), removing or adding people as they see fit. For others it's more difficult and they're pretty happy to have staff that can't just disappear within a month if they decide to go tour the Silk Road on a bike.
well put :)
1. go out for a walk. Offer the first good looking man a CEO-ship of your new company.
2. pay him $$$$$
3. hire loads of people
4. fire them all
5. goto 3
~10 years ago, when I got my first job, I was in the minority, pretty much the only person cynical about big companies' claims how "people are our most important resource", how important is the company "culture" and all of that corporate kumbaya. And, at that point, the vast majority of people around me cared and wanted to do a good job, going up and beyond.
Fast forward to now, and pretty much everyone has the attitude of "f**k these guys", doesn't want to be there and will do the bare minimum to get by. And that's exactly what companies have demonstrated that they deserve.
People are tired of job hopping to get market pay, dealing with bulls**t, and being thrown under the bus at the slightest hint of an economic downturn.
You tread in strange circles. I'd think a cursory look at history ought to be enough to put the lie to such claims.
I am convinced they have zero data indicating firing these people will be profitable on the long run, only that short term it is, and that’s all that shareholders are interested in.
I’m a big fan of any measure making stock exchange less volatile, like some form of tax on every transaction, to slow down the machine, make short term investments (speculation) less rewarding. This may help in reducing the appetite of shareholders for such short sighted measures.
Should a company prioritise shareholder happiness over efficiency is the real question here. Their losses don’t originate from these employees nor initiatives; it originates from market conditions.
Can you give some examples? Of big companies with more than a few thousand employees I mean.
Personally I'm doubtful that they exist.
Honestly I also feel there's another factor of a lot of depression as people look around and see that cynical view was the truth all along.
as per levels.fyi Senior Principal SDE at Amazon makes about a million $$$. Entry level salary is $168K
https://www.levels.fyi/companies/amazon/salaries/software-en...
Tell that to Johnny Paycheck.
White collar STEM jobs have historically been very lucrative and most Dev / IT types have had a good incentive to shut up and play ball.
If nobody moved from job to job, there would be no market.
Also a less monolithic tech culture. Right now every employee is more or less compatible across every company because we all seek to be transferable
So what I am curious about is, did companies used to hire in less myopic ways?
Sure, in 1997 an HR person told me they needed someone with at least 5 years experience in Windows NT, but in general most interviews I had in the late 90s and early 00s were way less myopic. I'm not sure I'd have the same experience if starting out today.
Some of the people I had to be honest with - if they are paying you the kind of money you say to reset passwords and stare at the wall, you should stay where you are and make sure that wall never leaves your sight.
Perhaps it IS the widespread case that a lot of us are getting paid as SRE for much less than you believe an SRE should know. Ultimately, where you've set the bar is arbitrary
People often can’t control what technologies their employer uses, but if they have solid fundamentals and I can tell they have tried to learn things on their own, more often then not I’ll give them a chance, and it usually works out because they are doing what they really want to do, and they are always looking for ways to build upon and improve what they’ve worked on.
Somebody has to build and maintain them.
Have you considered that maybe they’re fine with their level of responsibility and can leave work at the office?
If they are not there because they love working with technology, there are other places for them to be.
Or… am I hearing a new web3 startup?
(If I ever end up doing this; this comment will age super well)
I enjoy being the dumbest person in the room. Others find it threatening.
And for those who are so busy outside of work that they can't grow inside of work, I feel for them because that sounds like an exhausting life.
This isn’t true for all industries. Some have software systems with engineering life measured in decades
The only pool of software that both employs a large number of engineers, has an engineering life measured in decades and isn't rewritten every 3-5 years to a large degree is enterprise software, in my experience. Think C/C++/Java/.NET middleware type stuff.
And I imagine 90% of HN actively runs away from those jobs :-)
I've worked in more 'traditional' engineering fields (manufacturing, energy, healthcare, aerospace) and the vast, vast majority are long tenured systems built for dedicated uses. I've worked on many systems that are older than me. For those in SV, I imagine it's the opposite. Like you said, HN may be biased to a specific type of development which often leads to biased claims. Tbf, my main issue is with the "everything" modifier in the OPs claim.
But there's also a place for durable things of lasting value, built by people who enjoy perfecting their skills, technique, and craftsmanship with mature tools to solve problems well, learn the domain well, and build lasting relationships with customers who are big spenders.
It's kind of naive to assume that those people are making no effort to better themselves just because they're not always chasing after the latest hot new thing.
Nope. 30+ years of experience here working for different software companies in 5 different countries. I still use most of the knowledge today that I learned 30 years ago.
Software development fundamentally changes very rarely. However software development fashion changes all the time. But the latest fashion is just a slightly different implementation of the same underlying fundamental things I already understand. It is just a slightly different flavour of ice cream.
It's important to have distinct subcultures to progressultiple fronts sometimes.
So it's cool for employees to quit and job hop to get better pay, leaving their former employers with the effort and expense of replacing them, but not cool for companies to lay off employees to save money when markets contract?
A lot of employers have the unfortunate tendency to see their most loyal employees as furniture.
Companies have more power than employees when thinking about the size of the event:
they can fire you unexpectedly (with/without severance) so for your life (and probably your family) this is the main event happening.
But if you leave for a company that is usually a minor event that will probably not have any effect (or very limited) on their "life" (income/profit/culture ...)
Point being, I don't think you were the only one who didn't love the company 10 years ago.
Dude might have grabbed his crotch on the way out, but he probably made $$$$$ for 20-30 years. Modern hires deal with just as much BS but often for lower pay and less long-term stability.
New hires in tech these days make much much higher wages, inflation adjusted, than ever in the past. Stability is down, granted, though it was never great.
And anybody with that attitude should rightfully be let go. It's mutual.
(I don't want co-workers who act like that.)
Jeff is saying "save your money." Amazon is saying "we're cutting." It's self-fulfilling. And once it's over Amazon rein will be even further solidified.
When I was a kid my dad said "companies won't think twice about dumping you, don't worry about dumping them."
But he worked in the same place for forty years. Sometimes he was treated well, sometimes he wasn't.
It occurs to me what a relic that world is but also how it sounded bizarre when my dad said that to me in the early 00s. At that time there were still "lifers" all over that place. Or people who spent 10-20 years working up in the same company.
That's all gone now. Everything is more ephemeral, more disposable. I'm not sure if it's a good thing but I'm pretty sure signing up to be a "company man" wasn't, either.
A single well tended rack in a closet on-site, with a few single cpu servers hosting multiple applications, a SAN, and a fat data pipe could replace hundreds of Kubernetes clusters — if there wasn’t a cartel on network speed.
It does not help our societies to facilitate the siphoning of our local wealth to enrich foreign companies. Especially ones that have such disregard for their own, imagine their view of the rest of us.
I liken it to how MANPADS allow individual soldiers to overpower tanks for far cheaper, flipping the script on 100 years of war.
It hasn’t fully come to pass yet but corporations hire way too many “credential dead weight.”
In my career I have often been completely outraged at how bad credentialed people are in the pure talent department. Some of the most credentialed people who automatically get top roles really are not that smart versus some of the other people I know.
Corporations and institutions favor credentials. Individuals who have talent are very different and hopefully will go much further in current market.
Back to MANPADS: man-portable anti-aircraft weapons aren't new either. The US was giving Stingers to the Mujahideen in Afghanistan back in the 1980s to shoot down Soviet aircraft.
One should likely never use credentialing to substitute or proxy as a marker for creativity or capacity. Credentials only show a snapshot of knowledgebase at a specific point in time.
That is a line that is exclusively used by dishonest businesses. If people are more important than money the business will cease to exist eventually.
I'm not sure if this is the way a company thinks, even if they wouldn't have pressure from investors or worries for future survival (they would, BTW). Instead, some companies, likely Amazon too, view such cut as necessity for two reasons: bloated organizations slow everyone down, while diluting the company's culture; it's a great chance to trim the low performers. Not saying this is good or bad, just trying to explain the underlying logic.
> people started treating companies they way companies treating people and we are starting to see the results
Reid Hoffman wrote a book, The Alliance, which advocates that employees and companies are not family, but for an alliance. When they both have the right goal, they work towards the goal. When they don't, they part ways. Similarly, Netflix's Reed Hastings advocated that companies are like professional sports teams. A professional sports team is brutal when it comes to trading its players, but it does not mean the players will not pull their weights. I personally think the two views are more realistic and help employees advance their careers.
I think we need more unions, more automation, and more social security. We are racing towards a future where there simply won’t be enough “jobs” for everyone and the companies sure as heck aren’t going to look out. Companies have no soul and the humans that run them have worked hard to insulate themselves from that being responsible for the actions of that lack of soul they instilled.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34028087
I can, but we'd still be taking on a bunch of risk - we'd have to put the capital into the company, as owners we would no longer be eligible for unemployment insurance if the company did fold, we have the possibility of one of us kicking another out so internal politics suddenly matters - when the whole point of the exercise was to get stability even at the cost of some upside.
Have we been in a bubble so long that people have forgotten that the raison d'etre for publicly traded companies existing is not to simply exist, but rather make profit and ideally continually expanding profit for share holders?
For a startup runway and growth of whatever nature are all that matter. You need to exist long enough for the exit event, and grow in a way that makes this more possible. If you have a two year runway, you have two more years to win your investors back their money and more. But this is not true for publicly traded companies. Simply surviving or, even worse, slowly burning reserves is not enough.
I know so many post-IPO startup employees that dismiss layoffs because "the company has tons of cash!"
Do you invest in a company because you think it won't go out of business for a decade? No you invest because their profit margins are healthy and you think they'll continue to grow in a sustainable, net revenue positive way.
I still remember the dotcom bubble, which was much shorter than what we've been in, and the public debate among investors was about the "new economy" and claims that "things are different now". However those old fuddy-duddies that kept arguing that companies need to make more than they spend were proven right in just a few years.
Today I see CEOs and executive leadership at companies genuinely surprised that they're being asked to prove that they can be profitable. I see generations of tech workers sincerely confused about the very idea of what it means to run a successful business.
Amazon is doing massive layoffs because they need to show investors that the know how to create value, and become more profitable. At least Amazon has shown periodically that they can make profit. There are plenty of post-IPO startups that have never proven that they are even capable of not running at a loss.
Should be noted the ideology that the purpose of a corporation is to maximize the profits for shareholder above all else is a modern obsession, and always takes a short term view. Starving a company just for a few good years of share prices is is dumb but often what that ideology leads to. Making profit is part or what a corporation should do, maximizing it above all else is not.
Similarly HOAs are supposed to maximize house value but funny how some of the highest property values are places like Palo Alto that aren’t known for HOAs.
Amazon famously did not turn a profit for years as its stock price rose. It was able to do so because the market largely trusted the management.
The reason why the stock market demands profit from most companies is that many, many managers and directors are bad at their job. Demanding profits is a way to keep management disciplined and focused, and avoiding years long boondoggles and fiascos. This is important since they are playing with other peoples money.
Now there are just speculators exchanging pieces of papers themselves. These have not connection whatsoever with the company’s cash flow.
It is not "modern", depending on how you define the term. Ford v. Dodge was a case about it over 100 years ago.
Did you ever believe it?
It makes me throw up every time I see corporate messages speaking of family and employees being their most important resource.
I have been around for long enough and I have learned that a job is just a contract between parties and it exists for as long as both parties can benefit from it.
Don't get caught up in the whole companies family kind of bs or get too emotionally and culturally attached to your employer. Always be on the look up for opportunities and take them.
Never stop learning and investing in yourself. Knowledge and experience are your most important asset, keep nurturing them.
Also, I wanted to believe that a good chunk of these layoffs should have seen this coming. One must be aware at all time of how valuable (if at all) are for their employer.
Relevant joke:
An engineer is messaging with her boss on Slack after hours. The boss is talking about how his brother is in the hospital.
The engineer asks "What are you gonna do?" and the boss responds "Well, he is family..."
The engineer says "You're gonna make him come in on weekends?!"
There might be a joke in there somewhere. But your version have bugs.
What message does that send to the employees who stick it out who are expected to "give a part of their lives" for the company? Sacrifice, go the extra mile, "what can you do for the company versus what can the company do for you"?
This doesn't mean that it's all downside for employees though. Amazon grew a huge business and paid their corporate employees top of market with huge upside over the last 20 years due to their phenomenal growth. It was a very good deal for those who worked in Amazon corporate over the last 20 years—a lot of people got richer than their parents ever could have gotten in the previous generation of more stable corporate jobs.
But make no mistake, Amazon is not a magic pot of gold, they still have a P&L like any other company. 17,000 employees are not cheap. Amazon grew from 800k employess to 1.3m and then 1.6m at the end of 2019, 2020 and 2021 in response to the pandemic. It is to be expected that their forecasts were not completely accurate in light of the generational event and tech sea change that the pandemic brought. The fact that people are scandalized by this is indicative of how insane the 12-year bull run for tech really was.
Amazon's quarterly reports have all been good so far (Q3 2022 is the latest). Sales are up 15% YoY, and they are profitable.
Some of their investments are boat anchors pulling the companies profits down.
Amazon in particular has a longstanding problem of ops costs rising quickly giving the constant potential to eat into profit margins. If a company does not have a path to profitability, at the scale to justify it's market cap, it will continue to lose investor money.
TL:DR; - reducing an earnings report to "sales grew, all good" is wildly misleading.
In relative terms, Apple is in first place for the largest market cap in the world of any company, and Amazon is in fifth place.
They're totally fine.
Think of it this way: Amazon is still more than twice as valuable now as it was 5 years ago. Short-term investors will live by the sword or die by the sword, but long-term investors are fine.
The main problem is that everyone went nutty during the pandemic. The pandemic valuations were nutty, and the pandemic hiring was nutty. You could call it "irrational exuberance". Now they're coming back to reality.
Well, and also some of the employees there, regardless of their length of service. This whole thread is more from the POV of the tech workers getting laid off than investment performance.
That's not the logic we should expect from companies in a competitive market economy. Companies that think like that will eventually pile up so many bad decisions that they will fail -- and then everyone gets laid off!
Nothing. But one particular group believes that is is more "equal" than the others.
Financial services (banks, investment firms, etc.) have been doing this for decades. It might feel revolutionary to a comfortable recent tech company existence, but I'm afraid to say this is the norm. Companies can hire quickly when they think they'll grow, and fire en masse when the tide turns.
That said, I had some minor hopes for the current post-Covid world, because it, however briefly, looked like employees understood what standing together meant and that WFH is something that can easily be done in some positions ( and is artificially dosed as a reward to special ones ).
For better or worse, the coming recession will confirm whether I had hoped for too much.
FWIW, I am staying mostly remote ( as is most of my team now ). I already told no HR once. I am getting more and more comfortable daily with more otherwise uncomfortable situations despite clearly changing winds and better corporate propaganda ( they did learn from initial fiascos ).
People are an important resource, certainly for a company like Amazon, and probably the most expensive too. But I don't understand the argument -- you don't just throw money around like that on any other resource.
Certainly up until this year it was a seller's market in tech and I saw a lot of movement to chase bigger salaries (which is fine and people should try to get what they want while the getting's good).
> And this brings me to my main point - I think years of this has had an unexpected side-effect the companies never signed up for: people started treating companies they way companies treating people and we are starting to see the results - quiet quitting, oft bemoaned lack of loyalty, job hopping, etc. Now I am not saying it’s all new, but at least in my observation it’s peaking now and my thesis is these things are connected.
I'm not sure it is, and I'm not sure if you can assign the "blame" (if there is any) to one side.
I think as I said the workers have had a red hot run for quite a few years and it was those peaking conditions that drove the peak in their dissatisfaction. Conditions are going the other way now and people will try to hold their jobs a bit more I expect.
And what started the trend from people being lifetime company men to almost no loyalty? I doubt the ruling class one day got together and decided they'd stop treating workers well. It's surely a lot of factors on all sides. People have far more generational wealth including the investment in education, than in the early 1900s, and there are at least some social safety nets, so job loss might be considered less risky. It has become increasingly easier to advertise, search, apply, recruit for jobs outside the local region with telephone, fax, then internet, email.
I'm not sure what you'd prefer. Certainly people shouldn't be tied down to companies. Should corporations be made to keep people on long after they're costing more than they're producing? When you look at government and places with undue union power (police comes to mind), you get a lot of incompetence, corruption, and just poor organizations where crap floats to the top and they could never compete without enforced monopolies. Unfortunately it never turns places into egalitarian utopias.
It does not need to be interpreted as adversarial where you want to get as much out of them as you can for as little effort as possible and neither should they see it as an opportunity to suck the employee dry. It only works while your goals align with the company's goals.
There should be a mutual understanding --a meeting of the minds. I give you this for that. But, yes, ultimately, the company is not your friend. HR is definitely not your fiend. You should have friends outside the company. At work you have colleagues and co-workers. It's not to say you cannot cultivate friendships at work that last beyond your time there, but don't presume it to be your source of friends.
Amazon just had to take out an $8B unsecured loan to be paid back in a year to cover operating and capital expenses. Despite what the government is telling you, things are really bad and about to get a lot worse. The lowest hanging fruit/the least valuable employees get cut first. That's how they stay in business. That's the smart business move unless they can pivot.
Companies can't just borrow and spend anymore they actually have to be sustainable. Amazon gets loans to buy inventory and equipment and pay employees so they can stock their warehouse and then they pay back those loans later after it's sold. If they don't sell that inventory because consumers have no money they still have to make loan payments so it becomes more costly to them over time and if they want to break even they have to raise prices. This is inflation.
The Fed raising interest rates makes borrowing money to do this more expensive so they don't do it or do it less. Money in the economy evaporated in November 2021 with the announcement of Quantitative Tightening and the end of Quantitative Easing. That means getting loans and free money became expensive and private investment in the markets/companies evaporated. This forces inflation to come down because they can't keep borrowing and inflating. They have to stock just what they can easily sell or they find themselves imploding as they can't pay back their loans. Pretty much every industry is going through this, hence all the industries collapsing. You will see a lot of companies that have been struggling go out of business.
Why is this happening? Free money basically. Our government pandered to political interests (voters and cronies) and overspent for decades, kicking the can down the road and we're now at the end of the road.
The US debt to GDP ratio has been over 120% since 2020 which by IMF definition is an economic death spiral. That means the US is underwater, we don't produce enough money as a nation to pay our bills. By 2028 that death spiral will become irreversible, meaning the payments we make on our loans for all that free money --the bailout money, stimulus checks, the entitlements, that omnibus, the inflation reduction act-- will only go to the interest and no longer the principal. That sets us on track to be insolvent by 2042.
Yeah I know, crazy right? But why? Because when this happens all those companies and private investors that poured money into stocks and venture capital can't rely on them for profits so they instead buy government bonds. They don't give as high of a return but it's guaranteed money in a down economy so they do it. The result is the governmnet receives the money they need to pay their bills and all the those living off free money get a reality check and have to live and operate within their means.
And balance is restored to the universe. Unless people try to cash out their bonds and find the government is bankrupt. This is why government spending is bad folks. They manipulate the economy to prop it up and print money until the Ponzi scheme fails. Rinse and repeat or pass a balanced budget amendment and demand our government stop spending money on pointless wars and entitlements that buy them votes or kickbacks. As long as there is government debt, as long as the government exists, the cycle will repeat. We'll just have to wait and see if we survive this time. Where we are at the end of the road is unprecedented. This has been building since we got off the gold standard which is what allowed them to overspend money we don't have.
Historically this is when there's a world war or a collapse of civilization/Dark Age because most nations are in the same boat. Decadence gets the better of us and lack of restraint (dare I say, conservative behavior) leads to this moment in history once more.
Obviou...
I will agree with you that most military spending is inefficient at best, and that we should shift our focus and values to something more productive rather than something literally destructive.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Monetary_Theory
[1] https://youtu.be/KU7mda-4KwQ?t=1232
Stock price crashed. This effects the bonuses/equity of a bunch of employees, some of whom are on the executive levels. Cutting on employment is a very effective method to raise profits and help the stock price. It sucks but that's what the market (investors) like. This is just capitalism ...we've all signed up for this (I guess?).
Um, yes?
Honestly, I'm not sure how one could sincerely make this statement.
Amazon's net income for Q3 '22 is roughly a third of its net income Q4 '21. If losing 2/3rds of your revenue isn't considered hitting the pocketbook, I don't want is.
Now you could yada yada yada they're still profitable, but that's a different argument.
Amazon was seeing 20-30% growth of its revenue. Their expenses were also growing at a similar base. Now that top line revenue isn't there, they need to address how to address bottom line growth.
From: https://www.statista.com/statistics/273963/quarterly-revenue...
Note the stair-step graph. Q4 is Christmas so it's a lot higher. That's why we normally compare numbers with a year earlier.These periods don't last too long: Technologies are tried but discarded, or are too easy to reproduce and lead to saturation, or competition reaches fierce levels etc.
In "stable" or lean times the corporate structure becomes a ruthless spreadsheet optimisation exercise that focuses on exploiting every possible arbitrage (e.g., tax regimes, employee loyalty, overseas labor cost differences etc) to maintain the monetary profitability projections. This leads to endless corporate restructurings, financial engineering and other zero or negative sum games.
The lifecycle of a human being, the social and emotional needs to belong, contribute, feel appreciated and helpful, to create value when young and able, in order to receive value when old and frail. These things are not part of the corporate structure contracts. Neither is in any sense a sustainable planet (but thats part of another rant).
I think it's an interesting synthesis of the corporate-skeptical populist ideology with the non-white skeptical racialist ideology, so I guess we should be expecting far more of this in the next two years. Thankfully, I think most people this is just kinda weird culture war BS.
I think that shows a lack of morals on your part.
I think you’ll be surprised that outside your bubble, most Americans don’t support CFOs funding terrorists that murder children.
Again, I think this points to a clear lack of morals from you.
Most people would have looked up the murder I was talking about before trying to dismiss it — but triggered bigots often get ahead of themselves.
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/everybody-down-wha...
What is the estimated dollar amount that he had sponsored? Or is he sponsoring by buying weapons for them?
Or something else?
https://www.reuters.com/business/retail-consumer/amazon-secu...
Also, Amazon has ~$69B in long term lease liabilities. That’s about ~3x the combined long term lease liabilities of Walmart and Costco (~$20B combined). Walmart and Costco are the world’s #1 and #3 retailer, Amazon being #2.
From the beginning when Jassy took the job, the problem has always been the cost of the excess warehouse capacity. Once they realized the true demand from this holiday season, they can now rightsize capacity for 2024 and beyond. Until then, they need to tighten the belt. Just like if you realized you swallowed a bigger mortgage than you can handle.
“The last issue relates to our fixed cost leverage. Despite still seeing strong customer demand and expansion of our FBA business, we currently have excess capacity in our fulfillment and transportation network. Capacity decisions are made years in advance, and we made conscious decisions in 2020 and early 2021 to not let space be a constraint on our business.”
- Brian Olsavsky CFO Apr 28, 2022 earnings call
Long term lease liabilities are next to meaningless for any kind of analysis because it's the sum of rent due at any point after the next 12 months. Could be at the 13th month. Could be at the 13th year. I am not an accountant but I believe you could sign a 50 year lease at $1m/year, that can be terminated at any time by paying a $1m penalty, and it would still show up as a $49m long term "liability".
1. ASC 842 states that lease liabilities should be measured by lease terms that are non-cancellable. In this case, these are Amazon’s non-cancellable leases.
2. The average lease term remaining is ~9-11 years for Amazon.
3. Lease liabilities are present value calculations, ie. They are not as you suggested 50 years x $1M/yr. They represent the present value of the discounted cash flows. The discount rates are disclosed.
Leases notes from latest Amazon 10-Q: https://www.bamsec.com/filing/101872422000023/1?cik=1018724&...
Is it good to give 100% of your corporate employees a 25% pay cut, to avoid 5-10% layoffs? I think that's a less clear-cut value call.
Amazon was forced to shut down or delay plans for over a dozen facilities as e-commerce sales last year grew slower than expected. Another headwind - soaring energy prices - impacted Amazon's business in a major way, with the company's spending on shipping climbing 10% to $19.9 billion in Q3 2022.
To cut costs, Amazon plans to reduce its workforce in early 2023, reportedly by as much as 10,000 employees."
https://techcrunch.com/2023/01/03/amazon-secures-8b-loan-ant...
"In October, Amazon disappointed Wall Street with a holiday season forecast that woefully missed analysts' expectations. The company's stock fell about 50% last year.
Like Jassy, a number of other tech founders and CEOs have since admitted they failed to accurately gauge pandemic demand."
https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/04/business/amazon-layoffs/index...
May 15, 2021 - "The question, in view of these results, is what kind of world we are heading for after the pandemic. The company's vision points to a major consolidation of e-commerce as we adopt new habits brought about by the pandemic, to the point of becoming a trillion-dollar industry in the United States."
https://www.forbes.com/sites/enriquedans/2021/05/15/amazon-r...
https://techcrunch.com/2020/08/24/covid-19-pandemic-accelera...
https://web.archive.org/web/20200824070131if_/https://www.ib...
In the teach world, if you didn't blog about it you don't know it.
If the Feds did not raise interest, I doubt any of this would have happened, inflation might cross 10% though.
My impression is Amazon is a factory tuned to hire and churn a sort of middle of the road white collar worker with no creativity who can sort of plug into some pre designed module and churn away and be yelled at to “go faster.”
Some of the people I met at Amazon we’re ultra talented but all the ones I ever interviewed with seemed like total morons.
I never understood why. Maybe I just interviewed with the wrong teams
I've heard the same thing about them. I think it's a place where certain kinds of people like to work, for a while, because it pays well and looks great on a resume, and they don't mind working long hours to do that kind of work and earn that kind of pay. But it's not for everyone.
To be fair, the startup jobs I had weren't that stressful either. I was in a comfortable indoor environment with a nice computer and reasonable work-life balance. Way nicer jobs than working at a restaurant or something
How large would their recruiting organization be, and what percent do companies cut when they foresee that they won't need to proactively recruit for a couple years (because there will be enough job seekers who will apply to listed positions). I assume they'll still need people to process candidates, but that won't be as many as when they were reaching out to people and trying to woo them.
What does retail mean? Is this a reference to Alexa? Or is this about their storefront operations?
Internally, Amazon structures their teams into divisions. There is a retail division, and part of that division works on Alexa (mainly, the shopping skills and shopping experience, trying to make shopping on Amazon with Alexa as easy as possible) - but the main Alexa organization is not under "retail" at Amazon, which includes the actual device development, hardware teams, ML related to voice processing, etc. Same story with Prime Video.
Stuff like how the government would just randomly send me a letter and say "Hey, asshole, give us another $800." In my case it's like "OK" but for most Americans living paycheck-to-paycheck that would be a catastrophic event
* Age out at 21: H-4 no longer valid, green card process delayed because of country-specific quota
* F-1 student visa gives you a few more years, but still no path to residency
https://www.npr.org/2021/08/01/1023393351/documented-dreamer...