Googlers are realizing layoffs are 'just business' — and they're starting to fight back
- Googlers are fighting back against the company after years of being treated like "family."
- The search giant plans to cut more jobs in 2024 after cutting 12,000 last year.
- Staffers have taken aim at its "glassy-eyed leaders" and organized protests in response.
In 2012, Larry Page stressed how important it was that Google acted like a "family."
The search giant had become famous at the time for its perks such as snacks and massages. To Page, then Google's CEO, treating people well translated to "better productivity."
More than a decade later, Googlers can be forgiven for wondering where that family spirit has gone.
Last January, the tech giant said it was to lay off about 12,000 employees — the equivalent of 6% of its workforce — in a bid to cut costs and focus on high-priority areas such as artificial intelligence.
But the layoffs haven't stopped. CEO Sundar Pichai warned staffers this week that there were more to come in 2024 but said the "role eliminations" would not be at the same scale as last year's. Divisions from sales and advertising to product and YouTube are set to be affected.
It's worth pointing out that Google is not alone in making such sweeping cuts. Many of its Big Tech peers, including Amazon and Meta, have culled thousands of roles to rein in wage bills that ballooned earlier in the pandemic.
This, of course, does little to assuage the anger of Googlers who have been kicked out of the family home and the anxiety and frustration of those who remain.
Pushing back against Google leaders
In response to this week's wave of cuts, Diane Hirsh Theriault, a Google software engineer, vented on LinkedIn about Google's leadership.
In a lengthy tirade, she called out "boring and glassy-eyed" leaders for layoffs that seemed to be "torching institutional knowledge" and "perfectly functional teams."
"Google really was a magical place, not very long ago. And for some reason, executives are cashing out their human capital at the very moment it seems to me like they really need it," she wrote. "Who can be dawn-of-a-new-era-of-humanity creative in this environment of fear?"
On Thursday, meanwhile, the Alphabet Workers Union planned protests in five Google campuses across the US, from Mountain View to New York, to "push back against the bogus talking points that Google employs" to rationalize decision-making.
"The truth is that these layoffs cause chaos in our workplace, leaving us with increased workloads and widespread anxiety over which team will be the next to disappear overnight," Stephen McMurtry, senior software engineer and Alphabet Workers Union communications chair, said in a statement.
"Our colleagues are rightfully outraged and more frustrated than ever as we watch Google prioritize 'efficiency" over the people responsible for the company's continued, incredible success."
Google said in a statement it was "responsibly investing in our company's biggest priorities and the significant opportunities ahead," adding that organizational changes included "some role eliminations globally."
"We're continuing to support any impacted employees as they look for new roles here at Google and beyond," Google said.
Kenneth Smith, an engineering manager at Google who said he was notified by email on January 10 that his role was being eliminated, lamented the way in which he received the news.
"Call me old school, but I think that if you find yourself in a situation where you need to let someone go, you owe it to them to meet them face-to-face, look them in the eyes, and acknowledge their humanity," he wrote on LinkedIn.
Though he acknowledged one director followed up with him after the news, he has "harbored a lot of anger and frustration at Google's leadership" over the way layoffs have been handled since January 2023.
On X, software engineer and tech commentator Gergely Orosz recognized the cold-natured way Smith had been laid off by Google after almost six years of service but noted that "this is what you can expect from any faceless corporation."
"It's just business. They can fire you any time (and will, if it's the business interest) and you do the same and leave any time (when it's your personal interest)," Orosz wrote. "Forget 'loyalty' or 'commitment' both ways."
That's probably a pretty tough thing to accept for Google workers aggrieved by the layoffs. They spent years being lavished with perks and huge salaries at a company famed for its culture of creativity and community.
They might soon have to accept that work is no longer family.
Contributer : Business Insider https://ift.tt/0pvz5KX
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