https://www.ocregister.com/2025/11/18/mattel-laying-off-89-workers-in-brand-restructuring/
Posts mentioning hashtag #restructuring
Below are all the posts — topics as well as replies — that mention the hashtag #restructuring.
Mention #restructuring in your post to continue the discussion!
GNT Thread
I work in GNT, below is what I’m hearing as of 10:30EST on 11/19. Please share what you are hearing in the comments.
- If your AD is getting cut, your ED will notify your AD first thing tomorrow morning, and then notify ICs on the AD’s team. Depending on your ED, they may give the AD the option to call ICs if the AD would like to make those calls themselves.
- If your AD is not getting cut, they will get a list after 5pm today and they will start making calls at 8am tomorrow. They may not send calendar invites, so don’t infer anything from that.
- Once everyone is notified, your AD (or ED if your AD is impacted) will set up a call with the survivors.
- This isn’t just layoffs, it’s also a major restructuring. Markets will be merged. I’m hearing that there will be restructuring/reorganization beyond markets being merged, but I haven’t heard any details.
This su-ks. It has been poorly managed. I’m sorry for everyone who will be impacted, and I’m sorry for survivors who are already spread thin and will be expected to take on inhumane levels of work. Each one of you deserves better than this. Be nice to your colleagues, give everyone a little extra grace, and make sure you have everyone’s contact info on your personal phone.
Layoffs coming in IBO and GSCs
Town hall this morning announced that we're going to combine IBO and the GSCs, and that we will eliminate some redundancies.
Buckle up, it's time for another round of musical chairs aboard the RMS Titanic.
2025 Restructuring & Layoffs
A major restructure just announced with layoffs attached. Positions cut in warehouse, distribution, and account executives.
Cisco to lay off dozens in Israel as restructuring hits local operations
https://www.calcalistech.com/ctechnews/article/h1cjws5xwx
Cisco to lay off dozens in Israel as restructuring hits local operations
TC2 podcast - what Enterprise customers need to know
So sourcing consultants with their wise words of caution to enterprise clients.
https://www.lb3law.com/blog/verizon-restructuring-what-enterprise-customers-need-to-know/
Chaos, confusion, and a corporate bingo card
Fresh off the all-hands meeting, where leadership proudly told us everything is “record-breaking, absolutely historic, folks”, the company rolled out a restructuring plan so wild it should come with a safety label.
They’re desperately trying to fix what even duct tape, prayer, and three consultants named Kramshi, Vamshi and Bamshi couldn’t fix. And then, of course, the master stroke: shifting jobs to India because someone read a PowerPoint that said “globalization = savings” in big sparkly letters. Brilliant! Truly next-level thinking. Never mind that they understand the local culture about as well as they understand their own product roadmap. They probably think the caste system is just an optional settings menu you can turn off. Brilliant!
I’m sure nothing says “operational excellence” like replacing entire teams overnight and hoping the universe sorts it out. Really incredible work, if the goal is chaos, confusion, and a corporate bingo card full of terrible ideas.
Tremendous work! S'more Popcorn Please!
Another quiet layoff due to restructuring
Talent Acquisition team decimated on Friday 2 weeks after they were told of a hiring freeze for the rest of the year.
Greenville hospital to lay off 90 employees in restructuring
Regional Medical Center of Central Alabama has announced that it will lay off 90 employees and end inpatient care as it restructures its operations.
The hospital says it will file an application with the State Health Planning and Development Agency to convert itself into a rural emergency hospital.
https://www.waka.com/2025/11/13/greenville-hospital-to-lay-off-90-employees/
The truth about AI. From someone who is implementing it
I am an enterprise architect that has been tasked with implementing AI from design to implementation. We have been very busy for the past two years, from governance, safety and control rack, and stack. Yes, AI is very impressive, and does bring a lot to the table for immediate impact on workflows, data science and automation. With that All being said AI still needs human in the loop, I don’t care how much we can build the guard rails, hallucinations are still a plague for us. But I will tell you that Google is very active and their consultant services, about what they are learning from Gemini. Every day employees use Gemini, but all you’re doing is training a system. I know they have that little disclaimer at the bottom that they are not using any Verizon data to train, but they are. They just use different words for it. This has been in the works for a while, and will be used as future metric data, for future cuts. I will tell you that this downsizing that’s coming is not because of AI, it’s not mature enough inside of Verizon. These cuts are trying to curve the bleeding that our past leadership has left us in. They are going to sting, but won’t be part of a overall strategy. Yes they will announce some flashy, news attention seeking moves this week. But nothing truly about the honest direction where we’re about to go. Do you think it was just by chance that our new CEO mentioned perplexity in his first? conversation? He has a very big stake in perplexity.
Bayer Layoffs Continued in Q3 but CEO Says Cuts Should Be ‘Incremental’ Moving Forward
Bayer has let go of about 13,500 employees, including around 5,000 managers, since implementing a new operating model in early 2024. CEO Bill Anderson said in a recent earnings call that he expects a slower rate of headcount reduction moving forward.
https://www.biospace.com/job-trends/bayer-layoffs-continued-in-q3-but-ceo-says-cuts-should-be-incremental-moving-forward
They know exactly what they're doing.
Don't ask "how do they expect [any function] to continue?". They don't. Verizon will look completely different very quickly and your job, if you still have one, is going to change. Whether it's a sale, merger, or complete dismantling, the old phone company is no more.
Verizon CEO Schulman and his Department of Verizon Efficiency, (DOVE).
The transformation of Verizon under CEO Dan Schulman, driven by AI, to mirror the goals of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)—to achieve a radical reduction in operating friction and an aggressive overhaul of the cost structure—but focused on customers and internal processes rather than stove piped, bureaucracy.
Schulman has explicitly stated his plan is to "aggressively transform our culture, our cost structure and the financial profile" to make the company "simpler, leaner, and scrappier," using AI as the central engine for this change.
AI-driven transformation, analogous to a DOGE-style overhaul at Verizon:
AI as the "DOGE" for Verizon: Two Core Pillars
The transformation centers on AI simultaneously improving the customer experience (to drive retention) and automating operations (to slash costs).
- Eliminating Customer "Bureaucracy" (The CX Overhaul)
The goal is to use AI to dismantle the complexity and friction that causes customers to leave (churn).
Hyper-Personalized Offerings:
The Change: Instead of navigating complex plans and bundles, Generative AI analyzes each customer's real-time usage (data, call, streaming), device ecosystem, and loyalty history to instantly suggest the single best, most cost-effective plan for them. This simplifies the shopping process and eliminates the customer suspicion of being overcharged.
The DOGE Parallel: This eliminates "wasteful" time and frustration for the customer, much like streamlining a government form.
Proactive and Instant Customer Service:
The Change: AI-powered churn prediction models identify customers who are highly likely to have an issue or switch carriers before they even call. AI then triggers a proactive intervention, such as adjusting network capacity in their area, automatically applying a loyalty discount, or sending a personalized text to check in.
The DOGE Parallel: This is a shift from reactive management (only fixing problems after a complaint/crisis) to proactive, preventative problem-solving, eliminating the need for expensive, high-touch support calls.
Intelligent Agent Routing and Support:
The Change: When a customer does call, AI uses a "Fast Pass" or similar system to instantly categorize the caller's need (e.g., "international billing issue," "Fios speed problem") and route them to the exact human expert trained in that niche, cutting down transfer times and repeat explanations.
The DOGE Parallel: Maximizing the productivity of the human workforce by ensuring they only handle the most complex cases, eliminating time wasted on simple tasks.
- Aggressively Restructuring the Expense Base (The Cost Transformation)
AI will be deployed internally to achieve the "simpler, leaner" operations Schulman has promised, translating directly into major job role changes and cost cuts.
Automation of Back-Office Functions:
The Change: Intelligent automation takes over large-scale, repetitive tasks in billing, supply chain, and contract management. This results in significant staff reductions (layoffs) in administrative and support roles, a key part of the "scrappier" business model.
The DOGE Parallel: This is the direct application of "cutting wasteful expenditures" and "downsizing the federal workforce" by replacing manual labor with efficient software.
Network Optimization and Predictive Maintenance:
The Change: Machine Learning (ML) models continuously analyze network performance data to predict equipment failures, automatically adjust power consumption across cell sites, and optimize technician dispatch routes. The network essentially becomes self-healing and energy-efficient.
The DOGE Parallel: Modernizing technology and software to "maximize governmental efficiency and productivity," saving billions in maintenance and energy costs.
Precision Capital Allocation:
The Change: Data science and AI are used to determine precisely where capital should be invested (e.g., which specific neighborhoods need a 5G Ultra Wideband upgrade versus which areas can rely on existing infrastructure) to maximize subscriber growth and revenue return, rather than blanket spending.
The DOGE Parallel: Ensuring that every dollar is spent wisely and effectively to achieve strategic goals, much like a government audit of taxpayer funds.
The overall goal is a tectonic shift in Verizon's identity: from a company primarily defined by its physical network build-out to a digital-first, data-driven organization where AI dictates every interaction, promotion, and operational expense.
Verizon Set Backs and AI 2025
Another Verizon setback is on the horizon. Cuts are being made without collaboration with leadership that is directly involved in the work. Not the slightest idea of who does what and their job function. Dan starts his vision by taking 10 steps back, and it will take many years to get back to where we are at the moment. While AI is the future, it often produces inaccurate results and information that is not even relevant to the data sets it has been instructed to review, summarize, and recommend. Can't wait to witness the lawsuits and chaos it produces.Well deserved to the leadership that is blind to the way systems and technologies are currently working!
Perplexity Answers Which Dept are at risk?
The departments and roles most at risk in Verizon’s current layoff wave are those in non-hub locations, remote-only roles, legacy functions, and middle management, with a particular emphasis on areas not directly tied to core business transformation or strategic platforms.[reuters +3]
High-Risk Departments and Roles
• Remote/Non-Hub Employees: Workers based outside core and business hub locations or those exclusively remote are the primary targets.[remio +2]
• Middle Management: Over 20% of management roles, especially those with duplicative functions or not clearly aligned with growth priorities, are flagged for reduction.[finalroundai +1]
• Legacy and Support Functions: Departments relying on old technologies, process-heavy support teams, and administrative roles—especially those made redundant by automation or digital platforms—face higher risk.[remio]
• IT Support and Operations: Routine IT, helpdesk, and non-strategic operations, particularly those not driving cost savings or transformation, are being streamlined.[remio]
• Finance, HR, and Shared Services: These centralized functions face consolidation, with job loss risk greatest for those outside highly specialized, strategic, or compliance-driven roles.[fortune +1]
• Sales in Declining Markets: Sales teams in underperforming or shrinking segments are seeing targeted reductions, especially if their territory overlaps with others or shows declining ROI.[deccanchronicle]
Safer (But Not Immune) Roles
• Employees in critical, revenue-driving, or transformation-aligned teams—especially in core hubs—are less likely to be cut, but all business areas are under some level of scrutiny this cycle.[reuters +1]
In summary, remote workers, non-hub office staff, duplicative middle managers, and those in legacy support areas face the highest layoff risk at Verizon during this restructuring.
ExxonMobil Layoffs 2025 - ChatGPT AI Compilation
ExxonMobil is set to lay off 2,000 workers globally as part of a restructuring plan aimed at improving efficiency and consolidating operations.
Overview of Layoffs
Number of Layoffs: ExxonMobil announced it will cut 2,000 jobs worldwide, which represents about 3% to 4% of its global workforce of approximately 61,000 employees.
Affected Regions: The layoffs will primarily impact operations in Canada and the European Union, with 1,200 positions expected to be cut in Norway and EU countries by the end of 2027. There are currently no planned job cuts in the U.S..
Reasons for Layoffs
Restructuring Plan: The layoffs are part of a long-term restructuring strategy aimed at cutting costs and improving operational efficiency. ExxonMobil is consolidating smaller locations into regional hubs to enhance collaboration among employees.
Market Conditions: The decision comes amid fluctuations in global oil prices, which have prompted many energy companies, including ExxonMobil, to reduce their workforce to maintain profitability in a challenging market.
ExxonMobil has stated that the restructuring is necessary to align its global footprint with its operating model, emphasizing the need for collaboration in a rapidly changing energy landscape. A spokesperson noted, "Our global office network was established decades ago under very different circumstances".
Global News
These layoffs reflect broader trends in the oil and gas industry, where companies are adjusting to lower prices and focusing on efficiency amid ongoing market volatility.
Fiserv’s 2025 is quickly shaping up to be one of the biggest collapses in enterprise fintech history
Hearing massive retail restructure and layoffs..
From everything I’m hearing I’m retail there will be a massive shift incoming. Here is everything I’ve heard so far:
1.Operations and potentially VBG will take massive cuts and be rolled into existing retail framework. With ops/SMB leadership taking on way more stores each.
Store closures which cause re-org/re-districting - Re-districting will cause Sr. Directors will get assigned more stores per territory and there will be a 15-25% cut to Sr. Directors.
Once the re-org takes places Directors will take a massive cut. Directors will go from 6-8 stores each to 12-18 stores each, which will cause a 50-75% reduction in Directors. (Directors I know that left within the last 45 days were not backfilled and some of our directors are running 12-15 stores since last month. Then at the beginning of this month we’re told not to expect a backfill)
This is just the first wave. During Q1 there will be additional store closures to remove repetitive locations, mall locations, and unprofitable locations. Also during Q1 layoffs stores will be asked to go to 1 Assitant Manager with keyholders shouldering more responsibility (following the T-mobile model here).
This is just what I’ve heard in the position that I am in and wanted to share what I know.
Crystal Dynamics announces layoffs
"Today we've made the difficult but necessary decision to reorganize Crystal Dynamics' studios and teams. As a result, we've parted ways with just under 30 team members across various departments and projects as we restructure the company and business for our next generation. Crystal deeply thanks all of those impacted for their incredible talent, hard work, and dedication, which helped shape the studio in so many ways. We are committed to offering our fullest resources and support to you during this transition.”
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Crystal-Dynamics-announces-new-layoffs-and-it-s-worrying-for-the-next-Tomb-Raider-game.1163412.0.html
The next layoff after next - Already planned
The next wave isn’t some mystery, it’s already baked into our strategy. When leadership pivots this hard into AI, it isn’t because they suddenly care about “efficiency.” It’s because they’re building a structure where human labor becomes optional.
Once the next round is done and AI systems hit their next iteration milestone, the company will need another injection of savings to justify the spend. That’s when the follow-up layoff is planned. Everyone will be surprised. It won't be because the market shifted overnight. Because massive automation projects always demand a second cut to “realize value" it's the only way we make the money from it.
And the pattern is predictable:
• automate what you can,
• offshore what you can’t,
• shrink the org until the balance sheet looks cleaner.
People keep saying, “AI can’t replace us.” But that’s exactly what these systems are being trained to do, absorb workflows, mimic decisions, and reduce headcount. It won’t replace everyone, but it will replace enough roles to hit whatever targets leadership promised the board.
We’re watching a slow-motion restructuring disguised as innovation. Employees feel it long before leadership admits it. Pretending otherwise doesn’t protect anyone, it just blindsides people who could’ve been preparing.
Leadership has already set this in motion and they know the next outcome but they're going to work you harder than ever so the AI gets trained on good data practices as you all help to make the AI perfect.
At least we don't see any government regulators coming down to regulate AI and save jobs....oh yeah, probably because the top AI company's own the AI conversation right now and they need to move fast before they lose control.
Good luck to all
Aggressive & Long Overdue Verizon Changes Including Massive Layoffs
These major changes being executed by Verizon's new CEO, Dan Schulman, are way overdue at the obscenely bloated and underperforming telecom behemoth. Relentless price increases, undifferentiated products & services, absolutely horrible customer service and sheer corporate arrogance has driven many customers away at a time that competition has intensified in the mature telecommunications industry. Speaking as a customer it's about time this rotten and miserable company gets shaken up! Best of luck to all my career compadres going thru this period of upheaval at Verizon. P.s., Knowing Dan Schulman personally, I told you this was coming!
Verizon's Layoff Plan Exposes Growing Divide Between Investors and Employees
Verizon's New CEO Sees the Need to Implement Aggressive Changes Including Job Cuts
14 November 2025, 2:29 PM GMT
New Verizon CEO to intensify cost transformation and expense base restructuring, including job layoffs.
Verizon's sweeping cost-cutting plans are triggering sharply different reactions from the two groups whose futures hinge on the company's next moves. Investors see the restructuring as a long-awaited correction—one that could streamline operations, protect dividends, and lift a stock that has lagged behind competitors for years. But inside the company, employees describe a climate of mounting fear and uncertainty as reports of mass layoffs circulate with little internal guidance from leadership.
This widening gap between Wall Street optimism and workforce anxiety has become the defining feature of CEO Dan Schulman's early tenure. As the company prepares for what could be the largest layoff in its history, workers say they are bracing for a painful transformation, while shareholders look on with cautious approval. The result is a company moving in two emotional directions at once: confidence at the top, and unease on the ground.
A Gloomy Christmas for 20K Employees
Christmas 2025 will be different for an American telecom giant and gloomy for its employees. News reports say Verizon Communications will implement a massive workforce reduction of up to 20,000 as soon as next week. Also, up to 200 stores will be converted into franchises to be operated by independent owners.
Verizon is downsizing, and the twin news regarding job layoffs and new business direction are the initial moves of Dan Schulman as Verizon's CEO. The former PayPal chief assumed the post on 6 October 2025.
On his first day as CEO, Schulman already laid out his priorities. 'We are going to maximize our value propositions, reduce our cost to serve, and optimize our capital allocation to delight our customers and deliver sustainable long-term growth for our shareholders,' he said.
Aggressive Transformation
During the Q3 2025 earnings presentation in late October, Shulman shared his vision on how Verizon will return to growth.
'We are going to take bold and fiscally responsible action to redefine Verizon's trajectory at this critical inflection point for our company. We will rapidly shift to a customer-first culture —one that thrives on delighting our customers,' Schulman said.
'These will not be incremental changes. We will aggressively transform our culture, our cost structure, and the financial profile of Verizon in order to put our customers first, compete effectively, and deliver sustainable returns for our shareholders,' he added. His predecessor, Hans Vestberg, was network-first focused.
Financial Highlights
In the three months ended 30 September 2025, total operating increased 1.5% to $33.8 billion compared to Q3 2024, while net income climbed 48.2% year-over-year to $5 billion. On a year-to-date basis, the bottom line increased 18.1% to $15.2 billion from a year ago. After nine months, free cash flow reached $15.8 billion, up 9% year-over-year.
Total broadband connections rose 11.1% to more than 13.2 million versus the same quarter last year, including 306,000 broadband net additions. The partnership formed with Tillman Global Holdings' Eaton Fiberlast October will expand Verizon's broadband offering.
Schuman notes that, for the past few years, Verizon has relied too heavily on price increases for financial growth. He believes that over-reliance on price without subscriber growth isn't sustainable. He vows to discontinue the strategy.
Instead, the customer-first culture will simultaneously drive a much more efficient cost structure that fully supports incremental investments. Customers will delight in this without the decline in margins.
'My top strategic imperative for Verizon is to grow our customer base profitably across our mobility and broadband subscription businesses.' Schuman said.
No market success
Schulman acknowledged that Verizon's stock performance has been disappointing for shareholders. The share price stands at $41.11, up less than 10% year-to-date, with a three-year total return of 31.35%.
Despite this, Verizon, with a market capitalization of $172 billion, has increased its dividend for 19 consecutive years. Current shareholders benefit from a 6.71% dividend yield following the September hike.
Largest Layoff Ever
Verizon has yet to confirm the shocking news about the impending job layoffs. If true, 15% of the total workforce will be out of the company payroll. Remember, Schulman emphasized at the onset that aggressive change is needed through cost transformation and a restructuring of the expense base.
https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/verizons-layoff-plan-exposes-growing-divide-between-investors-employees-1754943
Throwing the baby out with the bath water never works
15,000 jobs gone. A ‘streamlined’ future promised. Yet executive pay stays sky‑high and friends get hired into new divisions. If we truly want transformation, let’s stop cutting the backbone of the company and start listening to the people who actually make it work.
Reorg before cleanup
Why cant the teams reorganize before cleanup. Let the low level hard worker atleast try to understand the org structures and the new skill needs before asking him to go. There are so many managers who are just going to take care of their favorites and the true workers might be left in the dust. It just makes sense for the worker to be assigned to the new org structure where he can reskill and deliver as needed. Remember most of the band 6 and below are just doing what they are told , with all the hard work necessary to acheive that.
What’s the thought on retail?
I know a restructure was said to take place and 180 store closures.. do you think we will restructure all of the territories? How do we think Sr. Directors and Directors will be impacted? Or possibly Sr. Managers and Assistant Managers?
What is the over/under
What is the over/under Of Verizon getting out of the PS business all together just shifting all focus to wireless and broadband?
Verizon to cut about 15,000 jobs as it restructures
https://www.reuters.com/business/verizon-cut-about-15000-jobs-wsj-reports-2025-11-13/
11/13 @ 12:37 EST - Wall Street Journal article - Verizon to Cut About 15,000 Jobs
https://www.wsj.com/business/telecom/verizon-to-cut-about-15-000-jobs-87280c3c?gaa_at=eafs&gaa_n=AWEtsqfwwzzGQNSjf0iTTRQ56zZ3hH423LmR2obghM3lJxDmwnKWn-zDeFAwFT9Kzlw%3D&gaa_ts=691622e7&gaa_sig=yRd7CDEKqfopJo7htngX-i8UXriFKDO6GYSMCuamHROphJYQhpOw8di_q5K05JgjulSJbciduA9AaLJ_qpKSqQ%3D%3D
Competitor layoffs
Looks like all of the competition are also going through major layoffs or restructuring. One of the companies I was looking at (Verizon) to move to just announced a 15,000 person cut.
https://www.newsweek.com/verizon-jobs-cut-biggest-company-history-11042581
Most corporate wireless stores no longer to exist Verizon to cut about 15,000 jobs as it restructures, source says
Wow just heard on radio not only 15,000 by next week ,but that Dan said more to come and layoffs and cost cutting will be a way of life at Verizon along with most corporate wireless stores will not exist anymore only 3rd party dealers
All questions (except healthcare) answered here.
Layoff Communication Timeline
• EVP/SVPs: Notified last week
• VPs: Being notified this week
• AVPs/Senior Directors: To be notified next week
• Direct Managers: Will notify impacted employees on 11/20 via phone call only (no WebEx or video)
⸻
Post-Notification Details
• Impacted employees will be removed from payroll on:
• 12/20, 1/20, or 2/20, depending on state notification rules
• After notification:
• No office visits allowed
• Work limited to transition duties only
⸻
Compensation & Benefits
• Bonuses: Paid out at 100% for the year (no proration)
• Accrued vacation: Fully paid out
• Stock awards: Will fully vest at their scheduled times — no loss of stock value
• Unemployment: Eligible, even if listed as “forced retirement”
• Severance:
• 2 weeks per year of service, up to a maximum cap per job band
⸻
Additional Context
• Further layoff rounds expected over the next couple of years
• Current phase involves 20% cost reductions
• Company undergoing major restructuring — work methods and operations will significantly change
Project Cremini
https://www.businessinsider.com/amazon-whole-foods-absorb-workforce-project-cremini-2025-11
No longer whole foods employees. Amazon employees. I wonder what positions are getting cut next year
Marketing layoffs
Sounds like there is a major reorganization in the marketing team and the corporate and business levels and multiple members of the marketing teams globally have been given a two weeks notice.
TheHill: 600 Quit
- Paramount told staff they must return to the office five days a week starting in January and offered a voluntary severance package to employees at vice president level and below who did not want to comply.
- Around 600 people, mainly in Los Angeles and New York, chose the payout instead of coming back full time. This comes on top of earlier layoffs and broader restructuring and cost cutting after the Skydance merger, including leadership changes at CBS News and canceling “The Late Show.”
- Critics say the new owner David Ellison is reshaping the company in ways that may also be politically aligned with President Trump, who recently settled a lawsuit with Paramount and has praised Ellison’s direction.
https://thehill.com/homenews/media/5600559-paramount-layoffs-office-return/
Even more cuts
The layoffs, which were first reported by Crain’s New York, were disclosed in a filing with the New York State Department of Labor. In total, 660 employees are being laid off by Amazon across nine offices in New York City.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2025/11/11/amazon-nyc-layoffs-restructuring-november-2025/87221740007/
A Late Fall Tradition
It is late fall in the United States. The leaves are changing, and the air has turned crisp. We begin to prepare for the holidays with family and friends. Christmas decorations come down from the shelves in the attic or garage. We make our homes—and sometimes our yards—festive, and we start our lists of gifts for loved ones. It is a magical time.
Oh… and Solventum begins its annual restructuring. It seems people are receiving their Christmas their pink slips from the water boy and his cronies today.
In ten minutes, we’ll get to hear how—with a little courage and some visionary leadership—we’re making the changes that will guarantee we stagger forward until the next layoff, which is in no way reassuring.
News: New details emerge in Collins Aerospace layoff
Company: Collins Aerospace
Source: KCRG
New details emerge in Collins Aerospace layoff
Summary: Collins Aerospace confirmed a restructuring with Iowa WARN indicating three positions affected in Cedar Rapids, with layoffs effective December 31. The company said it is reducing costs and optimizing its structure to reinvest in high priority programs. ([https://www.kcrg.com][13])
City: Cedar Rapids
State: Iowa
https://www.kcrg.com/2025/11/06/new-details-emerge-collins-aerospace-layoff/
Clearlake Capital
This is all Clearlake Capital pushing things in the direction that works for them. It'll get worse. But, rest assured, no matter what happens Clearlake will come up on top. Private Equity always wins and unfortunately we were done for the moment they came in. This is just a gradual decay that needs to be sustained until Clearlake Capital extracts whatever they decided to extract. After that, sale, spin off, IPO, etc.
If all these leaders
If all these VP level leaders are getting Rif'd, then who decided which Sr Directors and ADs to Rif? If people were chosen for layoff before the VPs, then in many cases, the people deciding if you keep your job could very well not be good enough to keep their own job.
Cisco Q2 Slashfest = 8,500 (10%) layoff
Cisco is jumping on the 2025 "AI-washing" bandwagon and will cut legacy roles and hire specialists. Total predicted: 8,500 jobs cut with severance of 6 months + stock vesting acceleration
Why?
The internal AI enshitification is in full bloom (employees realizing AI is bollocks)
Cisco's partner event last week was a wake up call (thoroghly underwhelming. Full of vapourware. snoozefest)
Cisco is pushing for a $2B annual cost savings amid AI restructuring.
the rumors are for 2,000-3,000 job cuts but a real possibility of 10% slash of their 85K headcount (8,500 jobs cut)
The numbers are looking weak.
FY25 revenue stagnated at $56.65B (flat YoY), with networking down 5% despite 6% product growth. At average of $200K total comp/person (salary + benefits) an 8,500 gutting would yield $1.7B in savings. This aligns with 2024 12% (9K) trim that boosted margins 2pts
EPS guidance signals a ton of pressure. Deeper cuts fund $1B+ AI capex while offsetting tariff risks.
which shall it be? 3k or 8.5k?
Congo in Lewisville laid off 155
Congo Brands, the parent company of Prime Hydration (co-founded by Logan Paul) and Alani Nu, is laying off 155 employees in North Texas by the end of 2025. The job cuts follow a $1.65 billion acquisition of Alani Nu by Celsius Holdings, finalized in April 2025.
Most of the affected workers are remote or field-based employees in Texas, including over 40 regional sales representatives and 26 account or marketing sales staff. The layoffs begin December 31 and come with no union representation or transfer (“bumping”) rights.
Alani Nu, known for its influencer marketing and fitness-focused energy drinks, has grown rapidly but now faces restructuring amid industry consolidation. The layoffs reflect broader corporate downsizing trends across the U.S. beverage sector in 2025, particularly in sales and marketing roles.