Thread regarding Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) layoffs

HPE's brain Drain

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) has experienced significant, long-term, and ongoing "brain drain," characterized by the loss of experienced staff and top executives due to consistent restructuring, offshoring, and layoffs. While some employee reviews still reflect a generally positive 4.0/5 star rating on Glassdoor, specialized talent is reportedly leaving, and high-level, long-tenured employees are being replaced by lower-cost or contract labor.
Wow, who knew?


by
| 4 views | | 13 replies (last May 6) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kpvjgv9y

13 replies (most recent on top)

As an executive, seriously, I spend more time shopping for executive sneakers that doing anything work related - most days.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @259+1kpvjgv9y

These giant, hulking relics can generate cash for years. Good for investors (HPE is up 80% y/y, thanks JNPR!) .

The problem is that at the "leadership" level, these ghost ships breed mediocrity like rats. Hundreds of exec careers spawned out of BS goals and metrics that then spread through the corporate ecosystem like a virus.

The good news is that if you're useless, timid, or completely lacking in expertise and experience, (or from India), there's any number of great titles available to you! Don't mind the inanity, though.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @238+1kpvjgv9y

@1e6 HPE has cash, so it will take some time to die. But, unless a person with imagination comes in, it will disappear like all its predecessors (DEC, Compaq, OG HP). There are parts of it that would be interesting to other large companies and when this happens (there really isn’t an if), the company will be bought, the valuable parts kept and the rest discarded to the highest bidder. Timeline is undetermined, but would not be a surprise if it is 5 years or so down the road.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @1ps+1kpvjgv9y

@ew The talent in Houston has retired, quit, or laid off. I was there for 20yrs starting with Compaq, HP, HPE and witnessed the brain drain. Now it's all H1b visas and off shored work. I don't understand how HPE is hanging on.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @1e6+1kpvjgv9y

The management is weak and has no vision. The amount of day to day work that senior managers engage in is hilarious. Perhaps if they showed some trust, paid to retain good people, the geniuses at the top could actually run a business. As far as brain drain goes, it is way past time to get out

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @14n+1kpvjgv9y

My advice to younger HPE employees is to learn as much as you can in three years and find a better job. The raises and bonuses are incredibly stingy at HPE. Dell is even worse. HPE is building commodity hardware and the bean counters are thinking up new ways to offshore your job.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @12k+1kpvjgv9y

@et That's the plan, right? all this ai! ai! andale! andale!

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @tv+1kpvjgv9y

@jv you’re right. It’s more of a Juniper thing than a California thing.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @jx+1kpvjgv9y

@ew California is overrated in talent. And talent comes globally these. The issue is people see the continued layoffs and nope away from job offers, if possible.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @jv+1kpvjgv9y

Walk around the talent in Juniper, then walk around the talent in Houston, then you will know. Talent margin in CA way larger and better than in TX.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ew+1kpvjgv9y

Autopilot is fine now. No need for brain or innovation. Run the machine on the cheapest gas and it will still work.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @et+1kpvjgv9y

@OP The real issue is hpe is top-heavy with too many senior employees and has never done a good job of retaining entry level talent. I've seen too many young employees disillusioned with low salaries small raises only to leave after being here two or three years.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @dr+1kpvjgv9y

Yall gots Dr.Gartner tho.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @cv+1kpvjgv9y

Post a reply

: