First, take emotion out of the equation and realize that Broadcom's purpose is to increase its stock price as much as possible AND run a company as lean as possible with using only as many employees as needed to keep the lights on. They already have the usual staff from legal, HR, tech support, marketing, etc, so these roles will be gone. Employees are the biggest expense and this company is CHEAP!
If you have been there for a long time then you might get a large severance package (unless you're support staff who usually gets outsourced to HCL) and possibly a transition bonus. But...it's a great job market so you might not even want to wait. Start looking immediately.
If your core engineering, then prob be ok if you are a solid senior or higher developer. These senior and principal developers will get like $200k/year just in RSUs. Your salary will not change so if you think you're underpaid now just go somewhere else for a better salary.
Within 6-12 months, they will get rid of almost 70% of your company. Those who survive will get nice RSU packages, but you probably won't see all the money. It really depends how much money your company (and your role) makes them. Get used to google instead of outlook and self-service IT for any hardware issue you have. They also hate work from home so get used to coming into an office every day.
Another important thing is to not trust ANY executive or managers and leaders. They will be trying to save themselves and believe me, they will know very soon who Broadcom will eventually terminate. Don't believe anything they tell you when they put on a fake smile. Directors and above make a ki----g in RSUs (probably double/triple the senior developers). They will throw crumbs at everyone else.
After they gut your company and a bunch of people quit, they will eventually backfill some roles and these outsiders will be making a lot more in salary and RSUs than any of you right now. Many of us from a previous acquisition who were d-mb enough to still stay are seeing new people come in that make at least 30% more in salary. The only response from leadership about the $ differences is love it or leave.
Somebody reposted this from an older thread on the Broadcom board, I think it belongs here as well as a refresher. Copied from @jxn+1gSVvcg5.