Thread regarding Oracle Corp. layoffs

2018 Layoff Schedule - Important Read

High level rumors are circulating, Group Vice President (GVP) level rumors. These are not confirmed, but I am posting what I have heard here. Next major round of layoffs are slated for March 1st 2018. Most of this will be hardware related. Oracle is divesting itself of all hardware related development, and production will be scaled back to match only existing customer demand. The impacted groups will be sales, support and development. This includes all engineered systems.

There will be some small layoffs before March 1st but the big one for HW is slated for that round.

The final round is a major reduction in force on the field sales team in June 2018. All field sales will be rolled into the Oracle digital call centers coming online. Its no secret that one man is responsible for the Sales shakeup. MH began the process by recruiting and hiring replacements in 2010 and 2011. His final vision will be realized this summer with the opening of several new Oracle Digital campuses.

https://twitter.com/MarkVHurd/status/939241479649632256

Its important to realize that all field Sales will be let go including the "technical talent" this means all field sales engineers and ECAs (Enterprise Cloud Architects) pillar teams will be given a severance package. The entire Oracle sales team, and sales engineers and architects will only operate out of the Oracle Digital call centers. You may have already noticed new people on your calls with duplicate responsibilities to your own.

Two major considerations lend credence to the new sales strategy. With the advent of cloud, and the rapid adoption of opensource, the old days of influencing a CIO or a high level executive to make a decision to purchase multi million dollar enterprise off the shelf software is gone. Developers now have access to the infrastructure and software they need to rapidly develop a cost effective strategy. This realization is carefully documented in the 50 page book "The new King Makers"

https://thenewkingmakers.com/

http://try.newrelic.com/rs/newrelic/images/The_New_Kingmaker.pdf

Agile development and devops projects really work and it is changing the sales landscape. The cheese has moved and so has your job. It is time to realize this fact. Developers are now capable of making the decisions and implementing working cost effective solutions with opensource and cloud. The decline in enterprise level software and solutions is rapid and happening right now.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who_Moved_My_Cheese

What is lacking in the new strategy (of moving all sales into Oracle Digital) is the ability to really understand and solve the customers problems. Helping Clients Succeed is fundamental to the success of any business, and this understanding has been lost at Oracle. With out people engaged onsite, sitting with the developers and helping them solve problems, Oracle products will not be selected. This is why it will be painfully obvious that the new strategy was a bad one. Oracle sells the large expensive enterprise software, and its current focus is not on helping the customer. The current focus is on shifting the expensive software to the cloud and reducing costs. All of this is well documented in the Oracle sales training and can be obtained by the link below.

https://www.amazon.com/Lets-Get-Real-Not-Play/dp/1596592060

Good luck to all of you. Its not a time to be angry. Its a time to prepare for the future. Be grateful that you are getting a severance package. Not all companies handle this the way Oracle has. Some handle layoffs better and many handle it far worse.

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| 34574 views | | 73 replies (last June 3, 2018) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+R4AdLKu

73 replies (most recent on top)

THIS “While Oracle knew chief information officers, Mr. Hurd said in an interview, "We didn't know the head of HR. We didn't know the chief marketing officer."” IS NOT TRUE. And any journalist who didn’t check up on it is obviously a shill to oracle public relations team. Furthermore, the following paragraph to the article that talks about MH hatching the idea to hire college kids so that he can then get contacts in the HR management or marketing management or financial management at each of his customers besides the CIO’s is a joke . First of all the veteran wraps wouldn’t tell him H if they had contacts at the top because They don’t want to take him to meet them as he is embarrassing, a compulsive liar and destroys relationships as fast as he gets introduced. And, the kiddos call the mai. Switchboards at their target companies and talk to secretaries ...they are notable to get high even meetings . How can a journalist not see through this? Or better yet, how can they not check into it. This media outlet publishing this should be ashamed at such half-a-- investigation.

SIGHHHH.

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Post ID: @5fyq+R4AdLKu

“"All they could talk about was that they partied and they sold. They would go to work, sell stuff, party, sleep some, sell stuff and party. This was life. They were so energized," he remembers.

He told Ellison about the dinner and the two of them wanted to bring back that startup feel to Oracle. He and Ellison decided, "Let’s go back to the future, the way it used to be," Hurd recalls.“

There is soooo much you can infer from this quote!

  1. Two old white guys in major crisis

  2. Incorrect conclusion linking youthful energy with success

  3. Churn only at 40-50% ... today it’s more like 60-70%

  4. Sell, party, sleep, sell ... this is a) incorrect & b) not happening — hurts sakes performance by the hubs & kids is in the toilet so far.

  5. The kids in hubs have figured out how to game the Phone systems at corporations to hit their call quotas and associated bonuses$ without actually talking to anyone at the companies, Mgmt has no clue.

Oracle is on the way to becoming the laughingstock of tech.

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Post ID: @5mlq+R4AdLKu

Oracle is not building a high school and never will. Oracle build a facility and rent it to charter school, Oracle do not own the high school.

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Post ID: @5pkl+R4AdLKu

http://www.businessinsider.com/oracle-class-of-program-college-recruiting-mark-hurd-2016-9

The idea was inspired by a dinner he had with his daughter and her friends who had just graduated from college. They were working as salespeople at a startup and were rooming together in San Francisco.

"All they could talk about was that they partied and they sold. They would go to work, sell stuff, party, sleep some, sell stuff and party. This was life. They were so energized," he remembers.

He told Ellison about the dinner and the two of them wanted to bring back that startup feel to Oracle. He and Ellison decided, "Let’s go back to the future, the way it used to be," Hurd recalls.

And, because this is sales, all four of these Class Of grads said their favorite perk was the money.

Glassdoor says that Oracle BDCs make $68,000 on average, including cash bonuses and commission-sharing. But some of them have reported salaries to Glassdoor over well over $100,000.

High churn rate, no worries

That's not to say that all of the Class Of grads are happy or stay at the company. As the program heads into its fourth year, the churn rate is pretty high. Between 40% and 50% of graduates don't stick it out to become salespeople.

Hurd is fine with that.

"If this churned over four years to where we lost 40% of the people, we might lose half of that to other things inside Oracle. That is just fine," he says.

And, he says, as Oracle improves its training of both the college kids and the supervisors who mentor them, the number of Class Of graduates that leave is declining.

Meanwhile, sales of Oracle's all important cloud products, which most of these kids sell, were up nearly 80% last quarter and are on track to become a $2 billion business this year, Hurd says.

"If at the other end, I get 50% or 40%, it doesn’t matter. My entry-level costs to bring them is materially lower than what it would be to bring in a mercenary hire," he says, meaning poaching a top salesperson from another company.

"If I get people who are great and are productive, this is a home run for me," he says.

So long veteran field sales! If this post is right... and it looks like it is. June 1st 2018 is probably your last day.

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Post ID: @5kay+R4AdLKu

http://www.foxbusiness.com/features/2017/08/17/oracles-sales-staff-revamp-is-bearing-fruit-wsj.html

Oracle Corp. is starting to see the benefits of revamping its sales force, addressing longstanding questions from Wall Street about the software company's commitment to cloud computing.

Just a few years ago, Oracle was ill-equipped to do so. Its highly compensated sales staff targeted chief information officers at corporate giants, looking for big-budget deals that came with fat commissions. The company not only bypassed smaller businesses -- who were among the early adopters of the cloud's web-based, on-demand computing services -- but also the division leaders at big companies who were starting to buy cloud services piecemeal.

While Oracle knew chief information officers, Mr. Hurd said in an interview, "We didn't know the head of HR. We didn't know the chief marketing officer."

So he created a program in 2013 to indoctrinate hires fresh out of college in Oracle's sales methods, rather than solely hiring veteran sales executives from other companies. Called "Class Of" -- playing off the term for a group of graduating students -- the program aims to develop a low-cost sales force that prospects for new markets. Oracle taps its own seasoned salespeople to become mentors to the newbies.

In four years, more than 4,500 representatives have gone through the five-week Class Of program. Mr. Hurd figures that in a decade or so all of Oracle's sales leaders will be graduates of Class Of

The program didn't initially sit well with some Oracle veterans, who worried mentoring duties would pull them away from managing their own accounts.

Good bye Oracle veterans!

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Post ID: @5cle+R4AdLKu

This has to be true. Its too stupid not to be true. The executives really are going whole hog on global call centers. They really did set aside 1.1 billion in severance packages. They really do have over 400 million to go.

Lots of money to pay out in severance packages + new call centers coming online = solid probability this rumor is accurate.

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Post ID: @5gmd+R4AdLKu

Oracle is now building high schools to teach the next class of. In 2019, college kids will be too expensive with their 6 figure student loan debt. Why not get high school kids for free and have them work on real projects for grades?

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Post ID: @5inv+R4AdLKu

Momma don't let your kids grow up to be programmers, they should be doctors and lawyers and such... the masses will not have money to buy anything but food so it will not matter in the end... de-evolving to LCD.

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Post ID: @4ypt+R4AdLKu

The turnover of these new kids is astronomical, in excess of 50% over a 6 month period. He has, oracle bought a hotel along rt 101 - the Marriott right next to the SFDC office, to have somebody to house them all for training. Given how little training oracle gives them, needing to own an entire hotel property gives you a sense of the volume of kids being processed through the wringer. Insane!

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Post ID: @4htc+R4AdLKu

To echo the last couple posters, employees are like widgets to Oracle. That’s why there’s no professional development, minimal raises (not even COLA) or other retention efforts (RSUs), etc. To the Three Stooges, newer cheaper widgets can always be found. So...the new call center in Austin, which they aim to fill with cheaper widgets.

Wonder how Oracle’s efforts to fill those “dialing for cloud dollars” seats at the new building is going? Has ORCL’s illustrious reputation as an employer preceded it with the millennial set?!

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Post ID: @4gpx+R4AdLKu

@3ite - spot on!

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Post ID: @3qbw+R4AdLKu

The strategy has failure written all over it. The "kids" won't pick up anything. They won't have the resources or the knowledgeable people to learn from. The top execs don't seem to have a clue how anything gets done. They seem to think of all employees as interchangeable bodies. Just put some bodies in a call center and your done! What else could there be?

People take time to learn and need the resources to do that. This will be the ultimate failure of Oracle's 'treat the employees like interchangeable objects' strategy.

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Post ID: @3ite+R4AdLKu

The kids are probably fine; the set up is utterly deranged and will definitely fail.

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Post ID: @2ciq+R4AdLKu

Everything is moving to the hub. The question is, can these kids pick up enough skills to be effective and will people buy software from some kid over the phone and web conferences? I doubt it.

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Post ID: @2kbf+R4AdLKu

Yep, newbies in a call center tying to seek software through PP demos, you simply cannot be more deranged, detached from reality and imcompetent than that. And yet that’s oracle for you today. What a shame, there goes another company that failed to adapt to a changing world.

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Post ID: @1ssv+R4AdLKu

@R4AdLKu-1emd you said it perfectly.

Amen amen amen.

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Post ID: @1bpi+R4AdLKu

@R4AdLKu-1ozw

The new normal is developers are important. These guys pick the technologies. For sales instead of wooing the CIO, you hold hackathons and showcase your technology. Developers are not impressed by recent college grads with click through demos and power points.

It means the new normal has shifted from infrastructure and enterprise software (hardware and software complete) to problem solving. The new normal is hands on showing the developers how to solve real world customer problems with your technology.

It means old monolithic software and software companies are not what you should be working with. Need to find a job with the new nimble companies. Amazon, Google, MongoDB, Cloudera, Redhat, Pivotal, MuleSoft, and the like. Avoid IBM, HP, Oracle etc... and to some degree Microsoft.

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Post ID: @1emd+R4AdLKu

" Will there be new opportunities and new jobs with this new normal? Just a hypothetical question."

Isn't the point of using the cloud two fold:

1) You don't have to buy hardware

2) You don't have to buy SW licenses

3) You don't have to hire staff to maintain HW or SW or to trouble shoot them

I suppose there will be new opportunities, buy many existing jobs will be going "poof!"

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Post ID: @1ozw+R4AdLKu

You may find the new IT paradigm to be boring and uninspiring. Only two places to be, in the cloud ops doing admin on a grand scale, or in a company trying to manage and corral all these “fill-in-the-blank” As A Service that make up the new server room. Will there be new opportunities and new jobs with this new normal? Just a hypothetical question.

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Post ID: @1tev+R4AdLKu

With the Intel security flaw and patched systems to be about 50% slower, does this mean that SPARC just had it's execution postponed?

AWS, Azure, and Google are only x86. Does this change anything?

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Post ID: @1erq+R4AdLKu

meanwhile AWS is moving into the on-prem space.

http://www.businessinsider.com/amazon-released-linux-software-that-runs-on-corporate-servers-2018-1

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Post ID: @1inx+R4AdLKu

This is interesting. Given the transformation going on with the field sales engineers for all pillars. Is leadership at that level in the dark or just doing a bunch of shifting and tap dancing to pull the wool over everyone’s eyes?

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Post ID: @1edm+R4AdLKu

@1pgq - right on, my thoughts exactly !!!

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Post ID: @1snb+R4AdLKu

This is...emh..I was writing Old News, but I will rewrite it as Confirmed News.

Not so sure what's really happening in SW, but HW field sales org is already officially gone, at least in EMEA. APAC will follow shortly, possibly H1FY19, depending on specific agreements with Fujitsu that are being discussed right now.

Details per region/country still to be officially disclosed, but I'm sorry it will be a massacre unfortunately. Anything between 50% and 75% of the current field sales/presales org will be riffed between january and march, depending on region. This is for ES/Servers, not sure though about Storage ad Tape (in some countries they are still separated from ES/Server)

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Post ID: @1kjy+R4AdLKu

It's funny because Salesforce being a true cloud company is taking a different approach with great success. This is clear to me why KB left Oracle and is now crushing it at SF. He did not agree withMH cost cutting approach. SF has a broad and deep field team. They are getting large deals. MH is running Oracle into the ground in a massive cost cutting move that will kill Oracle's future prospects.

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Post ID: @1ogq+R4AdLKu

Any odds that the "self-managing" database is also doing periodic metrics reporting back to HQ to enforce license terms? Not letting any pennies slip through the fingers can help achieve that 80% margin.

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Post ID: @1irb+R4AdLKu

Self fulfilling prophecies usually do. Someone should let MH in on that secret.

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Post ID: @1azl+R4AdLKu

All of which raises a simple question: when will these ridiculously overpriced 3 stooges be replaced by a computer? Now would be a good time. Maybe replace them with SFDC’d Einstein?

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Post ID: @bfu+R4AdLKu

Lets not forget that people are the problem. Human's are error prone and costly. The new autonomous database does everything but sell its self.

https://twitter.com/twitter/statuses/947959903947079680

Soon it will sell its self, after it learns how to dial a phone and search through linked in profiles. Once that happens Oracle will close down the new call centers they just built. That also shows another flaw in the paradigm shift. You cant sell more product with cheaper less skilled humans, any more than you can patch a database with cheaper less skilled humans. You just get more errors.

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Post ID: @zwh+R4AdLKu

Makes perfect sense given what the 3 stooges have been doing and saying. This is an experiment on an unprecedented scale and one which I believe is going to completely fail. The reality is that none of the 3 stooges know anything about enterprise software and how companies buy and implement it. So yes, things are changing out there in the world, but oracle’s response to these changes is assenine and will fail massively. In the meantime it is impacting many competent oracle employees, which is unfortunate. A lose- lose as both the employees and shareholders will be much worse off at the end of this failed and unnecessary experiment.

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Post ID: @fpm+R4AdLKu

The new call center in Austin is scheduled to start moving millennials in as we type, ramping up through this March. The article below also mentions a second phase of the new Austin location. Sounds like ORCL could have as many as 5,000 dialers for cloud dollars at that site within the next couple years.

http://www.512tech.com/technology/oracle-big-bet-austin/BYeYssjTMEY3MLMBKJTvlK/

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Post ID: @dsv+R4AdLKu

@R4AdLKu:

Good info. Thanks for the input. Keep us updated on further happenings.

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Post ID: @zms+R4AdLKu

ok

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Post ID: @xjg+R4AdLKu

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