Thread regarding Barnes & Noble Inc. layoffs

MORE STORES CLOSING - THE END OF B&N IS CLOSER

And more good workers used by Corporate and then discarded...

Well it has been a long ride, 30 years to be exact. I began my career with Barnes and Noble back in 1989. Tonight my beloved 2635 closed its' doors for the last time. It was a bitter sweet day. So many employees past and present came by today to share memories and take one last look at the once flagship store of Texas. I am so proud to have been a part of this team and I have never worked with a better group then my fellow managers at Voss. This is the end of my career with B&N but the beginning of a new adventure and I am so excited to take that first step into my future.

I’d go down to Houston for a few weeks every year growing up and would go to this one with my cousins. I bought my first CD in that store, Scary Stories to Read in the Dark and so much more .

Was the lease increased? I haven’t been to this store in a few years but it felt busy whenever I went even a few years ago, Busier than some of the DFW stores that are still open

Official story was the company did not want to renew the lease.

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My store closed tonight as well, I’m sorry and I feel you’re pain!

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Many memories, so many great signings.. I was there too.

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Well, it's over. Let the record show that I was the first person to punch out on the last day that store 2635 was open for business. We had a small gathering of ex-employees come by with cake to reminisce and to catch-up. It was nice seeing them, but watching that funeral break up was sadder than the cavernous, half-empty store. I greatly fear that just as Bloody Monday 2018 bought the company another year of life, an upcoming Bloody Monday 2019 of asst. managers will only buy the company one more year of life. B&N (I almost wrote "we") can NOT compete selling at retail what Amazon can sell wholesale (or at a loss) and deliver free in 1 or 2 days. It's like the difference between the kind of partners people say they want and the kind of people they actually respond to. B&N is the good listener with a great sense of humor and a shoulder to cry on. Amazon is the good-looking bad boy with a reputation and an attitude that says "Save me". (Ugh, metaphors.) Let it suffice to say, all of the talk about "I Love Bookstores" is not translating into enough sales for B&N.

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All I can say to everyone who is left with the company is "GET OUT, as soon as you can!"

Everyone in my store knew there would be no severance, no nothing.

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| 1341 views | | 5 replies (last January 16, 2019) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+X6tr9Tc

5 replies (most recent on top)

Regarding the ASM getting the chop: Demos, in his thankfully short tenure as CEO, announced that certain hourly leads were safe, but their positions would be lost through attrition. The same was said of ASMs; through attrition, most stores would drop down to one ASM. We all knew how the hourly leads fared. Of course, Demos is no longer running B&N, and instead is perusing Indeed and Glassdoor (which is, of course, capital) and Len Riggio is calling the shots. I myself think that the ASMs are next on the chopping block. In terms of running a store, compared to, say, receiving managers, ASMs are pretty small beer.

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Post ID: @3mtm+X6tr9Tc

Our store seems to get rid of ASMs regularly, one time they got rid of 2 of them the same day.

I swear it was age discrimination but they took the money and left. Who can afford lawyer fees, right?

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Post ID: @2akh+X6tr9Tc

Where did you hear that there was going to be a purge of ASMs?

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Post ID: @2ovy+X6tr9Tc

A heart-breaking story, to be sure. One of the things I miss about my time at B&N was the intellectual level of the average bookseller--of course, there were a few dullards here and there, but most of them were certainly the most creative, talented people I ever worked with in the retail sector. The OP was obviously one of them. People who were smart, and loved books, and loved the book trade. For every millionaire in the trade, there were a thousand, maybe ten thousand, who labored for little money but for the love of selling books, to people who appreciated books. I can appreciate the fact that B&N provided me with a living for many years, doing something I really loved. There really aren't a lot of people who can say that.

The OP is also quite correct in saying that the best course of action is to start looking PDQ, and find something else to do. We'll still have the memories.

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Post ID: @1hyx+X6tr9Tc

Can't get blood from a stone.

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Post ID: @ssr+X6tr9Tc

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