HPE, the dying company
A question for Antonio Neri.
HPE is a company with declining revenues over the past few years. Revenues have steadily and consistently declined. 2020 - well many companies had trouble that year. But for HPE, downright disastrous. What was HPE's response? Well lots more layoffs, of course. Layoffs across the board. Do layoffs help the company or make things worse? Well let's see. For one thing many of the layoff victims were the best employees. Layoffs were not based on performance (like they used to be). What happens during a layoff is that the survivors begin to question whether they want to leave as well. So after a layoff people begin to leave on their own, and these are mostly the best and the brightest because they have the means to leave. HR depts know this and account for it in their workforce plans.
Ironically, making things even worse is the terrible idea of giving everyone who was not layed off a 10% pay cut. This only increases the exodus of the best and the brightest out the door. There is currently a major brain drain of talent happening right now at HPE. HPE is just bleeding out talent now. And to make matters even worse, Antonio Neri took credit for doing a great job in 2020. He was selected by CRN as CEO of the year. Check out this link (it turns my stomach).
https://www.crn.com/news/cloud/meeting-the-moment-hpe-ceo-antonio-neri-s-year-of-extraordinary-leadership
Any CEO with a shred of decency or integrity would have turned that down. He should be saying that having to lay off so many people is failure of his (because it is) and a failure of HPE management. He should talking only about what a dark time it is for HPE, and how HPE will regroup and come back. But not taking credit for doing a great job while laying off thousands. That's horrible. You s— Antonio.
So finally, the question - Why would anybody want to work for your terrible company?