Thread regarding Verizon Communications Inc. layoffs

Leadership Connect: Messaging Over Meaning

Verizon’s latest Leadership Connect event served up a polished message of “bold ideas” and “pioneering work” — but for those of us on the ground, the contrast couldn’t be clearer.

While executive teams celebrate strategy sessions and photo ops, the reality across the organization tells a different story: operational instability, morale erosion, and workforce reductions that continue to undercut long-term capability.

Phrases like “going beyond innovation” ring hollow when experienced talent is shown the door, decision-making is centralized among disconnected layers, and execution gaps widen by the day.

There’s no shortage of vision — but there’s a growing absence of accountability. Until leadership starts addressing structural issues with the same energy they bring to staged applause, these events will remain what they are: optics-driven exercises in corporate self-reassurance.

by
| 1581 views | | 6 replies (last June 13, 2025) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1jxgm9jr5

6 replies (most recent on top)

'The current crisis isn’t just about external forces — it’s about internal miscalculations. Other carriers adapted. Verizon stagnated.'

But the leadership team will still reward themselves with bonuses for reaching 5G 'Blah Blah' covering areas that don't exist, while cutting back on actual people that continue to support the network - of course in the US.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @hv+1jxgm9jr5

@cw

Fair point — the telecom industry as a whole is facing headwinds. But let’s not hide Verizon’s failures behind industry trends.

Yes, 5G overpromised. Yes, Covid reshaped global supply chains. But Verizon had the scale, brand power, and early lead to pivot smartly — and didn’t. Leadership doubled down on a premium pricing strategy while T-Mobile ate our lunch on value, innovation, and marketing. We overspent on spectrum, underdelivered on services, and got caught flat-footed.

The current crisis isn’t just about external forces — it’s about internal miscalculations. Other carriers adapted. Verizon stagnated.

This isn’t about pretending there’s a magic playbook — it’s about acknowledging that Verizon had options, ignored them, and is now playing defense while pretending it’s just the weather.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @d5+1jxgm9jr5

Let's make sure to differentiate between the Verizon we remember and the reality of today's Verizon (and the industry in general). We were the leader in LTE, duking it out with AT&T and shooing away the gnats that were Sprint and T-Mobile. We had a robust staff and good outlook. Then 5G comes along, T-Mobile buys Sprint, Covid, and the world-wide delays and shortages of products. The economy shifts, 5G doesn't live up to its promise, and like our competitors, we're scrambling to find revenue streams. Time to reduce headcount, real estate and hope we can survive. Yeah, you can say VZ leadership blew it, but you'd have to also say it about the entire industry. Our leaders are in the same boat as our competitors' leaders, desperately looking for the right approach to this uncertain market.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @cw+1jxgm9jr5

Therein too lies the contrast... leadership to leadership celebrate, in person, with meaning.

When leadership celebrates with rank-and-file, it's over a webex, impersonal with a Powerpoint, and strictly held to 60 minutes if you are lucky. Leadership, esp in VGS/GTS, is completely impersonal, hands-off. Any efforts they claim otherwise are patronizing at best.....

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @ch+1jxgm9jr5

According to my google sheet formula I saved the company 5 million dollars this year.

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @bc+1jxgm9jr5

Pound for pound, LB to LB, the top 300 is infected by toxicity. If you know you know. Shared services/VGS especially right, right, right, right, right?

by
| | Reply
Post ID: @a7+1jxgm9jr5

Post a reply

: