From the outside, Verizon looks like the safe play. Big paycheck, fat dividend, steady corporate perch. People ask: “Why would you ever leave? You could have milked the cow forever.”
But here’s the truth: that cow isn’t grazing in some open field. It’s chained in a barn, weighed down by debt, and it’s the employees who end up getting milked.
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Dividends Don’t Pay Morale
Sure, investors cash the dividend. But if you’re on the inside, you don’t see that money. What you see are endless “transformation” projects, morale sinking year after year, and consultant slide decks dressed up as strategy. Try paying your spirit with that.
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Stability Is a Mirage
From 30,000 feet, Verizon looks like a fortress. Inside, it’s duct tape and reorgs. Every year brings another round of “cost-cutting innovation.” Stability isn’t real here — it’s a talking point that masks constant churn.
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Golden Handcuffs Rust Fast
People who stay aren’t milking Verizon — Verizon is milking them. More work piled on, promotions drying up, pensions shrinking. What looks like safety is really just slow erosion of your time and energy.
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Better to Leave Before the Obituary
When Hans Vestberg finally announces his retirement, the spin machine will crank up. But the reality is simple: Verizon isn’t a growth story, it’s a modern utility in decline. Better to leave before that obituary phase than have your name tied to it.
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The Real Win
Walking away wasn’t missing out. It was stepping out before the air ran out.
I didn’t just exit the cow.
I walked out of the barn.