Thread regarding IBM layoffs

Former IBM CEO Ginni Rometty doubles down on skills over degrees to get ‘more and more people better jobs’

‘more and more people better jobs’

People? Get with the program, honey: people are being phased-out and replaced with "New Collar" AI bots.

https://fortune.com/2023/10/11/former-ibm-ceo-skills-vs-degrees/

By: Kylie Robison
October 11, 2023 at 11:17 AM CDT

Former IBM CEO Ginni Rometty believes that when it comes to putting people to work, practical skills are more useful than expensive degrees.

Rometty explained why companies should hire for skills over degrees in an interview with Fortune’s Ellie Austin at the Most Powerful Women Summit in Laguna Niguel, Calif.

“Access and aptitude are never equal,” Rometty said. “Where you start should not determine where you end.”

This drive for economic opportunity and education has influenced Rometty’s career significantly.

As she assumed the role of CEO at IBM, she recognized the importance of not only driving innovation and growth within the company but also ensuring that opportunities extended to a broad and diverse talent pool.

Her commitment to this approach was also made evident when IBM made its groundbreaking “New Collar” initiative, which sought to hire and train employees who want to make a career change (regardless of education).

“Sixty-five percent of people do not have a college education like most of us. 80% of Black Americans don’t have a college education. There’s no time to put them all through, yet they have valuable skills,” she said, adding that she believes this “country will come alive again” if those without a college education are given a chance. “All people want is a better future for their family, their kids.”

The 65-year-old former CEO has been named one of Fortune’s Most Powerful Women multiple years in a row, in great part to her 40-year career at IBM.

The importance of being vulnerable

Rometty’s most significant regret isn’t about missed innovation or unrealized profits.

“I spent a lifetime not talking about personal things. And I think being vulnerable is probably one of the most powerful tools for change that you have,” Rometty said. “I would go back way earlier, and had been far more vulnerable decades ago.”

In her latest book, Good Power: Leading Positive Change in Our Lives, Work, and World, Rometty reflects on her life. She came from a family of strong women who faced significant adversity: Her grandmother lost two husbands, while her mother raised a family on her own after Ginni’s father left the home. This upbringing instilled in her the belief that one is never a victim, even in the face of difficult circumstances.

“This idea, that you are never a victim; when you have nothing, you have power,” Rometty said. “That idea is what has kind of stayed with me, that it doesn’t matter how bad the situation is. There’s always a way forward. And that’s how I look at it. Don’t complain. We all get handed our circumstances.

“I was handed IBM at a time when it was most tumultuous…and I knew how deep it would be to have to change it,” Rometty said. “So I think that’s what I learned. And I learned that there is always a way forward. And that‘s what we’re all here to do.”

In 2019, during Rometty’s tenure, IBM made its largest ever acquisition to date by purchasing enterprise software company Red Hat for a whopping $34 billion, which helped her land the No. 4 spot on the Most Powerful Women list that year.

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| 1611 views | | 16 replies (last October 24, 2023) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1paV1Zyr

16 replies (most recent on top)

Google is paying you less kid

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Post ID: @5whr+1paV1Zyr

If GR thinks degrees are no longer needed, then maybe she should reimburse IBM for the $5,000,000 that the company paid for the endowed chairs at her Alma Mater.

https://www.mccormick.northwestern.edu/news/articles/2021/11/Ibm-honors-ginni-rometty-with-five-million-dollar-gift-to-her-alma-mater/

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Post ID: @5ckv+1paV1Zyr

Skills over degrees helped this kid jump directly from H.S. to Google. I hope more companies follow Google's example.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/entertainment/high-school-graduate-rejected-over-172800455.html

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Post ID: @4gjg+1paV1Zyr

Proof of what you get, when a box needs to be checked.

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Post ID: @2wtt+1paV1Zyr

This joke sums up Ginni’s legacy at IBM “how do you make a small fortune at IBM??? Start with a big one” Ginni had no strategic vision for IBM, and the lack of innovation or strategic vision under her leadership was glaring. Honestly ask yourself what game changing innovation did IBM exploit under her leadership? Yep that’s crickets you are hearing. She exploited financial engineering games to make the balance sheet look good and took home millions. The IBM board should also be held responsible for keeping an incompetent in place for far too long (10 years). You could actually say lack of innovation for 15-20 years as Sam the previous CEO also doesn’t have much on his resume. IBM board the balance sheet has been laid bare, and you better hope AK has some innovation in his back pocket, as the shareholder are getting restless.

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Post ID: @2bqu+1paV1Zyr

https://www.theregister.com/AMP/2023/01/18/ibm_

It's called fraud Unless you have enough money to buy your way out

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Post ID: @2ymb+1paV1Zyr

She cooked the books in order to hit targets that paid her bonuses

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Post ID: @2uxx+1paV1Zyr

She was also guilty with her HR VP at the time on plotting to get rid of the older workers.

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Post ID: @2ggw+1paV1Zyr

why, because she feels guilty?

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Post ID: @2quz+1paV1Zyr

Why would anyone buy and follow the advise of the most loosing ceo of the history of IBM? Why?? I don't get it. The woman destroyed an icon of a company! The best thing to do with this book is the opposite of anything she advises.

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Post ID: @1eki+1paV1Zyr

Yawn, Ginny.

I’m not buying it. You destroy a company while making obscene amounts of money. Then you write a book about it, dispensing your pearls of business wisdom, with a bit of some gratuitous personal vulnerability BS thrown in, seeking some sympathy. Get effed.

IBM is yet another example of the principal-agent problem of American big business over the past forty years, where the stewards of capital (management) fleece the owners of the capital (shareholders).

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Post ID: @1hgo+1paV1Zyr
.. Red Hat ... whopping $34 billion, which helped her land the No. 4 spot

Powerful is to be able waste tens of billions of other people's money and laugh about it? Sounds more like psychopathic to me.

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Post ID: @fiu+1paV1Zyr

Self serving nonsense that translates to people with degrees are too expensive we want the cheapest workers possible.

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Post ID: @ggq+1paV1Zyr

Useless piece of garbage that needs to be buried 100 feet into the ground

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Post ID: @xha+1paV1Zyr

You ruined IBM long back as your greatest skill was running companies to the ground. Go back to your hellhole

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Post ID: @xxb+1paV1Zyr

I also wish she could go back and never have become IBM’s CEO…

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Post ID: @ssg+1paV1Zyr

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