Alright folks, let's get real here. The PE's gonna drop the hammer and lay off a few hundred folks sooner or later. To my hardworking colleagues, if someone's gotta go, it should be some of those senior managers and directors who just whip up pretty PowerPoint slides from the blood, sweat, and tears of the folks actually pushing the company forward. All they do is throw around a few fancy technical terms and rake in the big bucks. As someone with two decades of tech experience, I can't help but chuckle when they try to talk shop about our products.
Now, let me break it down for you. Over the past few years, I've seen people bringing in their buddies and getting them cushy jobs to cover each other's backs. And don't get me started on those acquisitions that never made sense, like Trifacta. My gut tells me they either bailed out a friend's sinking ship or just didn't do their homework. Plus, we've got vendors bleeding us dry thanks to the cozy relationships they've built within the company—what a waste of our budget.
In the end, I really hope the PE folks do their due diligence and figure out who the real contributors are. Let's cut loose the ones who got in through connections or benefited from those questionable acquisitions and vendor contracts. In the C-Suite, the only ones I trust are Trevor and Alan—they actually know their stuff and have a solid vision. But man, it's baffling that our analytics company's CDAO is running a two-person team. What happened with those constant re-orgs? It's a head-scratcher.