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AnimusFlux t1_j4vexa5 wrote

MS added 40k jobs in 2022 alone, so this is really a pretty small correction. It's crazy how fast hiring has ramped up in tech during the pandemic.

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aquarain t1_j4vfu6o wrote

Didn't they used to cull the bottom 10 percent every year under the stack rank system?

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AnimusFlux t1_j4vhd4b wrote

Not sure about Microsoft, but laying off the lowest performing 2-5% each year is a pretty standard practice in tech. It allows managers and HR to avoid the lengthy one at a time performance management and firing process which can easily take over a year while also giving folks 2-to-4 months severence so they have time to find a new job. With ~3% unemployment in tech and Microsoft on their resume, these folks will land on their feet.

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Welcome2B_Here t1_j4warx4 wrote

If anyone believes layoffs necessarily target "low performers," I have a bridge to sell.

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AnimusFlux t1_j4we9n0 wrote

If you've managed more than 20 people in your life, I'm gonna go ahead and guess at least one (5%) of them wasn't a good performer. That doesn't mean they're a bad person or that they don't deserve a job, it just means they're not doing well at the job they were hired for. Someone who is truly unable to do their job makes everyone's lives harder and they'd probably be better off doing something else in the long run.

I can also tell you from experience that loads of managers lack the grit required to fire even the most toxic employee. If you've ever worked with someone who you wished would just get fired, then maybe you'd have been better off if your company practiced occasional layoffs. If you've never worked with someone like that... are you hiring?

Edit: I think I misinterpreted your comment. Of course, layoffs don't only target low performers and typically have a lot more to do with corporate restructuring. Low performers just get bundled in to kill two birds with one stone.

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Welcome2B_Here t1_j4wg3f2 wrote

Of course layoffs naturally include low performers, but they also include employees across the board. The highest weighted metric is usually compensation relative to what's perceived as the "market" rate, which is also a sliding scale and open to interpretation.

This idea that these types of layoffs are simply "trimming the fat" just doesn't jibe with my first-hand experience, nor the second-hand experience learned through other employees. I've seen some of the best performers get axed while the sycophants and low performers get to stick around.

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Youvebeeneloned t1_j4yowa4 wrote

Considering the yearly average for tech is 11-13%... then yeah its probably targeting low performers given its performance review time for employees at companies whose fiscal match the calendar year.

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djordi t1_j4xqs70 wrote

Stack ranking had disastrous long term effects because different divisions had different metrics. Before MS got rid of it there was an incentive for backstabbing politics and employees making sure they were in divisions with under-performers to shield themselves.

It's kryptonite to team based development.

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datastuff1 t1_j4vl1ui wrote

It’s almost like the problem in tech is exactly this.

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thruster_fuel69 t1_j4vpji0 wrote

There's too many possibilities in what he said to assume what you mean. I'll say though, tech interviews and recruiting in general is broken. I say this as a senior engineer, that generally we are not selecting properly for appropriate skills.

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datastuff1 t1_j4vu64c wrote

Correct. There’s not enough emphasis on business architecture. Layoffs are preventable.

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