ronsimpson
- Joined Oct 7, 2019
- 4,706
The really great people get the job done. Showing up and sitting in meeting is much of the problem.The good jobs have always been reserved for those willing to show up.
The really great people get the job done. Showing up and sitting in meeting is much of the problem.The good jobs have always been reserved for those willing to show up.
A program begun early this year to bring employees back in the office five days per week, among tech's most stringent, has failed to generate sufficient attrition, said two of the people, citing that as another reason for the size of the layoff. Some of the employees who are not swiping in daily because they live far from corporate offices, or for other reasons, are being told they have voluntarily quit Amazon and must leave without severance, a savings for the company.
"We surveyed hiring managers, and found some companies post positions to create a talent pool," she says. "It isn't that they don't want to hire, it's more they're not hiring immediately.
"Others, we found, were inflating numbers and trying to show their company is growing, even if it's not."
Dr Escalera adds that she has also heard examples of companies posting jobs to obtain and sell data.
It's a mix -- including posting a job for a vacancy and simply neglecting to remove the posting once it's filled (this is adjacent to the first reason).
That's not too surprising, or suspicious.Many years ago, while I was out of work for a while, I did email my resume and cover letter as an application for a posted job that seemed to be a good fit. A year later I started getting emails about a variety of jobs , and I kept getting them for several years. Eventually they stopped,
What really annoyed me and this was decades ago, was the head hunters. They would send people to interviews not like anything in the resume. Things like sending a butcher to a position for a candle stick maker.
The head hunters need to fill a quota, after all.What really annoyed me and this was decades ago, was the head hunters. They would send people to interviews not like anything in the resume. Things like sending a butcher to a position for a candle stick maker.
Ron
Yep. And the current job sites are at least as bad. When I was looking about a decade ago I couldn't count the number of responses I got telling me that I was a perfect candidate for jobs as an insurance salesman.What really annoyed me and this was decades ago, was the head hunters. They would send people to interviews not like anything in the resume. Things like sending a butcher to a position for a candle stick maker.
Ron
Agreed. But it's also something that someone that is looking for a position as an ASIC design engineer is not a perfect fit for -- in fact, in many regards, it is one of the worst fits. The typical temperaments and social skills associated with the two do not align very well.To be fair, being a successful insurance salesman is not an easy feat.
They exist. I have one.To be fair, being a successful insurance salesman is not an easy feat.
1. Never outright believe a laid-off employee.
She quit and blaming Covid or 'AI' is lame this late in the game.1. Never outright believe a laid-off employee.
2. She did not once mention Covid.
“I don’t know what the exact percentage is, but there’s some AI washing where people are blaming AI for layoffs that they would otherwise do, and then there’s some real displacement by AI of different kinds of jobs,” Altman told CNBC-TV18 at the India AI Impact Summit on Thursday.
The current economic conditions, like people just not having the money to buy products/services because of inflation, monetary policies and other factors are what happening IMO.Gimbel attributed the practice of AI washing to companies passing off diminished margins and revenue from a failure to effectively navigate cautious consumers and geopolitical tensions to AI. WebAI cofounder and CEO David Stout also wrote in a commentary piece for Fortune that tech founders are facing increased pressure to justify exorbitant and continued investment in AI, which is the reason why many have created narratives of AI disrupting labor and the economy through predictions of mass worker displacement.
It's 2026, that's a long hangover. I do agree, it's a small part today.Covid was the reason for the explosive growth in Amazon beginning in 2020 -- basically cash from PPA loans and fear driving online shopping. They hired assuming the gravy train would last forever. Part of their recent problems are a Covid hangover.
Even better is to quit and sell yourself back as a consultant.I have been laid off a few times, and NEVER was it because of AI or anything like that.
Without exception, the lay-offs were solely for the reason that there were no funds to meet the payroll.
It all gets down to money!
At one job, when the owner explained that there had to be the layoff because of no funds, I asked how he would finish the project. He stated that there was no way, so he was in trouble. I asked if he would be OK if he could sell the project complete, would he be OK, and he said yes, if only he could.
So I volunteered to work and finish the project and wait for pay until it was paid for.
We completed the project and I got paid and he made money on it. He was an honest person indeed.