|
|
| Next: NRA: Don't ban gun sales to terrorist suspects |
| Author |
Message |
seaeagle

Joined: Aug 31, 2004 Posts: 5748
Location: Sydney, Australia
|
Posted: Sat May 05, 2007 10:11 am Post subject: Report: IBM to layoff 150,000 US workers by end of year |
|
|
This is interesting (although it should be made clear that nothing has been confirmed by IBM):
Lean and Mean: 150,000 U.S. layoffs for IBM?
| Quote: |
.....This is according to my many friends at Big Blue, who believe they are about to undergo the biggest restructuring of IBM since the Gerstner days, only this time for all the wrong reasons.
The IBM project I am writing about is called LEAN and the first manifestation of LEAN was this week's 1,300 layoffs at Global Services, which generated almost no press. Thirteen hundred layoffs from a company with more than 350,000 workers is nothing, so the yawning press reaction is not unexpected. But this week's "job action," as they refer to it inside IBM management, was as much as anything a rehearsal for what I understand are another 100,000+ layoffs to follow, each dribbled out until some reporter (that would be me) notices the growing trend, then dumped en masse when the jig is up, but no later than the end of this year. (continues) |
| Quote: |
LEAN is about offshoring and outsourcing at a rate never seen before at IBM. For two years Big Blue has been ramping up its operations in India and China with what I have been told is the ultimate goal of laying off at least one American worker for every overseas hire. The BIG PLAN is to continue until at least half of Global Services, or about 150,000 workers, have been cut from the U.S. division. Last week's LEAN meetings were quite specifically to find and identify common and repetitive work now being done that could be automated or moved offshore, and to find work Global Services is doing that it should not be doing at all. This latter part is with the idea that once extraneous work is eliminated, it will be easier to move the rest offshore.
All this is supposed to happen by the end of 2007, by the way, at which point IBM will also freeze its U.S. pension plan.
The point of this has nothing to do with the work itself and everything to do with the price of IBM shares. Remove at least 100,000 heads, eliminate the long-term drag of a defined-benefit pension plan, and the price of IBM shares will soar. This is exactly the kind of story Wall Street loves to hear. Palmisano and his lieutenants will retire rich. And not long after that IBM's business will crash for reasons I explain below. |
|
|
| Back to top |
|
 |

User: inactive Posts:
|
Posted: Sat May 05, 2007 7:18 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Out-sourcing?
That really sux!
Companies that do that are selling the work force of this nation right down the crapper!
 |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
tbernstein

Joined: May 16, 2003 Posts: 1508
Location: London
|
Posted: Mon May 07, 2007 4:08 pm Post subject: [Login to view extended thread Info.] |
|
|
The trouble is we all (everywhere) want everything cheaper all the time, and better returns on our investments at the same time. But one man's cheap product is another man's job up the Swanee.
The cheap t-shirt you happily buy in your local supermarket has been made in Asia, probably for a pittance, probably by a small child. So has the expensive designer one, but the cost savings there go into the shareholders' pockets. |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |
|
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
| |
|
|