> People are laid off when they are not necessary to a company’s future.
I think it is important for everyone to note that no one is necessary to a company's future. If you work for a company where that is true of you, or any other employee, it is a bad position to be in. You work for an extremely shaky employer.
At the end of the day, layoffs do not happen based on merit. They happen based on cost, or revenue, or a wide variety of other factors outside of your control. I've been in meetings where 1 group that was demonstrably better by every metric we picked was still let go over another group. The reason was the lease terms on the office space they were in.
Anyone that tells you that you can save your job in the face of layoffs due to changing your working habits is manipulating you.
I don't disagree with your point, but I wouldn't say this is 100% true.
I've seen where layoffs happen and the management of different sections asked to make cuts get to pick the members they want to layoff. So while you may not be able to save your job in every situation, there are definitely cases where you can.
This makes perfect sense. I like to describe corporations as sociopathic entities that will do anything to anyone if it makes or saves them a buck in the long run (including firing your ass).
As an individual, I'm a pretty nice guy, but as an employer, my motivations are much more directed toward the bottom line - balancing the company's business in a short term and long term view.
I don't mean to single you out, but I just think it's bizarre that people cease to be humans when they go to work and have an ultimate duty to their organization above human dignity. Or that there is this bifurcation of work reality and 'life' reality. It really commoditizes the idea of being a good person.
I'm not sure where you're reading "above human dignity" into the comments. In many situations, companies will try to accommodate people who are having issues of whatever sort; it's not always red of tooth and claw. But sometimes it does just have to be "just business," especially at the macro level for the benefit of not only investors but also other employees.
It's not that different if someone is just doing some work for me personally. If they have a personal issue someday, by all means they should go deal with it. But I'm not going to cut endless slack for poor workmanship or whatever just because I know they really need a job.
> In many situations, companies will try to accommodate people who are having issues of whatever sort
That's probably because it's easier and cheaper to accommodate people to an extent rather than replace them. Think about how little tolerance minimum wage food service jobs have for peoples' personal life. That's because you can literally replace those people off the street and a brand new employee is extremely productive relative to an experienced employee in a very short time. None of those things are true in a professional environment.
There's certainly some truth in that--although I'm not sure how unique to business relationships it is. The more one has invested in a relationship generally, the more they'll generally put into smoothing over a rough patch or making changes that allow the relationship to continue. Conversely, the more transactional the arrangement is, the more likely you are to terminate it if the immediate benefits aren't worth it. This applies whether employees, suppliers, plumbers, or whatever.
As an emoloyer, I have also consider the income of my family and the income of my other employees.
A classic example is tolerating behaviour that generates legal liability: as a friend I like dirty jokes, but at the office the same joke may be unacceptable.
Why do you find this odd? I consider my colleagues to be overall pretty decent people, but there are many, many things I would say to a friend of mine that I'd never say to a coworker or team lead -- especially a team lead.
Probably the same as it's always been - VC backed unicorn-aiming startups aren't a great idea as a long term career spot. If you are a genuine 10x engineer _and_ you have a single digit employee number, a wanna-be-unicorn is a gamble that's worth at least evaluating. If you want a family/social life outside of work, and you're only prepared to put in enough effort to be "just" a good solid employee, startups have probably never been a great idea.
Not that the non-VC fuelled "corporate world"or even the small/medium business sector is any less intrinsically sociopathic towards employees and their drag on the legal requirement to "increase shareholder value" - we don't live in the world out fathers/grandfathers did, where doing "a fair days work for a fair days pay" every day pretty much guarantees you a livelihood until retirement.
We're already seeing problems amongst the 50+ year old demographic finding it increasingly common to be looking for new jobs at the same time as finding their skills and employability are significantly less relevant to modern businesses. I suppose that's always been happening, there's not too many jpb openings for 55 year old buggy whip makers, or even automobile welders, but I _think_ the rate of change is getting faster and I seriously wonder what the job market and economy is going to look like with another decade or generation of people who spent the first half or more of their careers in serious debt and don't have the capital to live out a retirement, nor a skillset that'll allow then to remain employed...
And even having a retirement was a mid-century innovation that garnered its share of opposition. America has always made the political and economic tradeoffs to maximize employment, but politically it seems difficult to sustain a system that results in lower wages, fewer benefits, greater uncertainty and higher unemployment (plus ancillary social stress markers like opiate addiction) -- the Trump/Sanders dynamics this year may presage a future boom in populist politics on both sides of the political spectrum.
Pretty sure everyone knew this was true. In fact, I've never heard anyone say the opposite. Every 1st quarter you can see where company survival means job survivial is tenuous.
I think it is important for everyone to note that no one is necessary to a company's future. If you work for a company where that is true of you, or any other employee, it is a bad position to be in. You work for an extremely shaky employer.
At the end of the day, layoffs do not happen based on merit. They happen based on cost, or revenue, or a wide variety of other factors outside of your control. I've been in meetings where 1 group that was demonstrably better by every metric we picked was still let go over another group. The reason was the lease terms on the office space they were in.
Anyone that tells you that you can save your job in the face of layoffs due to changing your working habits is manipulating you.