#culture

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Oracle's culture is a dumpster fire

I know layoffs happen, but Oracle has created a culture of fear and uncertainty that can't be ignored. Why put in extra effort when raises are like unicorns? Why work hard when promo's are nonexistent and dry most of the time? Why give 110% when there is a layoff target on your back no matter what your value to the company?

It's nauseating to live this way

I am a 20+ year vet and years ago I would happily recommend Oracle as a place to work...not so much now. I tell anyone who will listen to go somewhere else unless you are desperate. And if you do join, stay no longer than 3 years. There just isn't an upside.

Oracle is late to almost every technical advance and plays catch-up which is how we get where we are.

It's toxic and depressing to know you are coming into the cross hairs every 3-6 months.


Don’t speak up!

Put your head down and do your work. Fortunately the CSO isn’t actually the one that keeps us safe. He sits behind the doors that he closes behind him in his fraternity room. Bringing the sorority girls in one by one, you know the favorites. The ones that he protects and the ones that protect his little secrets that aren’t even secret! The company doesn’t have time or money for lawsuits to waste on people like this anymore! It’s just a matter of time. One would think that integrity is a core competency as the CSO! Shane on you Nike HR and legal!


Bloated workforce

Qualcomm employs over 52k with little or nothing to show for all that. Why do you guys need so many people to collect license royalties? Companies like Broadcom generate massive revenue/market-cap per employee. You guys are in the same space right?

So what is the problem with Qualcomm being in forever in the toilet?


Wondering how individuals were picked for the RIF list

Has any else heard those skip-managers saying that they pretended that they aren't aware of names before the RIF event. How can someone in HR completely segmented from the department in a large company make decisions about the individuals in their reporting structure without consulting that skip-manager for a list. They already have been made the list individuals that they can let go and still function in the months before these RIF events. In today's world, no decision is made on the roll of a dice or in a vacuum.

Why cannot managers or directors own up the their decisions and state you're too expensive to move forward and we have to let you go instead of making up this silly story about "they didn't make this list"???? Letting experienced employees go that have attempted to build a career with the company for loyalty ( or good team ) reasons instead of job hoping to build your salary requirements is a sad culture to be in for sure!

They still have a well paying job, getting a raise and RSUs moving forward for trimming the fat so own it.

Am I the only one that thinks this way?


Solventum = Zimmer Biomet 2.0

1.) Hire exec. team of highly compensated "friends" to virtue signal
2.) Create us vs 'them' environment
3.) Have numerous employee indoctrination meetings (receive medals)
4.) Spin-off non core businesses
5.) Quarterly lay-offs of 'them'
6.) Complain that Bryan isn't Chairmen of the Board

Rinse and repeat.


Danville plant is a joke!

The Danville plant is a mess due to lack of leadership because they refuses to lead! Nepotism runs the show, accountability is nonexistent, and the people who actually keep the place running are treated like they’re disposable. It’s unbelievable how far the culture has fallen. Danville has low morale, high turnover, and a leadership team completely disconnected from reality. We will be lucky to have jobs by the end of the year! What was once a great place to work is an absolute nightmare to go into!


BNY Morale Craters: Artemis II Reports a Corporate Systems Failure on the Dark Side of the Moon

The moment BNY announces it has “partnered with McKinsey for strategic realignment,” associates react with the same serenity NASA astronauts display when Mission Control calmly radios, “We’re detecting an unexpected structural anomaly. Please remain calm.” A hush ripples through the workforce. Teams icons flip to “Busy,” résumés begin auto launch sequences, and everyone suddenly remembers they have “a friend at JPMC” they should probably ping before atmospheric reentry.

Associates know the pattern. McKinsey doesn’t arrive to optimize joy; they arrive to optimize payload weight — by jettisoning crew.

Soon the PowerPoint Telemetry Flood begins: hundreds of slides filled with arrows, thrust vectors, and phrases like “strategic delayering,” “value capture acceleration,” and “synergy unlocks.” Employees translate these instantly: “layoffs,” “more layoffs,” and “brace for impact.”

Then the consultants appear — bright eyed, hyper confident, and unmistakably born during the iPhone 6 era. They interview associates about the very systems those associates built, taking notes with the intensity of NASA scientists documenting steps to repair a faulty toilet and drain my catheter. Employees smile politely while thinking, “This is how my mission ends — explained back to me by someone who still uses their college meal plan.”

Meanwhile, deep in the executive command module, RV and Dermie quietly cheer as the fear and panic meter spikes and the algorithm for layoffs without severance boots up, humming like a guidance computer that only calculates cost savings.

The BNY EC soon begins speaking fluent McKinsey-ese:

• “Zero based redesign” (cut everything)
• “Workforce rationalization” (cut everyone)
• “Operating model uplift” (cut differently)

Morale drops like a surprise space toilet malfunction in microgravity. Motivation shifts from “doing great work” to “avoiding being noticed,” “avoiding being too unnoticed,” and “finding a new mission before this capsule depressurizes.”

Right on cue, HR issues its standard transmission: all employees must refrain from unprofessional or derogatory comments — including emojis. Violations may result in corrective action up to and including termination. A sarcastic po-p or head ba----g wall emojis could apparently end your career faster than a failed docking maneuver.

By the time the consultants return to Earth, the BNY EC will declare mission success, and associates will quietly wonder whether the strategy ever involved improvement — or simply surviving another orbit on the dark side of the corporate moon.


#2I on Best Companies to Work For????

How? I’ve commented before that I am fully aware that these awards are bought and paid for. As in the firm has a whole apartment deck to applying for these awards every year in a massive budget set aside to start writing the check for the applications. But I do also know that they supposedly randomly send emails to a certain number of home office associates as well as field associates. I cannot imagine if this was true, that we would’ve made this list at all given the last year, much less number 21 — now I’m going down the rabbit hole trying to figure out when the surveys were sent? I’m thinking it HAD to be before the ISPs actually started getting announced in August? This is just absolutely not reflective of the culture today.

https://www.edwardjones.com/us-en/why-edward-jones/news-media/press-releases/edward-jones-ranks-21-fortune-100-best-companies-work


Rogers Takeover of DnA

With the announcement of another Rogers following JS it seems clear like our days are numbered here if you are not of a certain s-x or nationality.. Funny to see them try and get around JS's non compete with Rogers by hiding them in the transformation org. Feels like we should all be looking for a new job ASAP!


Bloated middle management remains in Risk

I was one of the grunts that was let go last week. From stories I'm hearing, directors with 2-4 directs remain, all the management in remote locations like CT and DE and those massive salaries are intact. Would have been the opportunity for real change, but nothing will change, but for hundreds of less of us grunts doing the actual work. Yes, I'm a bit bitter.


QUIT!!!!

I don’t usually post stuff like this, but I wish someone had been honest with me before I joined, so here it is.

The culture here is honestly rough. There’s a lot of talk about “teamwork” and “growth,” but day to day it just feels disorganized and reactive. Communication is all over the place, expectations change constantly, and somehow everything is always urgent. It gets exhausting fast. Backstabbing is very common.

The bigger issue, though, is the pay. For the workload and stress level, it’s just not worth it. People are stretched thin, doing way more than what they were hired for, and the compensation doesn’t come close to matching that. Raises and recognition feel random at best.

Anyway, I’ve decided to move on. If you’re considering joining, just make sure you ask the right questions and really think about what you’re signing up for.


Choosing Pain on Purpose

Think about this.

Most companies, when they see something causing unnecessary stress or friction for employees, try to fix it. Even small things. Shorter commutes, more flexibility, better alignment. It’s basic common sense because it improves morale and productivity.

Here it feels like the exact opposite.

Every decision somehow lands on the option that creates the most friction. The most inconvenience. The most disruption to people’s lives.

Live 10 miles from one office? Doesn’t matter. You’re required to drive 50 miles to another one.
Can do your job perfectly from home? Irrelevant. Be physically present anyway.
Teams are distributed across the country? Still sit in an office on Teams calls.

At some point it stops feeling accidental. It starts to feel like pain is being chosen on purpose.

And then leadership turns around and asks why there’s no culture. Why people aren’t going above the bare minimum anymore. Why morale is gone.

Morale didn’t just disappear. It was worn down decision by decision, policy by policy, until people stopped believing anything would actually improve.

Then you hear “there’s no loyalty anymore” while at the same time wondering why no one shows up to town halls, no one engages, no one cares.

It’s not confusing.

People don’t disengage for no reason. They disengage when they feel ignored, when feedback goes nowhere, and when every decision makes their day-to-day worse.

And yet somehow the expectation is that people should accept all of this, have bad policy shoved down their throats, and then turn around and be grateful for it. After surveys where honest feedback was ignored or worse, scolded.

That’s not just disconnected. It’s delusional.

This didn’t become a bottom-tier culture overnight. It got there because of decisions like this. Because of policies like this.

Culture and morale aren’t things you can slap on a PowerPoint and speak into existence. They’re built by listening, adjusting, and actually giving people a reason to care.

Right now, that reason is gone.


Re-Joyce count down...

Well, that was fun, more value of the company obliterated in less time then you can chat the GPT. So many mistakes and fumbles...

Countless bad hires
Endless RIFs
Missed Quarters after Quarters (more like Y/Y misses)
Unlimited amount of Fuchsia bad fashion purchased
Mediocre acquisitions
Not retiring but got the BOOT
No longer the all female C-Suite bunchy bunch
Woke beyond belief
Endless RIFs (again... and again..) ± 1,000 people let go or MORE
Hustle in the Bustle
Off Shored Jobs - ±850 or so or MORE
6.2Bil of Value Reduced to 1.9Bil of Value
Precipitous Stock drop - 56% (or more) in two years
Endless more RIFs
Did I say terrible HIRES?

What a legacy, like a pinnacle of a legacy, like an empire of dirt or sand in the Sonoran desert.

At least she learnt how to spell AI

LOLOLOLOL..... Later!


Glassdoor-Truist

Based on recent employee reviews on platforms like Glassdoor and Indeed, Truist has faced significant criticism, with some employees labeling it a poor workplace due to high-stress, understaffing, and poor management. Common complaints include intense sales pressure, post-merger cultural issues, and poor work-life balance.
Key themes from negative reviews include:
Management & Culture: Reports of toxic, "bully" management, high turnover, and a lack of support from leadership.
Workload & Staffing: Many employees report being overwhelmed, understaffed, and expected to handle multiple roles (e.g., teller duties while being a banker).
Compensation & Career: Frustration over stagnant pay, minimal raises, and broken promises regarding career advancement.
Morale: Deteriorating culture, inconsistent, and often, low morale following the merger, often characterized as a "chaotic environment".
Glassdoor
Glassdoor
+7


TRowe is a frustrating place to work

It is, without question, the most toxic corporate culture I have ever experienced. people spend their entire day pretending to be busy, yet no one actually values high-quality work or individual contributions.
The biggest bottleneck is the "management" layer. Need to clear out these stagnant leaders who have been sitting in their positions for far too long. They have become comfortable, out of touch, and resistant to any modernizing influence. They don't manage; they just occupy space and block progress.
OP: @17e+1kmn211dn

We all know this, but it's worth repeating.


Leadership Failures by U.S. VPs

The senior leadership in the U.S., particularly the VPs, routinely take credit for the work done by their Indian directors and senior directors. These VPs claim full ownership of projects that their Indian counterparts have actually planned and executed, with no acknowledgment of their efforts.
The VPs have no real understanding of how to effectively execute projects with resources in India and are completely dependent on their Indian directors and senior directors. Despite this reliance, they fail to give the credit where it's due, continuously taking the limelight for work they didn't do. The Indian leaders, who have built strong relationships with their counterparts and teams in India, know how to get the job done efficiently. The VPs, on the other hand, lack the necessary expertise and often sit back while others handle the real work.
Adding insult to injury, the VPs undermine their own directors and senior directors by pretending to be supportive of the India teams. They put on a show, claiming to protect these teams from exploitation, like avoiding late-night meetings, but in reality, they are the ones fostering a toxic environment where credit is stolen, and recognition is denied.
The directors and senior managers are too afraid to speak up, fearing retaliation or career damage. As a result, the VPs continue to bask in the glory of others' hard work, while the real contributors remain unnoticed and unappreciated.
This toxic culture of credit theft and the undermining of competent leadership is a long-standing issue that severely damages morale and fosters an environment of fear. If you’re considering a position here, be aware that your hard work will likely be stolen by those higher up the chain with no recognition for you.
Bottom Line: Look elsewhere if you want a workplace where your contributions are valued and credited, and where real leadership is respected.


Hypocrites

The execs keep talking about the need to reduce expenses and are laying people off, yet they are paying over $120 million to get all the agents together in Las Vegas and spending an additional $15 million on incentive trips for said agents. Oh know gas prices increases costing us more…how about cancel the trip?!? Paying for Pink to entertain agents and executives…disgusting!


Always appear busy

There’s an unspoken expectation to always appear busy, even when work is under control. You always need to show activity. Like they want us to be constantly stressed. Sadly, these days, productivity is all about perception rather than actual results. How low this place has fallen.


Nobody is thinking about the future

Most decisions are focused on immediate results. Long-term impact doesn’t seem to ever be a priority. It leads to the same problems coming up again later and more wasted time and resources. Imagine how different things would be if we actually focused on the future and long-term results.


RT - 8 Hour sitting on office chair at Hub metric by leadership born in privileged class

Unique among banks, U.S. Bank measures success, merit, and performance using a singular metric: The duration employees remain seated for eight hours in non-ergonomic office chairs at hubs. This approach contrasts with traditional metrics such as:

• Business Process Improvements
• Innovation
• Project Management: Management of Scope, Time, Cost
• Reliability
• On-Time address of issues
• Net Profit Margin
• Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT)
• Revenue Growth Rate

The Top leadership do not have to worry about Child Care, Elderly Parents, Family Members with Special needs as THEY (MC - Senior Leadership) are rewarded and compensated with lucrative packages, including child care, luxury travel, and high-end accommodations near Minneapolis HQ.

Unlike an average Indian, Fun-an’s other half was born in a privileged class (called IAS) with ivy league education and background in mechanical engineering (worked at Caterpillar in 1980’s where it requires physical in person collaboration to manufacture and assemble construction, mining, and other engineering equipment to measure performance), but Fun-an’s other half strategy is not going to attract/retain/resonate with the average employee's challenges at a financial institution like U.S.Bank in year 2026, unless Fun-an wants to turn U.S.Bank into Caterpillar to manufacture physical goods or turn the bank into a sweat shop.


IBM Fake Leadership

In all my years in consulting i have come across multiple fake leaders (aka.. A fake leader is an individual who prioritizes personal image, power, and self-interest over the well-being of their team and organization) but nothing like IBM consulting. Per my experience apart from a handful of leaders every other leader i encountered at IBM consulting is very close to a fake leader. seems like its very much engrained into the culture what have you seen during your time ?


Fortune 100 Best….

Companies to work for? Are you f$&king kidding me? What a fraud - Jill Larsen via LinkedIn “puts people first and lives our values every day” what values might that be? Demoralizing and ridiculing employees. “Learn more about our “award winning” culture and current openings?

Openings? Perhaps a clean up crew from the mass casualties.

Fraud


For IT people

Just saw this on Wells Fargo's board, it's coming our way too:

  • Thread regarding Wells Fargo & Co. layoffs
    Agentic engineering as a standard
    Link: @OP+1kmzq8d4n

    We all knew that something like this will surface sooner or later. Now all engineers are expected to go full agentic starting right this second ( according to the communication). They even drafted a roadmap of how they envision this would take place. What are your thoughts about this move? I guess, this is mainly will affect technology but looks like some businesses will be included in this madness as well.

#BusinessTransformation #Change #Communication #Culture #Technology

4 days ago by Anonymous | 1029 views | 12 reactions (+8/-4) | 11 replies (last 3 days ago) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kmzq8d4n

33 open technology jobs. 21 in India, 9 in USA.

Filtering on Japan and Australia show 0 jobs. Great job tools team on getting the query working! Way to go, VZ leadership export those jobs! I see positions listed that could have been filled by people that were recently riff'd. What a BS company (leadership, that is). Bunch of greedy sociopaths and bootlickers willing to do anything to fill their own pockets.