#employeerelations

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Who is staying?

Who is feeling like this is a preferred workplace? What is leadership doing to make this a preferred workplace? It seems none of the employees from 3M are part of the future. The goal is to replace everyone with better employees and bring them in as Sr Director or VP and above. If you are not already that level, you never will be.


Lets Talk About Verint

If using this to track our every move why aren’t all bands (3 and 4 specifically) required to use it if not directly tied to production? Seems to me if they are looking to cut people this would be where to start - if your Verient consistently shows you are more idle than not maybe you are disposable more than others.
I am not talking the downtime because of reading an email and gathering your thoughts or listening to a recorded team meeting you missed. I am talking about the people who WAH and log in early in the morning then go about the morning getting breakfast, showering, walking the dog - THEN actually starting work or napping during the day. We all know installing Webex on your phone can help it “appear” as if you haven’t stepped away from your desk but if Big Brother can actually TRACK you are not at your desk why not leverage it as needed? I HATE Verient but if it is for some it should be for all and used the same across the board.


CSO Employee Work Avoidance

Wayfair really turns a blind eye on some. Im in another team but my friend heard that one of the CSO agents does work avoidance and nothing has been done. Keeps easy tickets and updates them every two days just to meet metrics when it should have been closed but goes on weeks with it open. Out of the blue the ticket metric sky rocketed.


Cultural Impact of Ongoing Organizational Instability

Over the past two years, T‑Mobile employees have been operating in a near‑constant state of transition. Frequent reorganizations, unannounced job eliminations, and shifting priorities have created an environment where stability is the exception rather than the norm. This instability has eroded the sense of security employees once felt in their roles and has fundamentally changed how they experience their work.

Employees consistently hear that “our people are what make T‑Mobile special” and that this is a place to build a career, not just a job. Yet the company’s actions — particularly the elimination of high‑performing employees who were previously recognized as role models — directly contradict those messages. Individuals who were celebrated, mentored, and held up as examples of the company’s future have been let go without transparent communication or meaningful attempts at repositioning.

This disconnect between words and actions has created a deep cultural fracture.

The most recent layoffs intensified this sentiment. They were not clearly announced, leaving employees to piece together who was impacted and why. In the same conversations where employees were told how valued they are, they were also informed that more “duplication removal” and organizational changes are coming. The result is a workforce that feels misled, unprotected, and uncertain about its future.

The emotional impact is significant. Employees who once demonstrated extraordinary ownership and commitment — who would “do whatever it takes” — now question whether that level of dedication matters. When high performance is no longer a differentiator in job security, the spirit that once fueled T‑Mobile’s culture begins to fade. Instead of feeling like they are building a career, employees increasingly feel like they simply have a job.

This is not a matter of resistance to change. It is a matter of trust.
And trust, once lost, is difficult to rebuild.

If T‑Mobile is to preserve the culture that has long differentiated it, leadership must acknowledge the gap between messaging and lived experience, communicate with transparency, and demonstrate through action — not rhetoric — that employees truly are the company’s greatest asset.


Chevron Culture 2026 (I agree with the OP, this needs to stay as a top topic)

(original post is 11 down)

I have worked for three companies before this one. Each had its flaws, but each, in its own way, understood something basic about decency. When I came to CVX, my fourth, I was told, again and again, that the culture was different. Healthier. Kinder. A place where people stayed because they were valued.

I believed it. For a long time, I wanted to.

Six years in, I can say without hesitation that this is the most hostile environment I have ever survived and I started on a rig in Midland, TX.

What makes it dangerous isn’t incompetence or chaos, it’s intention. Everything here is calculated. Smiles are worn like disguises. Praise is given only when it can be reclaimed later as leverage. If your work is good, someone else will quietly attach their name to it. If your ideas land too well, they stop being yours almost immediately.
And if you are noticed, truly noticed, by the wrong person, especially your boss, the consequences are swift and surgical. Threats are not confronted; they are dismantled. Slowly. Invisibly. By the time you realize what’s happening, your reputation has already been rewritten without you in the room.

Gossip is the real currency here. Cruelty, its favorite language. Personal lives are treated as public property, mined for weaknesses. An affair. A secret. A truth shared with the wrong person. Even something small, once discovered, is inflated until it becomes unmanageable. Stories grow teeth. Context disappears. Suddenly, survival feels like something you have to apologize for.

This is not a place where mistakes are forgiven. It is a place where they are archived.
I used to think cultures were defined by mission statements and values posted on walls. Now I know better. Culture is what happens in whispers, in meetings you aren’t invited to, in credit you never receive, in silence when you need protection.

If this place has taught me anything, it’s that the most dangerous environments are the ones that insist they are safe.


I’d like to see Citi do the classy thing but alas….I doubt it.

I’d like to think that Citi would provide the usual severance package that they’ve done in the past rather than a scaled down just two weeks only.

I’d like to see Citi NOT put the squeeze on people to run them off so as to NOT provide a severance.

Unfortunately it seems that these are two rather huge “asks”. It’s embarrassing if they don’t but I’m afraid there’s too much emphasis on reclamation of money to expect otherwise.


When redundancy becomes easy change

You work at DXC for 10 years and want a WFR package.
You stay because you think its the best thing to do.
You get zero pay rise for 10 years
You might be lucky (unlikely) but because of zero pay rises, your WFR package is reduced.
DXC gains either way - they can wait you out


Offer Letter Template

Offer – Private and Confidential

VIA EMAIL
To:

Personnel number:
Email:

Dear
As announced on September 29, 2025, the Company is restructuring. As part of the process, you were asked to confirm your mobility to other company locations on October 6th.
You confirmed that you are mobile to

You were therefore included in the staffing selection process for roles with the Company in
That process has led to you being selected as a successful candidate for relocation to

As a result, we are pleased to offer you continued employment as:
Role:
Location:

With an effective date currently anticipated to be in
The timing of this transition may change as business needs evolve, and we will keep you informed and provide as much notice as possible. The Company’s staffing and development processes will remain in place and continue through the transition and following the relocation.
Although the Role may begin prior to your relocation, as a condition of accepting this offer you will be required to relocate to the new location at a date determined by the Company. Relocation support will be available to you in accordance with the Company policies as previously communicated to you.
Your salary and classification level (CL) will remain unchanged in the Role.
To accept this offer, please sign and return this letter within five business days from the date of this letter. If these terms do not meet your expectations, you can decline this offer. Should you decline the offer or fail to respond to the offer within five business days, at a later time you may receive further communications such as notification that you are being placed in the redeployment pool or a communication that your employment will be terminated at a later date. Once a decision is made on your termination date you will receive a letter providing you with notice of the termination of your employment as of an effective date as determined by the Company. This letter will include an offer of a severance package which, if accepted, will entitle you to receive a severance payment provided you stay employed in good standing with the Company until your effective date of termination.
Sincerely,

Employee Acknowledgement and Acceptance
By signing below, I, _

  1. Accept relocation to the Location and continued employment with the Company on the terms set out above.
  2. Understand and acknowledge that the Company will strive to put me in a comparable position but cannot guarantee the exact position.
  3. Understand and acknowledge that should I subsequently change my mind and refuse or fail to transition into the Role or relocate to the Location as agreed, such refusal/failure will constitute a voluntary resignation. In such circumstances, I will not be entitled to notice of termination, severance, or termination pay beyond the minimum statutory requirements, if any, that apply under the Alberta Employment Standards Code (or any other governing employment standards legislation).
  4. Acknowledge and declare that I have had the opportunity to seek independent legal advice prior to signing this agreement.

Signature: ___
Date: ___

IF YOU WISH TO DECLINE THIS OFFER, PLEASE READ BELOW


If you wish to decline this offer you can select the decline button on the top right side of this Docusign template. If you do not take any action, this offer will expire at 3:00 pm MST five business days from the date of this letter and no longer be open for acceptance.


Here is what is not working in FIG Sales....

Foskett - Who might be the laziest CRO on the planet. Here is 25% off and a couple of tickets to the Super Bowl. Isn't a strategy. His rolodex is ancient and hardly relevant. And we keep him around to ride around in the jet. The level of favoritism and nepo babies he has in his org is nuts! Ineffective!!!!! The other guy working for him in FIG sales. He keeps losing more people because the smart ones won't work for him - utterly ineffective and we continue to not address. It's a mess and that is why people are leaving! They do not want to make changes and will continue to bleed clients and talent. It is that simple.


Check OUTLOOK Calendar for future events.

I checked Outlook instead of worday and I literally have no T-Mobile scheduled events for the next few months, but when I go back, I see events on every single month like the stupid a-s powwow, and the all hand meetings. none of that sh-t is scheduled in my Outlook calendar for the next few months. I think this means I’m gonna get laid off. Thoughts? I am regular non loyalty care rep. PLEASE LIST IF YOU ARE LOYALTY OR NON-LOYALTY CARE REP WHEN REPORTING IF YOU see future calendar events.


The Draft Has Started

Oh, you thought they were going to choose the most capable and knowledgeable people? Not a chance. They’re picking the ones who excel at kissing up and delivering polished slide decks to upper management. These are the folks who coast by using the work and expertise of the very people the company isn’t keeping.

They’re selecting the “yes‑at‑all‑costs” crowd—people who are just trying to hang on until the back half of 2028. Some of them even said they couldn’t relocate because of their spouse or personal situation… yet suddenly they’re taking the job?

Honestly, I hope it blows up in their faces when the yes‑people eventually leave, and the company realizes they let go of the people who actually knew the work and kept things running. At that point, they won’t even be able to operate properly.


After two decades here, I'm just praying for a layoff

What does it say about a company when an employee with nearly twenty years of service is actively hoping to be laid off? That's the situation I find myself in now. I've given this place my all for almost two decades, and the best outcome I can imagine is to be let go with a severance package. That's a clear sign of how far things have fallen and how broken the environment has become.


Franklin Site Legacy EMC / VCE

Hard to believe how much things have changed. What used to be a busy, collaborative place now feels like a complete ghost town. Empty floors, no energy, barely anyone around. It honestly feels like The Walking Dead, people just showing up, wandering around, and ki-ling time.

There’s not much actual work happening here anymore. Teams are gone or spread out, roles eliminated, and a lot of the real work seems to have moved elsewhere or just disappeared. So what exactly is the point of RTO when you come in and there’s nothing to do?

Curious if others are seeing the same thing. Is this just a slow fade until the site eventually shuts down?


Something to keep in mind

I've been through many, many layoffs at Optum and seen many talented people let go. It's tough to watch, but I've also seen a clear pattern where a lot of those people ended up in much better positions elsewhere. They found roles with better pay, better culture, or just more respect. Just something to keep in mind.


RIP FE/RDXT it was fun.

I'm the lead in this area and for the past month, we have had people visit in the hopes of getting repair work. The LTF is empty and we have no work. It was discovered that the repair work is being set up in a different area. My mother in-law got hire for this department. And she was told she was being assigned to a newly set up repair department. This week I talked to a parent of an employee in my area. And he said that the repairs are going to be done in an area near field camp. And that there is talk of dissolving FE/RDXT.


How can we prepare for coming layoffs?

To be ready for a layoff, I offer a few items. I expect more may come in the replies.

  1. If you need income from a job, should should be trying NOW to find one. It’s way easier to get hired when you still have active employment on your resume.

  2. Save contact information for co-workers. After you are gone, you will have difficulty connecting with them if you don’t get the contact info in advance.

  3. Decide if severance is worth losing the option to sue Xerox. Since severance varies and may change soon, this one is up to individual circumstances. Before signing a general release, consider this.

  4. Begin monitoring the HR policy regarding severance. It’s very likely that
    this may adjust downward. If you see it, it gives time to think before you are IRIFed. For example, #3.

  5. If you used your Xerox.com (or Lex whatever) email address for personal use such as password recovery, change it. You don’t want to forget a password in the future and then realize you used a business email for recovery that you no longer have access to.

  6. Take advantage of unused health insurance entitlements before they disappear.

  7. Understand that health insurance continuance is an option, but WAY more expensive. For me in the US, cost was 5X.

  8. Clean your desk so that is you are walked out, all your personal things are already gone or fit into a box you can take when you are escorted out.

  9. Remember you may have employee discounts that may expire after you are gone.

Any more?