Thread regarding CDW layoffs

CDW needs unions

After five mass RIFs in less than four years and many other unacknowledged workforce reductions, the only way for coworkers to achieve any transparency or fairness is through collective bargaining. I’m shocked that the Teamsters haven’t already organized the warehouses.

While organizing “knowledge workers” is more difficult, the CWA has had some success with bargaining for better severance packages, standards governing reductions, and guardrails around AI (and company’s false narratives about “efficiency gains”) at Google and Microsoft. If you’re an individual contributor, your right to discuss pay, benefits, and working conditions and organize a union is protected under the National Labor Relations Act.

Power concedes nothing without a demand. If you’re tired of CDW’s coworker last decisions such as authorizing a $1 billion stock buyback that they paid for with your former coworkers’ jobs, demand change collectively.


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Post ID: @OP+1kwxehns4

13 replies (most recent on top)

@OP United Auto Workers (UAW) represents non auto manufacturing organizations like college faculty members, administrative professionals, etc. You would be surprised to see the roster of represented groups they stand up for.

www.uaw.org, go to bottom of page and click on the link under ORGANIZE/want to organize with the UAW

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Post ID: @s2+1kwxehns4

Not sure how unions fit into office work but in a prior career I was part of a Union and it was amazing. Counter to the prevailing discourse there was a real pride in work and union bosses made sure you did your job and did not reflect poorly on the union. Also there to help you if you needed more education/training, and of course to protect your job and pay.

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Post ID: @j4+1kwxehns4

@d7 They kept their unions and pay. My brother works for Ford and is in a union and wouldn't have it any other way. Have you ever worked for automotive or a union?

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Post ID: @g6+1kwxehns4

@ea Spoken like someone who has never been in a union. Ask those who form unions and have them for years. It is easy to change back but they never do because the gains and protections are very positive.

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Post ID: @g5+1kwxehns4

@OP what a d-mb post. CWA was formed 100 years ago. Unions can make companies way less flexible. When pay isn’t tied as closely to performance and work rules get locked in, it’s harder for businesses to adapt when the market changes. A lot of the time, that pushes companies to move jobs overseas or replace people with automation just to stay competitive. CDW is already too woke and left which is a huge cultural problem. Total groupthink

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Post ID: @ea+1kwxehns4

Sound like some lefty from a big city. Look what unions did to our auto manufacturers

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Post ID: @d7+1kwxehns4

@ct Not true. I hired on with CDW after getting married to my wife who worked in this city. We had a long distance relationship and she did not want to move her kids to a new area. I worked in the Southeast and made much more with a union than I do now doing the same thing. More importantly, they protected coworkers. Sometimes too much as the union would jump in and protect coworkers who they felt were dismissed incorrectly so management was worried about upsetting us and layoffs were few at the non-management level. They would reduce their own bonuses or eliminate them for the year and would reduce executive salaries for the year. Our benefits were better and they would push for promotions from within. They had our backs. I would love to have them back.

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Post ID: @cv+1kwxehns4

No thanks! Unions do nothing to protect you!!!

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Post ID: @ct+1kwxehns4

Look out everyone. If Ray hears this he will put on that pretend "I give a fu-k" push to stop you from unionizing. He will start free dinners will begin and have his loyal puppets go around and ask questions on if you have heard anything about unions .But ask ourselves, why do we make less than union coworkers at other companies and why are they considering some automated options to eliminate some of us coworkers at the distribution centers. We need to do this for ourselves and kids. Enough is enough.

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Post ID: @cs+1kwxehns4

@by I ended up at CDW due to an acquisition and it was the worst work environment I have encountered in 15 years of experience. I left and went to a consulting firm and never looked back.

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Post ID: @c5+1kwxehns4

i've been saying that for years. My brother is working for a union tech company that went union to save jobs. It worked. And their increase percentages went way up. I have been applying there the last year and have not been offered yet.

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Post ID: @c4+1kwxehns4

Unions have been tried before at other big IT shops. It never worked just because people are too lazy and don't want to get off their butts. In order to get a union to work, you have to get enough willing people to sign a petition all at once. It has to be enough people signing the petition all at one time that if all of the people that signed the petition were released, it would put the business at risk. If not enough people sign, the business now knows who signed, and those folks become the latest casualties in a RIF.

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Post ID: @c3+1kwxehns4

...or just leave. There are so many other companies out there that offer a better career experience than CDW - with a more enjoyable culture, better compensation, greater opportunity to advance, where leadership recognizes and appreciates contributions to success, etc.
Unions won't solve the problem. For CDW to succeed again they'd need a full-scale culture overhaul which will never happen under the current regime.

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Post ID: @by+1kwxehns4

No thank you.

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Post ID: @bw+1kwxehns4

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