Thread regarding T-Mobile layoffs

T-Mobile Layoffs coming

During a recent leadership call, T-Mobile’s new corporate team announced that major organizational changes would be implemented by mid-January. The message was delivered with an unusual emphasis on “emotional intelligence,” as leaders reminded employees to manage their feelings throughout the transition. To many on the call, this advice came across as tone-deaf—almost dismissive—especially given the real possibility that these changes could dramatically affect workers’ livelihoods at a time when the cost of living continues to rise.

For employees already feeling the strain of inflation, uncertainty, and demanding workloads, being told to focus on emotional intelligence felt like an indirect admission that little consideration was being given to their actual well-being. Several team members interpreted the message as a clear signal that T-Mobile’s leadership was more concerned with optics than with the human impact of their decisions.

Some employees openly expressed frustrations, stating that working for T-Mobile since the merger has “been the pits,” and that they no longer find joy or purpose in their roles. Morale, once a hallmark of the company’s culture, has eroded. What was once marketed as an energetic, people-first workplace has increasingly begun to feel, to many, like a corporate machine asking for more while giving less.

As January approaches, employees are left navigating an atmosphere of uncertainty—hoping for the best, but bracing for changes that may once again redefine not just their work, but their way of life.


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Post ID: @OP+1kc2vzgx2

15 replies (most recent on top)

Hasn't been the same since we took in Sprint. Management has been nothing but horrid and when they used to care about people and growth, now it's money driven and numbers need to be charted at all times. Just biting my tongue at this point.

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Post ID: @627+1kc2vzgx2

@b1 Dumpwoody? Most of IT to be outsourced to India

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Post ID: @c2+1kc2vzgx2

Was anyone in Dunwoody/Ravinia affected today? IT?

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Post ID: @b1+1kc2vzgx2

@a5 Just let it fall.

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Post ID: @aq+1kc2vzgx2

@a7 You are just now waking up to this? I can’t believe people have been going along with this sh-t at all.

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Post ID: @ap+1kc2vzgx2

@a7 And then follow it up by kissing heiny on Linkedin about it.

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Post ID: @an+1kc2vzgx2

So this is what those emotional intelligence classes led to? I ignored most of them because what they were teaching I learned in the Martial Arts 25 years ago.

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Post ID: @am+1kc2vzgx2

@af You are 100% correct. It'e becoming a pattern now since 2021.

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Post ID: @ah+1kc2vzgx2

Don't worry, it will only get worse. We started with SVP and VP, who each get massive severence packages. Next will be Sr. Directors and Directors (10-25%), Sr. People Managers (30%-75%), and low performing individual contributors (5-10%), who will never make it to Director because we always cut the good ones at Sr. People Manager during re-orgs. If you care about career growth, do yourself a serious favor - leave, get promoted outside to Director+ and come back at Director+. If you don't, trust me - 0.01% chance you ever make it. Next thing they will tell us is, be fortunate we have a paycheck. The reality is AI is only helping T-Mobile cut costs, not drive growth. T-2 years until the stock plummets to sub-$40. At that point the current C-Suite will be retired and we will get bought in full by DT. 100% fact.

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Post ID: @af+1kc2vzgx2

@OP was this the Sr. Manager+ call that tool place late afternoon?

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Post ID: @ac+1kc2vzgx2

I have never seen a company so concerned with image and litigation that they tap dance around people who by all means would have been canned anywhere else. There large numbers of people who are using and abusing this company and sorry to say it are not money well spent and only take without actually doing any work or even being pleasant to be around. - stacking as many paid absences as they can and still finding something to complain about. I feel sorry for those impacted who actually did their jobs and less sorry for those who milked the system. It was a matter of time before TMO needed to clean house and simply rehire their favorites.

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Post ID: @aa+1kc2vzgx2

We do it to ourselves. When we have all hands meetings or events and we all are waving our Magenta flags and holding cutouts of leadership we give them the optics they want. Advice for those that might get to stay, stop this cr-p. We are just hurting ourselves. Next all hands just sit there. No high fives, no Magenta pride. I know that’s tough since many of us have built this place.

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Post ID: @a7+1kc2vzgx2

30% RIF over the next year announcement soon. Will happen in waves next year. Majority impacted will be frontline due to push to TLife

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Post ID: @a6+1kc2vzgx2

It’s honestly unbelievable watching this company pretend it’s doing us a favor by preaching “emotional intelligence” while ignoring the fact that employees have been drowning for years. The constant restructuring, nonstop pivots, and whiplash changes in direction are beyond exhausting. People are burnt out, mentally drained, and tired of carrying the weight of leadership’s bad decisions — all while being told to smile through it as they lean on hired-g-n consultants to make the operational decisions they’ve never been able to figure out on their own.

What makes it worse is how completely disconnected leadership has become. They keep talking about culture, values, and caring for people; meanwhile, morale has cratered, workloads keep increasing, and every new “organizational update” feels like another round of roulette with our livelihoods. It’s easy to preach emotional management when you’re not the one dealing with the daily chaos, the uncertainty, or the total lack of real support.

We’ve put up with all of it — the constant change, the mental fatigue, the poor leadership — in the hope that it might eventually lead to a better future for our families and our colleagues. And after all of that, they still have the nerve to act like the problem is how we feel about it.

So honestly? After all the org shifts, layoffs, broken promises, and endless “test beds” for new models, there’s nothing left to say but this:

Fu-k you, T-Mobile.

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Post ID: @a5+1kc2vzgx2

@OP ok chatgpt. The dashes are a dead giveaway

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Post ID: @a4+1kc2vzgx2

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