Thread regarding Verizon Wireless layoffs

The Clues Are There In Plain Sight

Since the involuntary/voluntary layoffs began over 3 years ago, certain things have changed on the wireless side that made itself apparent, and that the end for some is coming fast and hard.

Sale: Diminished storefronts, decrease in commission, other avenues for the end user to purchase with incentives to not go into a brick and mortar location.

Customer Service: Call centers closing down, Home Based Agents rising, outsourcing to places even after all the work to relocate higher wage call center workers to non union states. Home based agents also dont work well for those struggling to make it even in a call center environment.

Finance: The dissolution of groups, multiple changes in cost center designations and the removal of those from BR/BM. New software implemented to challenge what the finance department has come up with.

Network: The hiring of cheaper labor (right out of college), promotions for those that do not have even 2 years in, increase scrutinizing of time, increased tracking of field workers, contract workers taking up positions once (some rif'ed workers even coming back), management buckling to get that bean counter stabilized. Noc duties getting moved to regionalized teams that are struggling beyond measure.

Couple all of the above with increased automation and all of the efficiency experts around and you'll have a company running extremely lean by 2022. Since no one cares about quality of service and putting all of their eggs into the 5G basket, there will not be anything left to wonder when over MVNOs start popping out to take the extra customers away from VzW. I don't expect to see customer service using any actual VzW workers, greater automation for switch offices not considered distribution plants, and a good percentage of workers pretty much apathetic to it all.

Directors think they can save the regions by keeping costs down and champion it up the chain. In 2019, it doesnt work this way. The goal originally was to focus on the customer. That proved to be too expensive, quality of service diminished, and customers will leave because they would rather pay for a cheaper service if the customer experience is sub par.

The layoffs aren't done, they're just warming up.

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Post ID: @OP+10iXCDCB

5 replies (most recent on top)

Leave now. Even if you have to take a pay cut. Better now then later. If you leave a year two years from now. You're still gonna take a pay cut. But if you take it now, you'll have hopefully settled into something you like and have gotten a couple raises. If you wait, your gonna have start that buildup alot later. I left two years ago, the paycut was rough but I was happier. Now I'm in a good position to have a decent career. I'm climbing back up that payscale ladder as well.. it's still not as good as we was making a few years ago at Verizon but its gonna get there and be better and be solid.

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Post ID: @3ihu+10iXCDCB

It’s a trainwreck. We handed them a fantastic network after 20years of builds and experiences and talent and they’ve thrown it against the rocks. Oh and where’s that wonderful 5G coverage map? To late ya done laid off the people building it. Someone has more money than they have sense.

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Post ID: @2spa+10iXCDCB

There are currently 13 sites offshore... with more to come. The reality of transparency is false. If you aren't already HBA, then I'd say you're at risk for RIF. Even HBA will probably be outsourced in the end... look at most of the vzw heads, they are outsourced.

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Post ID: @2qrq+10iXCDCB

Don’t forget about Verizon cannibalizing itself with Visible!

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Post ID: @1yxq+10iXCDCB

Very well put post and actually showing the reality of this company. Does one know what this post tells us? Get urs while ur at it & get it all what u can & however u can get it, and say Goodbye from a dffrnt boat.

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Post ID: @1imv+10iXCDCB

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