On the surface, Verizon’s recent celebration of “Stock Together Day” sounds like a win for employee empowerment. Chairman and CEO Hans Vestberg proudly announced that, for the sixth consecutive year, the company is issuing restricted stock unit (RSU) grants as part of its equity participation initiative. Launched in 2020, the “Stock Together” program promises to give every employee—known internally as a “V Teamer”—a stake in Verizon’s success.
But the reality behind the celebration paints a different picture.
The Illusion of Shared Prosperity
Equity participation can indeed be a powerful tool for aligning employee incentives with company performance—when the company is growing. But Verizon isn’t. Its core business—wireless services—is in structural decline. The customer base is saturated. ARPU (average revenue per user) is flatlining. Meanwhile, cost-cutting efforts are accelerating: layoffs, outsourcing, and benefit reductions are becoming routine.
In this environment, stock grants begin to look less like rewards and more like a tool of optics management.
What Happens When the Stock Doesn’t Grow?
RSUs only translate into meaningful wealth when the stock price increases. But Verizon’s share price has underperformed the broader market for years. While executive compensation has remained robust—often tied to metrics the public can’t fully verify—rank-and-file employees are asked to cheer for devalued stock and shrinking career security.
If you give someone equity in a declining asset, is that truly empowerment? Or is it bait?
A Culture of Celebration or a Strategy of Distraction?
Vestberg’s language is uplifting: “shared success,” “winning culture,” “unique participation.” But morale at Verizon tells another story. Ask long-time employees who’ve seen pensions eroded, wellness benefits scaled back, and internal systems become increasingly fragmented and inefficient. Many don’t feel like co-owners—they feel like collateral.
The equity program might reach every employee, but it doesn’t change the fundamentals: Verizon is managing decline, not engineering transformation. Stock Together Day may boost engagement metrics for the communications team, but it won’t pay the bills when the real compensation trends are going the wrong direction.
Equity Without Strategy Is Just Spin
For equity programs to work, there must be a credible path to value creation. That requires bold leadership, strategic investment, and operational clarity. Instead, Verizon continues to double down on platform bloat (SAP HANA, PeopleSoft, Apptio), strategic confusion, and executive storytelling that no longer matches the lived experience of its workforce or shareholders.
Stock Together isn’t a bad idea. But without real change, it’s just another internal holiday—like cake in the break room during a layoff.