Thread regarding Ford layoffs

Ford Offers Severance to Workers It Deems Underperformers

https://www.wsj.com/articles/ford-looks-to-offer-severance-to-white-collar-employees-it-deems-underperformers-11667186857

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Post ID: @OP+1jtfU6Sv

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@1bhd+1jtfU6Sv : total baloney

Get rid of friends and family workers, which by definition are useless know-nothings that are directly responsible for costing the company millions in quality issues. Problem solved.

Do you work at Ford? I bet you know at least one of these people, in fact, you might be one.

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Post ID: @1gdo+1jtfU6Sv

It's time for Ford to right-size the firm so this is a good beginning. Ford has too many white collar workers that grew over years of management failure... The brand must survive and 30 percent of white collar jobs in the USA need to go out the door now! We are talking about survival and Ford needs to act now before year-end!

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Post ID: @1bhd+1jtfU6Sv

Did you miss the part of 55 the article that says only about 100 employees generally fall into this category?

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Post ID: @sfh+1jtfU6Sv

Damning quotes in this article. Things are worse than we know.

https://www.freep.com/story/money/cars/ford/2022/10/31/ford-workers-pep-severance-benefits-package/69605931007/

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Post ID: @qfw+1jtfU6Sv

100% target for older workers. Just a legal form of ageism.

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Post ID: @nsl+1jtfU6Sv

Where's my buyout?

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Post ID: @onn+1jtfU6Sv

Ford F 0.49%increase; green up pointing triangle

Motor Co. is altering its approach to addressing white-collar employees deemed underperformers, telling managers that some of those workers must choose between severance or a performance enhancement program.

The changes in its talent-management policy mostly focus on employees who have eight or more years of service and whom the company has identified as demonstrating a pattern of declining performance, according to an internal email reviewed by The Wall Street Journal and confirmed by a company spokeswoman.

These employees now have the option of taking the severance, rather than enroll in the enhancement plan, which can take four to six weeks, the email and spokeswoman said.

Those who instead choose the enhancement plan but fail to improve won’t be eligible for any severance, according to the Oct. 4 email, which went to all U.S. managers.

The changes are intended to simplify how managers confront poor performance and provide an alternative to the improvement plan, which can be an intense period of work for employees who have made up their minds, the Ford spokeswoman said.

The amended policies, which apply to all U.S. salaried workers, went into effect Oct. 1, according to the email.

As part of the updated policy, managers who have low-performing employees with less than eight years can skip the performance-enhancement plan and move to an involuntary separation with severance, the Ford spokeswoman said. These employees can also receive some benefits, such as job-placement assistance, if they are let go, she said.

Ford has about 30,000 salaried employees in the U.S.

The U.S. auto maker made moves to streamline its white-collar workforce in recent months as part of a broader effort to slash costs by about $3 billion annually by 2026. The belt-tightening aims to free up more money to fund a costly long-term transition to electric vehicles, a market that is now dominated by rival Tesla Inc.

In August, the Dearborn, Mich., auto maker said it was laying off about 3,000 salaried and contract workers in the U.S., Canada and India, a move that followed months of company executives signaling to Wall Street that it needed to reduce staffing levels.

Ford Chief Executive Jim Farley has said the shift to electric vehicles is prompting a reassessment of the company’s resources, including its staffing levels in some areas.

“We absolutely have too many people in certain places, no doubt about it. And we have skills that don’t work anymore and we have jobs that need to change,” Mr. Farley said on a July earnings call.

Earlier this year, Ford reorganized its internal operations to create different divisions, including one that focuses exclusively on electric vehicles.

Ford, like other companies, could also face some attrition in the near term because of rising interest rates and the impact that is expected to have on pension payouts for those looking to retire.

Ford, in a separate email sent in September to employees, said that because of rising interest rates, the rate applied to the lump-sum pay for U.S. salaried workers who elect to retire is going to change as of Dec. 1. After that date, interest rates could reduce the overall lump-sum cash-outs by about 20% to 25%, the email said.

A Ford spokeswoman said potential retirees have until the end of November to decide if they want to retire by Dec. 1 and cash out their pensions before the IRS segment rates affect their retirement calculations.

Across the auto industry, executives are preparing for a potential downturn in business, taking steps either to reduce staff or freeze hiring.

Stellantis NV, the global parent of Jeep, Chrysler and other auto brands, said Friday it is offering voluntary buyouts to U.S. salaried employees as part of a restructuring to sharpen focus on new technologies and low-emissions vehicles.

The buyouts, initiated this month, target certain white-collar employees with benefit packages that wouldn’t otherwise be available to them, the company said in a statement.

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Post ID: @rzf+1jtfU6Sv

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