Thread regarding Verizon Communications Inc. layoffs

Verizon’s Workforce Realignment Reflects Deeper Industry Transition

Verizon’s multi-phase workforce reduction, initiated in late 2024, marks more than just a cost-cutting measure—it reflects the industry’s broader evolution toward leaner, digitally oriented operations.

The company began offering voluntary separation packages in September 2024, with over 4,800 U.S.-based management employees targeted. A significant portion exited by fall, and the remainder are expected to depart by March 2025. Public filings show associated severance costs between $1.7 billion and $1.9 billion, alongside additional restructuring charges linked to real estate and non-core asset exits.

These moves come as Verizon attempts to reposition itself in a hyper-competitive market where fixed wireless access, automation, and enterprise platforms are gaining prominence. Yet, the company’s strategic messaging has often lacked clarity—and that raises a leadership question.

Despite strong technical capabilities and infrastructure assets, Verizon’s executive team, led by CEO Hans Vestberg, has struggled to articulate a cohesive vision that resonates with either investors or internal stakeholders. Under their tenure, the company’s consumer strategy has appeared reactive, with limited progress in high-margin innovation or international competitiveness.

This isn’t simply a matter of optics. Leadership in today’s telecom landscape requires more than operational oversight—it demands narrative authority, strategic coherence, and the ability to reenergize both talent and market confidence. Verizon’s top team, while experienced, has not consistently demonstrated the transformational leadership required to reposition the company beyond its defensive posture.

This realignment may be necessary. But without a credible forward narrative—and the leadership to carry it—the company risks becoming operationally efficient yet directionally adrift.

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Post ID: @OP+1jvxxj6vy

5 replies (most recent on top)

replace ALL overpaid execs with AI/robotics. Anyone making over 1 million a year can EASILY be replaced by automation, which in itself, is superior, anyway!! The only necessary employees are those who are hands-on, or customer facing. Take ALL the excess, wasted salaries on the group of 70 year old fossils that can't compete with robotics anyway and put that money back into the network.

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Post ID: @gf+1jvxxj6vy

@bg replace ALL overpaid execs with AI/robotics. Anyone making over 1 million a year can EASILY be replaced by automation, which in itself, is superior, anyway!! The only necessary employees are those who are hands-on, or customer facing. Take ALL the excess, wasted salaries on the group of 70 year old fossils that can't compete with robotics anyway and put that money back into the network.

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Post ID: @ff+1jvxxj6vy

From an industry perspective, there’s a widening gap between Verizon’s internal messaging and its market posture. Cultural optimism, as echoed by Joe Epp and others, has its place—but it cannot substitute for strategic coherence.

The company’s ongoing restructuring—initiated in late 2024, affecting over 4,800 management roles with nearly $2B in associated costs—signals a fundamental repositioning. Yet the public narrative remains focused on field visits and innovation platitudes, rather than addressing investor confidence, execution gaps, or international competitiveness.

Leadership isn’t about visibility; it’s about direction. In a telecom landscape where fixed wireless, automation, and AI-driven enterprise platforms are reshaping the battlefield, Verizon’s challenge is no longer technical capacity—it’s narrative authority.

Until that’s resolved, culture-first commentary risks sounding like applause for choreography rather than alignment with strategy.

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Post ID: @d7+1jvxxj6vy

There was a recent article where Verizon is trying to get down to 70,000 employees by 2030, thats just 5 years away. The company is slimming down significantly

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Post ID: @bg+1jvxxj6vy

Meh, all companies have been embracing a digital transition for years. This is nothing new.

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Post ID: @bf+1jvxxj6vy

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