Thread regarding Intel Corp. layoffs

One year post CPM, much more meaningful work, key is savings to create escape velocity

I had a long and mostly good career at Intel. I remember the early days, when it was demanding, but in exchange, there was a meaningful employer/employee relationship. Towards the end, and sadly like so much of tech, it is now just transactional, you are here for the moment, then not. In the last chapter of my career at Intel products side (DCG), I felt our mission and goals were always shifting with the rotation of VPs, job clarity and purpose were low, and you spent as much time navigating politics, turf and survival as you did actually focused on delivering anything to our customers. Still, I always saved, maxed out 401k, additional savings along the way.

When our team was hit a year ago, I took the money and ran. We only have one shot at our lives, so for the next chapter, I focused on finding a job and organization that had more meaning to me, and not about the pay or title. I landed a role that pays about 1/3 of what I made at Intel (was double digit grade level), but I have very clear job clarity, ownership, accountability, I have direct line of site where my contributions add value, there isn't a re-org every quarter, the management is stable. This is a much better space than the nonsense of working on ever shifting goals, and one day you are told what you do matters, and the next day the team is CPM'd.

The key, if you are there navigating Lip-Bu's 'you are born to suffer and work hard' mindset, is save, save, save, and as you have more and more socked away, your options beyond Intel, and beyond tech, grow, grow and grow.

I am grateful for the wealth accumulation Intel provided my family and I over the years, and I do wish the remaining Intel colleagues the best of luck, I hope Intel and those that are there succeed (still have stock), but have to say the employment experience - from the perspective of meaning and purpose - decreased significantly from the Intel I joined in times past.


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Post ID: @OP+1kx6zzsva

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I was laid off by Intel 8 months ago. Since then I created an amazing bandwidth and headspace for myself to pursue exciting work and learning opportunities for myself and started the rebuild process of something new and exciting for myself. Furthermore, I am now working on real world AI problems using real world data. Now I can see the AI projects pushed by the management are waste of time and are completely disconnected from the rest of the world. I never thought I'd say this but I am so grateful for being let go!

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Post ID: @q7+1kx6zzsva

I vote OP Most Likely to go Postal in the cafe!

This is the most maniacal, obsessively unhinged post I've seen on this site, which is saying something.

For someone to vote so many times for their own post is deranged.

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Post ID: @q0+1kx6zzsva

Very well written, OP. Thanks for the perspective. I am in a similar situation. Will take the money for now but it has become very transactional and meaningless. Thankfully I have been prudent about saving and will take up a more meaningful opportunity in a better culture if/when I can find it.

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Post ID: @pd+1kx6zzsva

Yep; been at Intel less than 10 years, but saved and have a fully paid off house. I know what we need to achieve but the constant worrying about perception, especially post record in my group, is getting to be too much.

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Post ID: @aw+1kx6zzsva

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