Thread regarding Comcast layoffs

An Open Letter to Michael Angelakis, from Someone Inside the Building

Welcome back. You are inheriting something better than the org chart suggests and worse than the earnings calls admit.

Here is the uncomfortable math. The last consumer innovation this company shipped that genuinely surprised the market was the voice remote. That was a decade ago. Since then we have iterated, rebranded, and repackaged. We have not invented. A technology company that goes ten years without a breakthrough does not have a talent problem. It has a culture problem.

The talent is here. I see it every day, two and three levels below the leaders whose names you know. You spent a decade in private equity looking for underdeployed assets. You are inheriting one, and it does not show up on any balance sheet. It is the layer of people whose ideas exist but never compound, because they die in the space between teams, ground down by territorial disputes that no one above has the will to resolve. Alignment gets talked about in every ops review and practiced in almost none of them.

Worse than misalignment, we actively compete against each other. Teams undermine teams. Credit gets fought over harder than problems do. In that environment, bringing a good idea forward is a risk, because someone will see it as a threat to their territory before anyone sees it as value for the customer. And when we do need fresh thinking, our reflex is to hire a consulting firm rather than look at the people already in the building who have been raising their hands for years. We pay outsiders to tell us things our own employees have been saying for free.

The deeper issue is tenure without growth, and it is not confined to any one business unit. Across the company, senior leadership has been in place for a very long time. Longevity became the qualification. Loyalty became the currency. The same leaders who mandate culture and leadership training for everyone below them have not meaningfully changed how they operate in years. They are skilled at protecting their positions and the structures that support them. They are not producing new ideas, and the people under them who do produce new ideas rarely get an audience.

This is also why there is no growth pipeline. When leaders stay in the same seats for a decade, everyone below them stays put too. Ambitious people learn there is nowhere to grow into, so they either leave or shrink to fit. And something quieter happens over time. When good ideas get stomped out often enough, people stop bringing them. A culture that does not respect ideas eventually stops producing them. That is not a morale problem. That is the mechanism behind the innovation drought itself, and it compounds every year the same names hold the same roles.

The separation gives you something no sitting CEO here has had in fifteen years: a legitimate reason to rebuild rather than inherit. When the new Comcast stands up its leadership, the easy move is to promote the familiar names into familiar boxes. If that happens, the culture transfers intact and the innovation drought comes with it. The harder move is to actually open those roles, look hard at the layers below, and ask who has shipped something new in the last five years rather than who has survived the longest.

Two smaller things that would cost you little and signal a lot. First, loosen the rigidity around return to office. The current posture reads as distrust, and distrust is expensive in exactly the currency you need most right now, which is discretionary effort. Second, go find the people doing innovative work without permission. Every large company has them. Ours have learned to keep it quiet. Make it safe to be visible and you will be surprised what surfaces.

Here is a data point you will not find in any diligence deck. When the separation was announced, the mood on the media side was not sadness. It was relief. The sentiment that circulated among NBCU and Sky colleagues was that they were finally free of the anchor that had been holding them down, and the anchor they meant was not our balance sheet. It was our culture. Treat that as what it is: an exit interview from the two businesses that knew us best. The companies we owned identified our way of operating as the liability they most wanted to shed. No leader here has acknowledged it. That silence tells you as much as the sentiment does.

One more thing, and it is the big one. After the separation, this company cannot afford to be seen as the old broadband business managing its decline at a slower rate. Right now Wall Street is grading us on losing fewer subscribers than expected. Think about that. Our wins are measured in smaller losses. Analysts are openly saying that eventually we will have to prove we can grow. The spin gives the market a reason to look at us fresh, and it will be watching for one thing: evidence that this is a technology company with a next act, not a utility with good marketing. If the new Comcast launches and the story is the same network, the same products, and the same leadership, the market will price us accordingly and it will be right to. We need to give them something big. Not a rebrand. An actual innovation. The kind of thing this company has not shipped in a decade, built by people who are already here waiting for someone to ask.

You said the company’s assets and track record provide a powerful foundation for the future. The assets are real. The track record on innovation is not, and most of us inside know it. The question is whether the new Comcast gets a new culture or the old one with a new ticker symbol.

We are watching to see which one you choose.

  • A Comcast employee who wants to stay

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| 722 views | | 6 replies (last ) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kxmc4nzr

6 replies (most recent on top)

@g7 Angelakis announced several leadership updates, and not a single woman was included. I really hope that isn’t a sign of the direction things are heading.

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Post ID: @gb+1kxmc4nzr

Executives are rewarded for staying in the clouds. Angelakis should spend a day unannounced in a store, a call center, with techs in the field, and try to navigate as a customer. One telling sign would be how many employees drop our services if they removed the courtesy discount. It’s also not a place that’s kind to women.

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Post ID: @g7+1kxmc4nzr

Damn, I hope he sees this. Recycled leadership is the problem same names, different titles, no real change. We duplicate apps, buy overlapping tools, and spend millions on consultants who leave behind nothing employees couldn’t have done better. It’s just an expensive executive checkbox with no accountability.

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Post ID: @fa+1kxmc4nzr

“ Worse than misalignment, we actively compete against each other. Teams undermine teams”

When I worked for CMCSA there were at LEAST 3 video monitoring systems and zero synergy across teams.

Divisions HAD to build their own and new national
VPs had visions of grandeur led by team leads unwillingly to share.

Great open letter.

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Post ID: @dz+1kxmc4nzr

A well crafted and accurate analysis of our situation.

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Post ID: @dx+1kxmc4nzr

Mid/high level engineer in HQ - I agree with all of this and hope he does somehow read this.
I enjoy my team for the most part, but as a tech worker im now paid under market for the skills and efforts I give. There is no upward mobility in my pillar. No coordinator position, no management track, no lead on a technical team. Nothing. It's worker bees vs the SLTs. And I've directly asked my manager and their manager for a path, advice, I want to grow. Again, no options. Realistically I will end up leaving for another job that has more opportunities, not the same competitive managerial re-arrange. When the Director, Vps and C suite names after every single restructuring are the same 20 people, what are we actually doing differently? All the worker bees see is our friends getting laid off, and the same people who got us into this strain getting another promotion & title change. I hope he takes this opportunity for change.

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Post ID: @d1+1kxmc4nzr

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