@3dzy+1lN6Iny0, nobody likes a whiner.
You and the employees not impacted are just as much to blame for drinking the executive Kool-Aid being served to the masses. You were lied too, know of the disservice that has been done to us, and are also turning your backs on us.
When is someone going to speak up to the execs and to the investors? Most everyone is fearful of their jobs and not speaking up.
How am I to blame for your getting LR'd?
You had the same opportunities that I had to research Cisco as a company before applying to, and accepting, a job from Cisco. From the banner at the bottom of this page, this site has been around since 2009. Glass door has been around for a long time as well. You should have known what you were getting yourself into before you joined, and if you didn't, you certainly had time to figure out what was going on around you and leave before you were impacted instead of sitting on your backside waiting on the axe to fall. If you were impacted in the first year or two, then the severance package you received from Cisco was incredibly generous compared to what I've received from other companies so you don't have anything to whine about and if you've been with Cisco more than 2 yrs, you had plenty of time to figure out what's happening and leave on your own terms for a better place. So that's on you, not me/us.
I don't see it as a "disservice". I see it more as a bribe to allow Cisco to target people with impunity. I wasn't pi---d at Cisco for getting let go back in '11, I was pi---d at the manager who put me in the position to be let go because he'd made it personal. But, with hindsight, it was the best thing for me because my job function was gone w/in 18 months. They had someone try to cover my responsibilities while it was phased out, but no one could handle it along w/ their normal work, so they hired a contractor to replace me about a quarter later, and kept him for just over a year as he shutdown the servers/service I supported and terminated him.
My departure gave me an opportunity to work a 1 yr gig at a company that paid OT for every hour over 40 and I was working 50-70 hr weeks making bank before coming back to Cisco to work on a great team. Then Cisco did one of it's LR's where it was an across-the-board cut and they had to let 2 people go from our team. They cut me & another guy who were supporting the oldest technologies that the team supported. His wife was, and still is, a Cisco employee, so he's now back as a contractor and enjoying Cisco benefits via his spouse's coverage. This time, I was more shocked that our team, which was understaffed and over worked would have cuts, but it was what it was. That LR was the longest break in employment I'd ever had, even when the dot-com bubble burst and cost me my job back then. (Yes, I'm old.) But that dot-com job gave me 2 wks severance, plus 2 more wks and 1 wk/yr of service if I signed the waiver, so I got 9 wks total for 5 yrs of service. That's only 1 wk more than Cisco gives everyone regardless of length of service and not signing the waiver!