I acknowledge that the title may attract more trolls than it keeps away. But it's difficult to get a wide discussion going among employees and still be semi-anonymous, so I'll try it anyway. I'm hoping to have some intelligent conversation, as there have been some glimmers of intelligent insight and even empathy on this board recently.
Before I begin, let's acknowledge a few things, so we don't repeat or go off on the same well-worn tangents:
- The RTO will definitely result in a loss of people; no need to bring up "hEaDcOUnT rEduCtIoN" as though it's a new thought
- The leadership of AT&T has been wildly inept at many past dealings
- Very few if any people have gotten RTO letters, so stupid declarations like "all letters go out this week; off payroll July 1" are unnecessary trolling
- Union/CWA members who stir the pot are easy to spot by their choice of phrases; please stay away from this thread and stir it up elsewhere
- RTO in this discussion is more about "RTD" ("Report to Dallas") than about being in an office a few days a week; no need to debate the merits of working at a home office vs. working in a work office...it's been done to death
- Severance will be paid according to the severance policy to people who receive a relocation notice and choose not to move; this is established fact and no longer an item of speculation
That said...
What are some of the possible endgames with the recent "RTO" action? I'm afraid I don't have a complete explanation. Some possibilities and reasoning for/against:
- Just a big headcount reduction to please investors
While this will certainly be a major side effect, I don't see it as an endgame per se. A few reasons:
(a) RTD is not going to be 'done' by 3Q or even EOY. It's going to be ongoing and have ripple effects as there are already not enough facilities in Dallas to handle office workers
(b) There is a lot of expense involved; there's already been acquisitions of acquiring emergency parking capacity, and the office requires a lot of investment in equipment
(c) Severance will be paid (as described in the assumptions above), so there's not a cost savings there vs. doing a normal surplus
(d) In short, to achieve faster FCF returns by way of headcount reduction, a 'traditional' surplus would have made more sense and could be implemented much more quickly
- They really do want people in hubs and Dallas, either under the false premise of collaboration, or to more closely 'monitor' them
(a) Again, this is an awfully big sledgehammer to use when a much smaller one would be more appropriate, affordable, and effective. As stated in the assumptions, leadership is perhaps clueless, but it's as though there was absolutely no input into this from anyone outside a C-level executive. Yes, that group has made terrible decisions in the past (think Warner Media), but those didn't directly involve existing business units. It was a whole new target entity
(b) One could achieve the same effect in a much more controlled fashion by allowing for attrition and only filling positions in Dallas when they are opened
(c) Many groups are bypassing hubs entirely for direct-to-Dallas, even when most of the business unit has been located in a hub already
- A reduction in real estate footprint to free up cash
This will also be a side effect for sure, but
(a) Again, it's crazy inefficient; the same could have been achieved as it's been done in cities across the U.S. recently - close the facility and either have the workers report to a new location, or stay virtual. A large, already-virtual workforce is one of the cheapest to maintain. Having them come into an unprepared facility in Dallas is taking a step back for each step forward in closing a different facility
(b) Creating cash flow quickly this is not. It absolutely should be a long-term goal, but as in (a), its effect is being muted or even cancelled by RTD.
- Preparation for selling off major assets to another buyer
I'm interested to talk through this one, but I find it somewhat suspect. A buyer of, say, wireline assets will own assets across all states. A partial workforce consolidation doesn't make AT&T a more attractive acquisition - especially when (as in 3(a)) a lot of it is transitioning from a 'cheaper' virtual workforce to an in-office one. At best, it would be neutral. But the expenses involved in getting there stump me as to the benefit.
Again, please try to keep this intelligent. I look forward to some thoughtful and actual discussion.