I worked for an Oracle Platinum Partner, and I've been in meetings with MH twice. He is very proud of his cost cutting plans. In the summer of 2016 he got full approval to move forward with his Oracle Digital Plan. He was quite chummy with our company and many business partners like us and told us he wanted to leverage our skill sets to do the heavy lifting. In short he was going full steam ahead with a new plan for Sales and Solutions.
Basically he told us flat out the entire sales team and consulting team at Oracle was going to be revamped in a big way and he was looking to us for his onsite presence. He said as soon as the Oracle Digital call centers were online big changes were on the way.
After the meeting the senior executive at my company pulled me aside and we had a candid discussion about what the big changes meant. My executive filled me in on MH and how he works. MH is doing the same thing at Oracle that he did at HP and NCR.
2010 - Jun. 1st
https://www.mercurynews.com/2010/06/01/hewlett-packard-to-cut-9000-jobs-take-1-billion-in-charges/
At HP MH had a reputation for aggressive cost-cutting. He laid off 15,200 workers — 10% of the workforce — shortly after becoming CEO. Other cost-cutting includes reducing the IT department from 19,000 to 8,000, reducing the number of software applications that HP uses from 6,000 to 1,500, and consolidating HP's 85 data centers to 6. During the 2009 recession, MH imposed a temporary 5% pay cut on all employees and removed many benefits.
HP said it will spend $1 billion on the new effort over the next four years, but expects it will ultimately save $500 million to $700 million a year.
9,000 jobs cut over the next few years as HP automates and consolidates computer centers.
About 6,000 jobs added during the same time in sales and other functions.
Cost of the transition is $1 billion
2010 HP 10Q
http://otp.investis.com/clients/us/hp_inc/SEC/sec-show.aspx?FilingId=7303762&Cik=0000047217&Type=PDF&hasPdf=1
In May 2009, HP's management approved and initiated a restructuring plan to structurally change and improve the effectiveness of the Imaging and Printing Group ("IPG"), the Personal Systems Group ("PSG"), and Enterprise Storage and Servers ("ESS"). The total expected cost of the plan is $303 million in severance-related costs associated with the planned elimination of approximately 5,000 positions. As of April 30, 2010, approximately 3,500 positions have been eliminated. HP expects the majority of the restructuring costs to be paid out by the fourth quarter of fiscal 2010. ... consisting mainly of severance costs to eliminate approximately 25,000 positions
MH cut cost at HP and replaced 9,000 senior positions with 6,000 new jobs (lower salaried workers) in sales and other positions. MH did not stay on with HP to reap the benefits of his changes, on Sep 6, 2010, MH joined Oracle as President and was appointed to the board of directors.
Fast forward 7 years...
2017 - Jun. 1st
The first round of layoffs that exactly mimic the 2010 Layoffs at HP take place. 1.1 Billion dollars was allocated to employee severance packages just as it was for HP, and history repeats itself. MH is busy doing what MH does best, cutting employee costs by replacing expensive labor with cheaper labor. Oracle layoffs occur in sales and presales. In some cases 40% reduction of specific teams and departments. This Oracle 10Q is key as it is the first open indication that we have a direct link to the MH strategy at HP with its similiar 10Q. The severance package size and scope is nearly identical.
http://d18rn0p25nwr6d.cloudfront.net/CIK-0001341439/6aae1efb-e6ff-44cb-9563-94b1d5ebd7e1.pdf
Restructuring expenses during the first quarter of fiscal 2018 and 2017 primarily related to employee severance in connection with our Fiscal 2017 Oracle Restructuring Plan (2017 Restructuring Plan).
The total estimated restructuring costs associated with the 2017 Restructuring Plan are up to $1.1 billion and will be recorded to the restructuring expense line item within our condensed consolidated statements of operations as they are incurred. The total estimated remaining restructuring costs associated with the 2017 Restructuring Plan were approximately $475 million as of August 31, 2017 and the majority of the remaining costs are expected to be incurred through the end of fiscal 2018.
HP never recovered. NCR was acquired by AT&T and was in such bad shape AT&T actually reversed the acquisition.
https://www.datamation.com/columns/article.php/3902836/Why-Mark-Hurd-is-a-Bad-Match-for-Oracle.htm
At both NCR (where Hurd was before HP) and HP, he cut expenses to extremes while working to increase his own income. This gets the financials in line and few acquiring companies look at morale as a unique problem and anticipate it in any case. Once the sale is done, the Hurd-like executive moves on to the next project and the lack of employee loyalty becomes someone else’s problem to solve. It is one of the most lucrative types of jobs in the industry but it takes a relatively heartless person to do it because of the adverse impact on employees.
NCR had been sold previously, and the result for the old AT&T was so bad that the acquisition was reversed. This means it would be difficult to sell again. And while it seemed likely that Dell at one point would buy them, that never happened.
Basically I knew back in 2016 what was going to happen at Oracle. I see the rumors here and I want to clue everyone in as to what is really happening. Across the board you will have job eliminations. Not everyone will get a severance package. Many will be told the only option is to take a pay cut and relocate to the Oracle digital hub.
Scroll to the bottom and Read the first few sections for a time line and to published links as to what is really going on.