Yet another series of layoffs has hit Google, this time at its video-sharing platform, YouTube. The company will eliminate 100 employees, a spokesperson
Not saying it isn’t possible, but layoffs would not be the bellwether for that. Companies lay people off all the time, even when they aren’t hurting if they think they can pad their bottom line.
I guess we can at least agree, that even if a company doing lay offs isn’t necessarily going belly up, a company that is going belly up is probably doing some lay offs along the way.
However going beyond the point we agree over… what if a lay off sets in motion a series of chain reactions:
reduced investor/shareholder confidence -> possibly stock/company-value tanking -> -> leading to issues with the lowered valuation and their debt, worse credit rating(?)
destroyed worker moral -> the best workers are more likely to leave, workers who remain having to shoulder their burden
less team members have to shoulder much more work (usually for the same pay)
I am sure there are other factors and maybe some of those three above are not a factor at all…
Didn’t they just do several rounds of layoff?
I guess layoffs are a sign of a dying company…
Yeah, all the largest companies in the world conducting layoffs are dying simultaneously.
Why isn’t it possible?
The cost of servicing debt has exploded.
Not saying it isn’t possible, but layoffs would not be the bellwether for that. Companies lay people off all the time, even when they aren’t hurting if they think they can pad their bottom line.
I guess we can at least agree, that even if a company doing lay offs isn’t necessarily going belly up, a company that is going belly up is probably doing some lay offs along the way.
However going beyond the point we agree over… what if a lay off sets in motion a series of chain reactions:
I am sure there are other factors and maybe some of those three above are not a factor at all…
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
Why isn’t it possible?
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
It’s more that the years of “hyper growth” has ended.
have the years of hyper growth ended or the years of cheap money?