Intel To Lay Off 1000 Managers
sprash writes to mention a Forbes article about an Intel cost-cutting measure. In response to stiff competition from AMD, the company is laying off 1000 managerial positions. From the article: "In April, Intel reported a 38 percent drop in first-quarter profit as demand slackened for PCs and microprocessors from AMD continued to steal market share. That same month, Chief Executive Paul Otellini vowed to spend the next 90 days identifying underperforming business groups and cost inefficiencies in an effort to save the company $1 billion a year. He said he planned to make changes as his analysis progressed, rather than waiting until the end of his review."
In my experience it's middle-managers who go first, then after consolidating groups and departments, headcount follows. If this is 1% of Intel's workforce then there's likely 5% or more to follow, which would be 5,000 or more when the next boot hits the Linoleum.
It's inevitable when a business loses a significant amount of market share and only the most ignorant Intel employee wouldn't see this coming. I wish them luck. This is probably more a move to maintain profitability and stock value (got to convince those anaylists on Wall Street you're minding your P's and Q's) than "streamlining for growth", which is exactly what you hear when they are doing major houseclearing no matter whether the house is merely smoldering or engulfed in flames.
The pity is those most responsible rarely are held to account for keeping a business trundling along only to be blindsided something some from the inside saw coming, but weren't taken very seriously (Yamhill). Intel may pare their losses, but they'll never enjoy 90% market dominance again.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
I remember over the years how a bunch of the regular mods used to mod me down as troll when I defended Intel against the "they're a monopoly!" posts. For the newbs here, Intel in the past was right up there with Microsoft now, IBM in the 90s, GM in the 80s, etc. Intel wasn't a monopoly, they were just a very aggressive company with a great marketing system, great support, great products and happy customers. As I said many times (I wish I could dial back to quote my old posts), Intel's future would be as shortlived as IBMs was, as Atari's was, as GM's was -- there is no need to start screaming anti-trust! anti-trust! when a company you don't like seems like they'll never fall. I said Intel would have its down days, just as I say today that someone will beat Microsoft fair and square some day, too.
Here are some posts that I recall people talking about Intel being a "bad monopoly," looking back in recent slashdot times:
Timeline Set for Intel/AMD Antitrust Trial
Intel and Skype Exclude AMD
AMD Files Antitrust Lawsuit Against Intel
Japanese Government Raids Intel Tokyo Offices
AMD Alleges Intel Compilers Create Slower AMD Code
Of course, some people will defend their "Intel is a monopoly" belief by saying they're not really a monopoly, they just engage in anti-competitive practices. Like what? Lowering prices below market value? That is _good_ for consumers because NO business can sell for a loss forever -- the minute that they raise their prices after they've wiped the competition clean, new competition will turn up the beat them down again. It has to be good prices, good quality hardware and good quality support -- if they want to give items away, let them. The other anti-competitive practice we hear about is how they "force" suppliers to buy bundles or maintain a certain ratio of items sold to branded items bought. Again, this is all acceptable if the contract stipulates these situations -- most suppliers are happy to sign agreements if they know what the customers want.
I'm glad to see these big companies fall because they're all colluding with the various governments to maintain their power through what I consider negative rights -- copyright, patents and ridiculous mandates requiring their products. Some even have defense contracts. They fall because the customer decided -- there are no natural monopolies as long as the customer is given the opportunity to make their decisions. The market will decide the victor, and the victor won't be on top for long.
Unlike the company I work for that creates an entire new layer of management, then does layoffs for all its technical (read: non-management) workers.
There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
Despite the expierience of not a few Slashdotters, managers are still quite important in any organisation. Their job is to manage things so that you can get your job done. They're there to make sure the lights stay on, that there's water in the coolers, donuts in the kitchen, that you get a new computer, that you can order software, that you get feedback on your code, that you don't have to go looking for customers, and so that you don't have to deal with every trifling detail that goes with running an organisation and basically can just get down to work.
Unfortunately, some managers get it into their heads that not only should they make the company run smoothly, but that they should also run it outright. When this happens, it's best for the CEO's/directors to prune things pretty quick.
May the Maths Be with you!
AMD Lays Off 1000 Intel Employees
Just kidding, but I feel sorry for those people :( But having 1000 less managers will probably allow their employees to actually get some work done :)
http://religiousfreaks.com/How do you have thousands of managers and not have someone who needs to be laid off (for real reasons)? And to have 1000 that can be shown the door just seems to indicate that such an action is loooooong overdue.
Meh, a real sig would take too long, and I have an MMORPG to play with....
It's refreshing to see a bunch of middle management given the boot, rather than the much more common scenario of cutting jobs of the technical people "in the trenches".
I've always felt that especially in fields like engineering and computer support or application development, you can get by with very minimal management if you make it a point to try to hire people who are comfortable/capable working with little direction.
Most people I've known who were good in the area of computing and I.T. (not to mention engineering types) spent a lot of time teaching themselves and experimenting via trial and error. (If you got interested in computers back in the 1980's, there really were no classes to take or certification exams to pass. You *had* to pick up whatever book(s) were bundled with your computer, learn how to program it yourself, and master the thing.) These aren't people especially "compatible" with multiple layers of management and micro-management.
I Am Not An Intel Manager. But I do work there. I can say that there are way too many managers and that this action is required :-)
I can not count the number of managers that have two or three people reporting to them. There are^H^H^Hwere managers who have never worked in the field they manage. I say that before becoming a manager you should have years of experience doing the things that the people you manage do.
Paul Ottelini rocks!
So, sales are weak and costs need to be cut. This Friday, though, Intel is going to announce their new 'Conroe' desktop chip when the NDAs expire. We've already seen from the hype and benchmarks of the pre-shipping chips that Conroe is going to be a very good chip that will put Intel back in the driver's seat so why do the 1,000 have to go only two days before Conroe appears? Couldn't Intel just hang on for a few more weeks until the Conroe sales take off? Maybe then they wouldn't even need to dump the 1,000 managers.
At least one person I know personally has lost his job in this round of layoffs. He had been with the company for 27 years (before they even started making processors).
So how much time do you spend a day on these TPS reports?
I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
Seriously. The Folsom facility is a sea of nothing but 6*8 cubes. It's completely cheerless. Those people really should have more space.
Schwab
Editor, A1-AAA AmeriCaptions
TFA says:
... predicting Intel would reduce its work force by more than 10,000 employees
...Intel had about 100,000 employees
and
So, the 1,000 managers will be followed by some 9,000 more, for a total of about 10% of the workforce - if the predictions / estimations are correct. If so, then this is very significant.
I personally know three people who worked at Intel, one who still does. All worked in the same division, so this isn't a representative sample. But all of them saw money thrown around quite freely, including on hardware and on salaries (which are among the highest in the area here). I hope they tried to cut other things before they started firing.
It's funny how when a company does very well, the CEO takes credit for all the brilliant choices s/he made. Yet, when a company flails, it's not that CEOs fault until after it has been thousands of underlings' faults.
Otellini should resign. He stands for all the things Intel is/was not. He's a marketroid in what was and should be primarily an engineering driven organization.
How much of a pay cut will the Board of Directors and CxO's take?
microprocessors from AMD continued to steal market share
First AMD stole Intel instruction set, and now they're stealing Intel market share !
When will they be ordered to hand them back ?
I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of killer sig, which this margin is too narrow to contain.
Here is the internal email from Intel CEO sent to all top level managers. This is sourced from a relative that has been working there since the 1970's.
------
From: Otellini, Paul
Sent: Thursday, July 13, 2006 8:14 AM
Subject: An important and difficult step: Manager reductions
To: All Intel employees
This week we're taking an important and difficult step in our efficiency project: reducing the number of Intel managers by about 1,000 people worldwide. Only managers, ranging from senior to first-line, are affected. This step is important because it addresses a key problem we've found in our efficiency analysis--slow and ineffective decision-making, resulting, in part, from too many management layers. It is difficult because the managers who will leave the company are our colleagues and friends, and since we have limited internal job opportunities, redeploying their skills is not a viable option.
We are notifying the majority of impacted employees on Thursday and Friday this week, and (except where a country's laws require different steps and timelines) we plan to have all affected employees informed by Monday, July 17. In the U.S., most employees' last day of work will be July 28, and their benefits will include a minimum of about three months' separation pay (and more for lengths of service over two years). In other regions the process and benefits will differ. While we can't eliminate the impact to these employees, we're committed to offering them support during this difficult time.
This manager reduction is one of the first major actions coming out of our structure and efficiency project, and I believe it's an essential first step toward making us more competitive. Over the last five years at Intel, the number of managers has grown faster than our overall employee population. Our efficiency analysis and industry benchmarking have shown that we have too many management layers, top to bottom, to be effective.
In addition, this finding is consistent with what our organizational health surveys have suggested: that the relative increase in management has impaired decision-making and communication, reducing the company's efficiency and productivity. Many of you have made the same point in your individual inputs to the efficiency team.
As I've said in previous Webcasts, one of the outcomes of the structure and efficiency project is that we'll be a leaner and more agile company. We'll make quicker decisions, collaborate better across the company, and enable a cost structure that allows us to continue to win in our extremely competitive industry as it evolves.
This manager action is one step along that path. Another was the decision to sell our communications and applications processor business to Marvell. We'll continue to identify other opportunities, act on each one as soon as we can, and tell you about the changes as soon as possible. I'll talk more about this and our business priorities in my employee Webcast on July 19 at 4 p.m. Pacific time.
In April I said that we had decided not to do an immediate "across the board" layoff, because that would be reactionary - focused only on the current environment rather than the long term strategic needs of our company. Instead, we chose to undertake a longer, more comprehensive project to analyze all of our operations and make strategic, data-driven decisions. That is still our plan. This manager reduction was the result of careful assessments of the management and leadership roles we need for our future success. We are in the process of fundamentally changing our behaviors and our structure for where our business and industry are going. You should expect that we will continue to take actions, including selective reductions, as we complete analyses and decisions about investments, expense levels and organizational structures. You should also keep in mind that at the end of this process we will still be the largest and most profitable semiconductor company on earth. Our actions are focused on ensuring tha
For Intel's sake, I hope those managers were really not worthwhile. Because cost-cutting efforts like this can come back to bite you if it means you lose the brains of your operation in the process. Unless Intel had a thousand people sitting around who were little more than paper pushers, this will inevitably negatively impact the company's growth potential in the future. After all, sectors of the company that are "not profitable" right now might be sectors that would have become highly profitable with additional research.
(BTW, A tangential point re: the sub-thread about previous antitrust complaints about Intel, and how in retrospective they were overblown now that Intel is losing market share... you might even be able to say the same thing about Microsoft. It's been "big and bad" for 10-15 years now, but look at what is happening to its market share. Internet Explorer is losing share to Firefox, and within a year or so, OpenOffice.org will do the same thing to Microsoft Office. It might still have a monopoly on operating systems, but it will hardly be the behemoth people have always thought of it as. Intel and Microsoft are showing us that big companies can be toppled by competitive rivals more quickly now than in the past.)
Apple purchased processors from Motorola. Their processors couldn't keep up with competition. Every time Motorola had a promising new design, the processors started out like gangbusters and then went nowhere. Then Apple switched to IBM; their consumer processor efforts flopped. Now they're with Intel and look at what's happening.
Apparently my submission was rejected, but AMD cut 1,000 folks too, include GEODE!
2 991
http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=3
https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
In some cases, that's right. My last manager practiced the BDOS attack (Boss Denial of Service). Where every 15 minutes, he would ask me the status of project [X, Y, Z]. This occured when I was using the debugger and stepping through my foobar PERL program. I had all the variables and contexts loaded in my head, and PHB would jump in for the next round of BDOS attack... Needless to say, my brain does not do cache hits very well. Massive core dump, my face probably had the expression of a SPED (special ed) for a few minutes. I'd have to re-group to even think about what projects were in work. Then I could look up the log files, and check on the progress. Needless to say, I then re-started the debugging from the beginning again. After 15 minutes, PHB started up the next round of BDOS, again ElectricRook does the core-dump.
I always made great progress when I'd order a pizza, and stay late debugging.
Yes, I work for Intel.
- High Tech workers, please say NO to Union Carpenters, their Union sees fit to control our compensation.
I think there are way too many engineers or manager that dont make the cut. I know a lot of graduates in CS who have made to the positions/internships at Intel just because there spouse/brother works there. With there struggling education averages and no specific skills or merits, I was suprised they still made it. Seems like internal contacts are more important at Intel than educational merits, experience or skills. I will not be suprised to see more inefficient people being layed-off as cost-cutting measure.
This is how Intel got to this point to begin with. If I remember correctly, there was a big purge of experienced designers after the P3 came out, when it came time for the P4 (Prescott) they didn't have enough folks who could work from a clean sheet of paper. They got by on superior fab until the P4M showed up from a non-decimated division. On the other hand AMD went on a hiring binge for good processor designers and has had the upper hand ever since.
I am reminded of an anecdote my father once told me, about the management policy in a large company where he worked.
One day, the management decided to call in the management consultants. In due course, a snappily-dressed 24-year-old strolled into the office where my father worked as leader of a team who were, essentially, the world's experts in their particular area of R&D.
My father is not a man who suffers fools gladly, and after the introductions, asked the 24-year-old in his tailored suit what he could offer by way of background, to help him guide a man with 20 years' experience in the industry to perform better.
"I have a degree," said the 24-year-old.
"That's interesting," said my father. "So do I."
"Mine's from Oxford," said the 24-year-old.
You can imagine the reaction...
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
NetBurst came from top - marketing decision to fool the customer into buying GHz number only, regardless of consumption and efficiency. No way that such "lucid" idea would come from designers; they were simply forced to implement it.
... 1,000 laid-off managers?
A good start.
Perhaps they were getting $100,000 in salary and making $900,000 worth of bad decisions a year. That would certainly be a good reason to throw them overboard.
Douglas P. Price
Why then, is Intel lobbying Congress for more H-1B visas, and claiming a "skills shortage", when they are laying off this many employees?
If Intel wants to get rid of the sub-standard dead weight it's managed to accumulate over the years, all they need to do is ask their employees to spell the word "lose". Those who spell it "loose" are the obviously morons and can be shit-canned right on the spot; in fact, getting rid of these idiots will probably improve the performance of the company dramatically.
Max
My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?