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Major Shakeup in Nintendo of America Brass?

Last month Game Informer Online was reporting that Nintendo of America's (NoA) marketing and sales team was being moved away from the company headquarters in Redmond. The likely new home cities for staffers were either New York or San Francisco. Either way, it seems as if that choice didn't sit well. GI is now saying that 90% of the folks in those departments have opted not to move, and instead are taking severance packages. Surprisingly, this includes three of NoA's biggest names: Senior Director of Public Relations Beth Llewelyn; Vice President, Marking and Corporate Affairs Perrin Kaplan; and Senior Vice President, Marketing and Corporate Communications George Harrison. At the moment there is no official confirmation from Nintendo, but if true this would constitute huge change in the message from the company in North America.

3 of 82 comments (clear)

  1. So... by maniac/dev/null · · Score: 5, Funny

    So, where do I mail my resume to? Its-a-me, new hire!

  2. Re:huh by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Funny

    SF
    - Earthquakes
    - Not sure what else... Commute to work continually held up by:
    - Gay pride marches
    - Exciting car chases starring Steve McQueen
    - Massive cascades of small, brightly-coloured balls
    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  3. Re:What the hell? Why? by hibiki_r · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Given how many of their bigwigs are taking their severance packages, I can only think of two plausible scenarios:

    -This change was mandated by some crazy executive in Japan without caring about what the US division said. This would probably mean the move will be a complete disaster for Nintendo of America.

    -Maybe our good friend Reggie, who used to be head of Marketing, thinks that their marketing and sales department is full of bozos, and did this just because he'd get high attrition rates. On the new cities, he already has new management lined up, so the old figureheads take the severance now instead of just getting fired or demoted later. If this is the case, it could be good or bad: Maybe they really were under-performing.

    Your typical option number three, an executive wants to move to a nicer city, and who cares about all his underlings, seems very unlikely given how many executives are leaving.