HP to Layoff 15,000 Employees 448
William Robinson writes "ZDNet reports that HP is planning to layoff 15000 employees. IT, sales and services will be among the areas particularly hit, although the sweeping cuts will be felt throughout the company, according to a close source to the company." From the article: "HP is expected to announce the layoffs as early as Monday, but employees are not expected to be immediately notified of their status, the source said, noting such a practice is common in corporate America. More high-level discussions on the layoffs will occur late next week and employees may get a greater sense of their specific status sometime thereafter."
Vox populi, vox dei (Score:2, Insightful)
I guess the market has spoken, where's Carly now?
Re:Vox populi, vox dei (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Vox populi, vox dei (Score:2)
Re:Vox populi, vox dei (Score:2)
I guess the market has spoken, where's Carly now?
Carly is enjoying her multi-million dollar severance package, complete with outplacement counseling and a company-paid secretary. Somebody has to pay for it, and I'm sure the displaced employees will be happy to do it.
hellbent on self destruction (Score:3, Insightful)
First the utterly pointless merger with Compaq.
Then the abandonment of developing HP-PA in favor of developing Itanium.
Then dissolving the Itanium partnership.
Now, inflicting DRM on all their consumer products. Woo hoo, because it worked so fucking well for Sony that Apple ground them to dust.
If I were an HP shareholder, I'd be demanding executives heads on platters about now...
Severance (Score:5, Funny)
I guess this averages out with management's planned $10 million per executive along with the $1000 normal employee package.
Re:Severance (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Severance (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Severance (Score:2, Funny)
Those poor CEOs. How will they feed themselves when they are only paid enough to buy a loaf of bread?
Re:Severance (Score:5, Insightful)
It has been shown that european CEOs salrays are often a much smaller multiple of median workers salaries I recall. BusinessWeek, which has tracked executive pay for half a century, figures that CEOs of the country's largest corporations last year (2003) were paid about 300 times the average factory worker. In Europe, in contrast, chief executive pay tops out at 30 times the average worker. Americans might defend this disparity by declaring that U.S. companies are better run, but are these companies more than 10 times better run?
Additionally according to Kevin J. Murphy, E. Morgan Stanley Chair in Business Administration, Marshall School of Business, University of Southern California: 'Since 1970, cash compensation for CEOs has gone from 25 times the pay of the average worker to about 90 times the pay of the average worker. Total compensation, including stock options measured at grant value, went from just over 25 times average worker pay in 1970 to a peak of almost 600 times average worker pay in 2000, and has now (2004) dropped down to about 360 times average worker pay.'
I dont know about you but I have to say I am sure that being a CEO is a hard job and requires a variety of skills and risks to be taken, but it is not such a specialized set of skills that warrants 600:1 pay disparity I think. Yes, capitalism exists to reward those who take the greatest risk but if you are a CEO making multi-millions a year regardless of company performance all one needs to do is survive for a few years and then then bail out on your disgustingly obscene Golden Parachute(tm) and be set for life while the company you leave lay in ruins and the common worker gets the shaft.
At least thats how I see it in the light of what that bitch Carly did to Hewlett-Packard (oh, and dont call it HP, then your parodying Carly's attempt to make everyone forget how Walter Hewlett spoke out against the merger between Companq and Hewlett-Packard http://news.com.com/2100-1001-858499.html?legacy=
In related news... (Score:5, Funny)
Remember folks, outsourcing is good for the economy!
Re:In related news... (Score:3, Insightful)
It is for the economy of India.
And if history is any indication, it is for the US as well.
Re:In related news... (Score:3, Insightful)
Your statement is wrong.
We now have 6 billion people competing for a few million jobs. No new major jobs-creating industries are going to come up in the US any more; as soon as the potential appears, the jobs will be sent overseas. Prove your assertion; show me one example to the contrary.
I can prove my point, however. We've already lost the tech industry and we are now losing the biotech industry. Recent job growth has been heavily weighted toward the low paying service industry.
Re:In related news... (Score:3, Informative)
Back in the day people said the US was doomed because textile jobs moved, then steel making, then auto industry, then electronics manufacturing. The same issues of globalization came up in the late 1700's, and early 1800's with Federalism. States tried to tax each other because they were worried about their own
Re:In related news... (Score:5, Funny)
It's Bangalore or Bust Baby! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It's Bangalore or Bust Baby! (Score:3, Interesting)
Since you can only increase your wage with a new job, and inflation is going nuts... well... it's tunover central.
Re:In related news... (Score:3, Interesting)
How do you think US became an economic power? A completely internal enconomy can never make profit because the net of spending and earing will always remain constant. To have capital gains an ecomony will have to profit at the expense of other economies. Over the last 100 yrs. you guys were the better off. And in being better off you created a standard of living which has come back to haunt you. Your world turns upside down if you can't get hold of the latest gizmos and spend billions on celluloid stupidity
TGI Friday.. (Score:5, Funny)
Bob: "Studies have statistically shown that there's less chance of an incident if you do it at the end of the week."
Re:TGI Friday.. (Score:3, Insightful)
I never bought the theory that it gave the fired person the weekend to calm down. What I see are the opportunities listed above.
The HP way (Score:4, Interesting)
In the short term it should improve profitability. I'm not so sure about the long term, though.
Re:The HP way (Score:2, Interesting)
There's too many other companies that I don't buy from specifically because of the fact that their Customer Service Representatives don't fully understand their own product (n
RIP HP (Score:2)
No Management Cuts (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No Management Cuts (Score:5, Interesting)
That would be Carly, and she's already been affected. Affected to the tune of a $40M payout package, but since getting rid of her caused HP's total market cap to go up several billion dollars, getting rid of her was money well spent.
Re:No Management Cuts (Score:3, Insightful)
HP has gotten out of all the markets they were good at, except for printers
Those kind of lay offs are bad news (Score:4, Interesting)
The "indispensible" ones usually have the attribute of time urgency to get things done... and getting another job is now on their list.
The "useless" ones lounge around.
When the managers get around to announcing exactly who is gonna be affected, they get to choose among the useless ones, as the "indispensable" ones by that time already have jobs... working for their competitors.
HP is the walking dead (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:HP is the walking dead (Score:4, Funny)
30% Work Force Reduction (Score:5, Informative)
Re:30% Work Force Reduction (Score:2)
*sings* One of these is not like the other.. *sings*
Seriously though, is moving to Toronto really "off shoring". I think last I checked Canada was still on the same continent as the US
Re:30% Work Force Reduction (Score:3, Funny)
Re:30% Work Force Reduction (Score:5, Funny)
grim (Score:2)
Agilent (Score:5, Informative)
The company Hewlett and Packard founded is now called Agilent. What HP does now has nothing to do with what they did originally.
IANACEO (Score:5, Insightful)
That doesn't make a lot of sense to me. So now you have 15,000 less people to lead/manage but you still have the same number of executives and managers. That seems to create a very top heavy structure and those tend to fall over both in the management world and the engineering world.
The more cynical side of me tells me that the execs and managers have more pull so would put up more of a fight if laid off. I'm sure the top level execs know the middle level ones at personal level so found it harder to laid them off. Instead, the little peons on the bottom who they barely know or care about can fend for themselves.
HP Services has roughly 65,000 employees, but analysts are predicting HP will lop off only about 8 percent here because the company is working on edging out IBM Global Services, EDS and Accenture for corporate contracts. "We estimate that HP has roughly 20,000 salespeople, with the majority in (enterprise server group) and Services, and that CEO Hurd is likely to look to streamline the organization, moving away from HP's current 'matrixed' selling organization to focus on more direct accountability," Sacconaghi said.
I really hate the word "accountability" when used in isolation. From my experience, if accountability is the only method being used to solve problems, people start playing politics and the blame game. Bueraucracy goes through the roof and everything has to be documented in case the problem doesn't get solved. You end up spending more time covering your ass than solving the problem. You also end up taking a toll on teamwork.
It seems to me that their current strategy is to lower costs so they can lower their margins to compete. Not a bad plan but there are other avenues. I know at my company, we're more than willing to pay more for better service and reliability. The initial contract cost isn't the only factor. We have to think about the cost of downtime.
Noncritical research and development (R&D) could also be impacted, analysts suggest. HP's R&D spending is nearly $1 billion higher than all of its relevant competitors combined, according to an independent benchmarking analysis done by Sacconaghi's firm. The comparison was designed to mirror the one that Hurd has professed as his method for bringing costs back into line. "We suspect that Hurd might be able to lower HP's annual $3.5 billion in R&D by $250 (million)-$500 million through the elimination of non-core projects, Sacconaghi said. So they're going to gut the thing that made HP great in the first place. I don't know what they consider non-critical R&D but a lot of innovations aren't obviously useful at first. Didn't a division of HP invent the optical mouse? I wonder if that was considered critical at the time.
Again, I'm not a CEO. I'm all for making an organization more efficient but I wonder if they're making the right cuts. It's sad to see the "Grey Lady of the Silicon Valley", the engineers' corporation get hacked to pieces.
Re:IANACEO (Score:2)
IMO the core of any tech company is: research, support and sales. If you cut jobs in those areas, are the managers going to be making sales calls? Doubt it. Are they going to do support and research? They wouldn't know how.
If this continues, I can see something else happening to HP: its competitors get their old employee
Re:IANACEO (Score:2)
Short-termism (Score:2)
Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:2, Insightful)
This all started with Bush Sr, and his NAFTA, to export jobs to Mexico. I remember the lies, how it would stregnthen the American workforce.
Now the current Bush is exporting jobs to India.
Anyone see a pattern of what the republicans are doing? They got the idea, they no longer need American workers. So they start
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:2)
Good, then my recomendation to you is to quit your job so you are not polluted by any of this 'money' (and no going on welfare either!)
In fact since you care so much, you should actively go around to the HP workers who were not laid off and tell them to quit their jobs too to prevent them from being corrupted by money as well.
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm starting to think more and more it might be a really good thing if abortion gets overturned. Then maybe the red state people can start voting their interests rather than their god and we can go back to having reasonable politics in this country. Flying to Canada/Mexico onc
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:3, Insightful)
To date, that's how we all started.
Minor factual correction (Score:4, Insightful)
The idea had been talked about long before Bush I was in office, he had some discussions about it. President Clinton signed the NAFTA deal on Dec 8, 1993. And I believe it was ratified by a Senate and House, both with Democratic majorities. (57-43 Dems in the Senate, and 258-176 Dems in the House) You can check which party was in government in recent history at this link [gvsu.edu].
Cheers.
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm from the USA (native balding white guy, mid 30's), and know it pretty well - as I spent 2001-2004 living in a RV traveling the states working internet job via cell phones.
I have spent the last year living in Chile in a decent site city (200,000 people).
You pretty much describe Chile and MUCH of the world "outside the USA" from what I have studied
Have you considered that maybe this is just the natural rebalance of wealth?
Frankly, the USA as it was from WW2 - 2000 could prove to be unsustainable... at least without some form of rebalance. Even if the average person in the USA were knocked down by 50% income... still better off than MANY places in the world.
And JAPAN in the 1980's and 1990's took a lot of the real wealth... cherry picked Hollywood, etc. Turned Tokyo into a city more expensive than NYC as quick as they could.
BTW, here in Chile the latin american tradition of close family is more responsible for the 'small studio' part... they actually share a house with many generations of the same family living under one roof. More family ties, less stress, more simple pleasures. The point is, there are cultural reasons too - not just financial.
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:2)
Probably. Despite the supposedly altruistic reasons it had for entering WW2, the US benefitted positioned itself to make a killing after the war and did so with a vengeance.
The US after WW2 became a culture of selfishness and exclusive personal ownership: my car, my stereo, my house. Among my friends (heart of silicon valley, all 19-25), it might end up looking more like what you say. Most of my friends live with family still and will for quite a while. I'm building an addition for myself to live in. I've
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:2)
Okay, but... that would make a lot more sense if balancing were actually what were happening, rather than the United States becoming internally more imbalanced. The middle class of America may be getting more "balanced" compared to the people of Chile, but t
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:4, Insightful)
But are you using natural as a proxy for desirable? A lot of things are natural. Having cavities in your teeth is natural, is that a good reason not to go to the dentist? We have a lot of people who are such devout capitalists that they think anything explained by market forces must be AOK.
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:3, Insightful)
On the bright side: It will all get better once the remaining blue collar work force is au
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:4, Interesting)
Hi, welcome to America. I'll be giving you a brief synopsis of how a free market works.
In a free and open job market, you have people and you have jobs. Many people have the ability to do more than one kind of job. Likewise, most jobs could potentially be filed by one of a relatively large set of people.
Some jobs are able to be done by lots of people, like being a cook in a fast food restaraunt. Some people are willing to take that job because they do not have a skill set that enables them to work a different job, or maybe because they like it. Anyway, the worker and the business agree on compensation for the job that is agreeable to both the business and the worker. If there is someone willing to do the same job for less, then the worker should get paied less. If there is nobody that can do as good of a job for the same price, the worker can ask for more money and may get it.
For a job like a CEO or Baseball player, there is incredible demand to get the absolute best people for those positions. If you are the best baseball player, you can demand a lot of money, because there is demand to have the absolute best player on your baseball team: it would help you win, wins help you sell more tickets and advertisements, and people want their team to win. If your team is a perpetual loser, you won't sell as many tickets. (Unless you are the Cubs, because of Cubs Fans like Me).
Likewise, Good CEOs can demand a premium. Someone who can manage a business effectively has a skillset that is in high demand. If you can make your company that earns 1 Billion / year, and grow that profit by 20%, you are worth a lot of money. Stockholders are willing to pay these high salaries because there is the perception that a good CEO can lead a company to be more profitable.
Of course, this is all based on perception. If killing the R&D saves money now, but you lose out on the next major innovation, you've screwed yourself. But that's how the market works, and your competition (who did the right R&D) will beat you. As they should.
Now you may notice that America isn't exactly a free market. Even when Southwest airlines is making money, the Government gives billions of dollars to airlines who didn't make good business decisions. Unfortunately, the Government has, over the last several decades, gotten more involved with business. This leads to situations where bad businesses are rewarded, in many ways at the expense of better businesses. This makes those better businesses less competitive in the global marketplace. Which means that jobs will flow out of America into places where the work / pay ratio is better.
The good news is that you have the freedom to do things you think will be successful. Is there demand for baseball games for blue-collar folks? Start up your own baseball league, sell tickets for $5, sell beer and hot dogs for $1 each, and pay amateurs a few extra bucks to come out and play in front of some people. Will people come out to your park? Maybe. But maybe people won't really want to come to your baseball stadium and see fourth-rate baseball played. And that's the risk you take in a capitalistic society. If you want the best baseball players to come and play for you, you'll have to pay them what they demand. And if you have to pay them a lot, you'll have to earn lots of money. It's just the way things work.
Of course, there's another way to do things, the socialist way. The government makes sure everyone has a good lifestyle, regardless of what they do. The government also tries its best to make sure the best people don't get too far ahead of the worst people. The government has a hand in almost every part of the economy. Europe does this a lot, and the lowest standard of living in Europe tends to be better than the lowest standard of living here. And w
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:5, Interesting)
Socialism scares me. The direction of America scares me. Patton said ``America loves a winner. America will not tolerate a loser. Americans despise a coward. Americans play to win. That's why America has never lost a war, for the very thought of losing is hateful to an American.'' I wonder if now this is no longer true; Americans love losers and cannot tolerate a winner. And it's sad, really, because Americans have the opportunity to become winners. We're just choosing to bring everyone down to the loser level, making sure nobody gets ahead, so that nobody will be left behind.
I agree, in the pre-1990 era, America did love a winner. So did I. When a freind of the family succeeded and got a great job, or got accepeted to medical school, or did something really good, everyone was happy. People would celebrate, there would be large meals, everyone felt good.
What has changed?
Those are a few reasons why America no longer loves a winner. The avarage American is not greedy. We want a nice house, a yard for the kids to play in, a car, food in the fridge, money for a vacation, and a retirement fund. The problem is, that lifestyle is not middle class anymore, it is becomming upper class.
Is it any suprise that parents are threatening teachers, that if their kids don't get "A"'s in all their classes, get accepted to the best schools, that parents will sue teachers, or get a gun and kill a teacher. I think in Texas some mom killed another cheerleader so her daughter could get on the team and have less competition. In the papers, at a youth baseball game a father beat up an umpire for calling a third strike on his son, when the father thought it was a ball.
Think about this very carefully. People are scared there will be no future. They are fighting like 10 wild hyinas over a found carcus. We are loosing our humanity when we degrade ourseleves to fight for a basic survival.
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:3, Insightful)
Nothing, as somebody else pointed out these issues existed in the past.
Instead of Enron there was the S&L scandal; tech jobs were being taken by the Japanese instead of the India and China; insider trading was legal until the 60's; AT&T and the rail barons existed long before Microsoft; the military has always recruited in high schools; gas prices and inflation exploded in the 70s; and workers have always been looked at like a commodity
Think about this very carefully. People ar
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem with this calculus is that there are no winners. EVERY HUMAN will ultimately end in total impoverishment (i.e. death).
There is no win or lose. There is only "suffer more" or "suffer less"--and the curve is logarithmic with respect to increases in wealth. Past a certain level of capitalization in an individual life, the inverse relationship between dollar quantities and suffering quantities is increasingly shallow, the opposite of what
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:2)
This is such a myth - that Bush was the force behind NAFTA. NAFTA passed under immense bipartisan support. I still remember the photo ops and being shocked that the conservative/protectionist and the liberal/socialist crowds both showed up for the pro-nafta events. Support for NAFTA continued under Clinton, including a massive bailout of the Mexican economy when the
Re:Started by Bush Sr, continued by his son (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you have any evidence of this, like a link to support your claim? Didn't think so.
The 9/11 victims fund had enough money to pay each family 1.6 million dollars, if it was split evenly.
Instead, they used a formula based on how much income a persom was making.
It is possible for the family of a janitor to get $300,000, and a stock brokers family to get 4.35 million dollars.
http://www.csmonitor.com/2002/0104/p11s1-coop.html [csmonitor.com]
What made it all worse, is the government told all the families if they sued or disagreed with the distributation of funds, they would be denied any government victims money. So what is a poor family to do? They can't hire a lawyer and fight. A few of the ultra rich families decided to sue anyways, they must have felt that getting 10 times as much as everyone else was not enough for their "loss".
And to think.. (Score:4, Insightful)
It just goes the show that short-term, bottom-line only thinking really isn't good business sense.
Re:And to think.. (Score:2)
I wonder how many employees that they brought on with Compaq vs how many they are laying off now.
People always complain about inefficiency in government, but I've seen big public companies waste millions and millions. Most of these employees will get a decent severence package, and have their health insurance paid for by HP for a while. Next year, they'll announce that they are hiring 10,000 to keep up with the new
And of course they fire a lot of skilled workers (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I would want efficiency-minded former engineers to head an engineering company I was the CEO of. I'd want these former engineers because they'd know what's bullshit and what's not and that'd keep my company's ass farther away from the fire. We're sentient beings, not hive workers. To paraphrase Heinlein, specialization is for insects, there is no reason why someone who spent most of their career as an engineer cannot have a good sense for business and be a good business leader.
Since the buck clearly doesn't stop at the CEO's desk in most situations, I don't see why stockholders waste tens of millions of dollars of their company's money on them. At a company like HP, the CEO is naturally going to be detatched from most of the company's operations and excuse me, but I just don't see why any company would sacrifice anyone who could contribute to R&D of new products when cuts in middle and upper management employment and salaries would yield decent results.
Which is more likely to bring a higher ROI: firing many of the people capable of making new products and keeping many of the middle managers and their upper management ilk, or trimming top down? Maybe if HP put many of those people on some good projects, they'd do a lot of good for the company. It'd be ironic if several groups from the 15,000 who get laid off end up founding companies that make the next iPod, Tivo or something like that.
I'm not saying that many of them shouldn't have been laid off, just that it is incredibly stupid to fire people who can make products if assigned properly, but not cut back severely on upper management's pay and the ranks of the middle managers. When Sun laid off a number of its Solaris and Java developers, but didn't fire McNealey, that loud mouth imbecile, I just shook my head. In order to save money and face, our shiny suit wearing business elite would rather fire people with very hard to find engineering skills that could make or break the success of their products than cull the ranks of their own.
Re:And of course they fire a lot of skilled worker (Score:2)
Re:And of course they fire a lot of skilled worker (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't always true, but it's true such a large percentage of the time that only a fool would bet against it.
This economy is on fire! (Score:4, Interesting)
IBM announced cutting 10,000 to 13,000 jobs in Europe just last month.
Ford and General Motors can't sell cars and are at risk of defaulting on their debt -- their credit rating has been cut down the minimum by ratings agencies.
So is this the freight train of a bull economy everyone is raving about? I'm an amateur financial enthusiast but I strongly suggest anyone thinks twice before buying any mutual funds in this climate. Stocks are at 4 year highs and future prospects don't look positive at all
Re:This economy is on fire! (Score:4, Funny)
So is this the freight train of a bull economy everyone is raving about?
You're probably critical of Bush, too. Why, Rumsfeld and Bush alone have created more than 130,000 full-time jobs in Iraq.
Re:This economy is on fire! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This economy is on fire! (Score:2)
Glad I left in May (Score:2)
I worked for them for 4 years, and there seemed to be no interest in employee development. I was making a good salary, but found no interest in spending a few thousand a year to develop skills and interests among the talented employees. The reason I stayed as long as I did was the fact that I was on an account contracted for a long enough period of time, that my job appeared safe, but with HP, I felt like I was "play
Of course they won't know right away (Score:2, Insightful)
"lay off", not "layoff" (Score:3, Funny)
Being one of the resident curmudgeonly grammar freaks, I feel inclined to point out that "layoff" is a noun, and "lay off" is a verb (phrase). Therefore, it isn't possible to "layoff" someone; instead, you must lay them off.
TFA? (Score:4, Interesting)
As for the layoffs... well... I really believe in free, borderless markets. I really really do. But I think we can take a lesson from the EU, and require an adherence to a minimum set of criteria before granting full trade privileges. Giving other markets power without responsibility is a bad thing; without some sort of market synchronization we're just shooting ourselves in the foot.
What if we could say "Okay, India, we'll have completely free trade with you if you become a member of WEFTA (World-Encompassing Free Trade Agreement) and have your economy up to minimum standards within five years."
Maybe a four-tiered system could be made:
This is a bit more complicated than the current EU system, but the idea is the same: Don't let our jobs, our money, our very economy go to those who aren't gonna play by the rules. Small economic variations in WEFTA would exist and would be allowed (it's cheaper to live in a small town in Ithaca, NY than it is in Beverly Hills, CA) for free-trade regions but this $1-an-hour-factory-in-Mexico phenomenon wouldn't exist to pull jobs from the lower rungs of the U.S. (or any full WEFTA member) economy.
If only we could get our Congress to get their charbon and acier together.
These headlines have been the norm (Score:5, Insightful)
HP and the Feminist movement (Score:3, Funny)
This instance does not speak for all women, but this definitely will not help them either. Thanks, Carly.
How many people does the CEO equal??? (Score:2, Insightful)
Having had to call the support line at HP for a faulty bit of hardware recently I have to say they need more phone agents.
i envision that... (Score:2, Funny)
just a hunch
CEO Hurd Not Going to Build A Success (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't work for, near, or against NCR in any market, I just live here. My perception has been that Hurd took NCR and focused them on ATM machines, their core business. Lots and lots of other unrelated things were shed, including long-term employees and facilities. Most recently, NCR has turned over maintenance of their world-class headquarters to a local office-real estate company (Miller Valentine). Their ATM sales, by the way, are in competition with the infamous Diebold, Inc. And in that market, Diebold is innovating with ways to keep banks coming back to them. NCR just never seemed to get the hang of it.
Now back to HP and the recent high speed printing invention [slashdot.org], and I would have to say we can all expect HP to shed all the unprofitable businesses and focus heavy on the printing. Well, heavier than they already do.
I expect that if HP is in some select-contract, highly-profitable, niche market that they will stay there. NCR has their TeraData database [ncr.com]. HP had, during the merger claimed that Compaq's worldwide sales and services forces would allow them to dominate global industries, but I don't think that really every took foot they way they wanted to. So, unless they drum up something other than calculators and home PCs, those segments are likely to get hit hard. Hurd likely won't wait for the home PC market to do something unique because they've had a couple of dozen years to find a niche and haven't. I'd better say goodbye to the calculator segment too before Cringely goes around saying something stupid like "you saw it here first."
So that leaves the saturated inkjet market. Since the DMCA cannot be used, [slashdot.org] and since we're already paying $3,800US per gallon of ink, [aroundcny.com] increasing profitability will be difficult to do without large customer outbursts. Of course, NCR was so full of waste, those of us in Dayton didn't think they could ever shed all of it and yet they did.
Re:Here they come. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Here they come. (Score:2, Interesting)
Regarding wages stabilizing relative to employees' worth, what you say would only be true without external interference.
And comparing CEOs and sharehold
Re:Here they come. (Score:3, Insightful)
Nonsense. Germany has worker protection and their 3rd quarter is better than our 3rd quarter. Their 2nd quarter is pretty close and their 4th quarter is far far better. Oh and the US hasn't had its major cities destroyed and a good chunk of the male working population k
Re:Here they come. (Score:2)
Riiiight.. So you're only avoiding the flamewar by pre-emptively taking the troll bait and posting some non-responses to straw man arguments?
Re:Here they come. (Score:5, Insightful)
A four month CEO is cutting R&D at a TECH company, firing IT workers, and hiring more managers - this is good?? I guess those 120 days on the job does give him the right to slash the pensions on engineers who have been their for 20+ years. After all, those idiots were trying to invent things to make the world better, when they should have been in business school....eck.
And I love this:
And they certainly won't celebrate the 150,000 people who still *do* have jobs created by the likes of HP.
Absolutely, and I'm sure if someone raped your daughter you wouldn't complain - you'd be celebrating that they didnt do it to your wife too!
Apologist.
Re:Here they come. (Score:2)
Re:Here they come. (Score:2)
The point here is that corporations don't give out jobs because they are nice people, they hire people. Now if someone gives you something and then takes it back, well thats a dick move.
If they promise you a pension and then take it back because they cant run a business for shit, well, that cant even be accounted for by witty speech. We are punishing people for working hard, and being loy
Right on! (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't know what happened to HP the past 15 years. When I was a kid, there was only one King of laser printers, and that was HP. Nobody made better laser printers in the world.
3 or 4 years ago, a friend purchased a HP computer, it had windows ME on it. She was in college, a
Re:Right on! (Score:2)
It devoured her paper? I bet it was a really good paper. That's like...a bummer.
I know... I told her "save your work more often". But that computer was a horrific peice of crap.
http://www.apple.com/switch [apple.com]
Re:Right on! (Score:2)
Re:Right on! (Score:2)
Re:Here they come. (Score:3, Insightful)
Do you consider perhaps that management fucked up by creating a bloated personnel heavy organization? Big companies grow out of control during good times by hiring tons and tons of people they may not really NEED. When times get tough expendible employees are just as fair game as other belt tightening measures IMO.
Re:Here they come. (Score:2, Informative)
If those workers didn't like that, they could've:
a)taken different jobs or
b) started their own businesses or
b) write to their representatives to change the political system - a workers revolution and to each according to their needs.
Re:Here they come. (Score:3, Insightful)
Only the rules are the same anywhere, because we're all a part of the same "free market" capitalist economy.
So then the idiots say "Well then, don't take a job. Nobody's forcing you to work."
Only then how is one to eat?
People like you are effectively arguing that this is utopia. And it's not an uncommon argument, I hear it all the time and see it on Slashdot as well: the free market is perfect. If you d
Re:Here they come. (Score:4, Interesting)
One theory goes that corporations are simply the complications of this "inhumanity" where wealth naturally collects and distribution is thwarted in the name of the great distributive system itself: capitalism.
Consider, corporations are proxies which have the power of ownership - private property. Corporations have an advantage of efficiency when we consider large resources and complex tasks. This makes them akin to machines. As a body, any task is broken into smaller tasks and responsibility is spread into a chain. The weakest link defines the chain and thus the entire responsibility of this great machine can easily fail. As humans - remember our axiom - we place a huge amount of resources in corporations and therefore a large amount of our ability to fulfill our responsibility in these machines.
I think of Assimov's 3 laws of robotics - so well interwined and seemingly effective. By breaking one law, the illusion fails and all the laws are broken. But we would love to believe the illusion can be held up, so we repeat the laws to ourselves. We even have the machines repeat the laws. Ultimately, the machines, our proxy workers designed for efficiency, fail to assume our responsibility.
With a corporation, the general effect is that responsbility is far more difficult to handle than with a more direct ownership model. If you think about it, it's a ridiculous notion to believe that a corporation will have responsibility. Groups have jobs, incentive structures, and rules, but the central responsibility - which we assumed at the beginning - is not delegated evenly. It is not delegated at all, for the most part. How can you regulate humanity to humans? It certainly can't be "cost-effective".
We are thus back to punishing individuals, only this time we have made the task more complicated. Now corporations get in our way of responsibility, because they allow people to amass great wealth and power, all while hiding behind a corporate curtain. What's more, they allow us all to participate as consumers, share-holders, etc.
If the machine breaks the laws, are it's part's responsible? No, we attach responsibility to people. But people will always blame the machine - those who stand to gain from the machine's product will always place responsibility on the machine. Ironically, since we all own pieces of this great machine, these individuals are essentially blaming all of us. While citing the virtues of private property, a CEO may very well place the blame of some action on the organization as a whole - "inefficiences" or "the markets" or "competition". In effect, the CEO - a the model of centralized wealth in a capitalist system - is distributing the blame (responsibility-wise) while keeping the money. Thus the machine - and the hive of poorly coordinated machines that make an economy - really is a proxy, but for who's interests?
Honestly, if we actually take up the responsibility as outlined, I am not sure the answer to that question. Do we get a good trade for owning stock in a corporation? All I know is I'm not quiting my job just yet
Re:Here they come. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Here they come. (Score:2, Insightful)
And I guess you have the right to comment on the management of an giant international corporation.
You just sound naive when you boil complex policies down to a few sentences on a web board.
...here *you* come, you mean..? (Score:2)
Well, sure. Times are bad and the CEOs aren't sacrificing. So why should the employees?
Well, let's see here. Last I checked the board of HP
Not "evil coporations", try "inept management." (Score:2)
But my guess is that someone's just assuming that they can can 10% of the workforce and nobody'll notice the difference and they'll net about a billion after expenses in extra profit.
Re:Here they come. (Score:2)
As a major HP customer, all I have to say is "instability is bad". I don't care about the shareholders - and I have the expectation that HP management and employees will be there to support me. If it wasn't for the customers, HP wouldn't have seen the light of day.
Re:Here they come. (Score:2)
You could argue the reverse - in 2 years, HP may need to layoff even more people, and then you would have spent 2 years paying 15,000 employees you could have done without. Any company that waits 2 years to respond to market conditions won't last long.
It's also possible HP has already waited 2 years before doing these layoffs, and now it is even more obvious they need to pull the trigger.
Re:Here they come. (Score:2)
Re:Here they come. (Score:4, Insightful)
Just watch any story about failing companies on Slashdot and you'll see just how many posters argue that a company that isn't profitable right now absolutely should go out of business because it "can't compete" in the "free market." Nevermind whether the company was competitive in the past or could be competitive again in the future with proper (i.e. less greedy and short-sighted) management, or the fact that in that "should go out of business" trope, hundreds or even thousands of lives may be ruined--when the improvement of lives is, ostensibly, the reason for commerce in the first place...
Capitalism is always short-sighted because the capitalists (in the orthodox sense--those people who have capital) will always see their holdings increase, regardless of the longevity of any particular enterprise. That's where this attitude of "bad business should fail" comes from--it's cultural brainwashing from those who control the economies through their wealth. It is their vested interest that unprofitable ventures should fail immediately, so that capital can be transferred to other ventures, in order to minimize losses and maximize profitability on an ongoing basis. If and investment in B will yield a 50% higher/faster return than an investment in A, capital will shift to B to maximize the profits of those who control, even if A was still nominally profitable, and even if thousands of non-capital-holding lives utterly depend on A. Capitalism is fundamentally anti-humanist that way.
Direct link to India job listings (Score:4, Interesting)
Just making a search using the term 'Service' at HP India produces 192 new positions.
Job Search HP India [hp.com]
(Scroll down if you don't have a vertical monitor / insane resolution)
Re:Direct link to India job listings (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Don't blame the corporation... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Don't blame the corporation... (Score:5, Informative)
Which is why they have double digit unemployment.