Washington Post link

The first time Julian Chavez got laid off from his job as a digital ad sales rep at web.com didn’t turn him off from the tech industry. Neither did the second time when he was laid off from ZipRecruiter. By the third time, though, Chavez had had enough.

“I really loved what I did,” said Phoenix-based Chavez in a text message. “But the layoffs got me jaded.” Now he’s pursuing a graduate degree in psychology.

Chavez is one of hundreds of thousands of tech workers who’ve been laid off in the past two years in what now seems like a never-ending wave of cuts that has upended the culture of Silicon Valley and the expectations of those who work at some of America’s richest and most powerful companies.

Last year, tech companies laid off more than 260,000 workers according to layoff tracker Layoffs.fyi, cuts that executives mostly blamed on “over-hiring” during the pandemic and high interest rates making it harder to invest in new business ventures. But as those layoffs have dragged into 2024 despite stabilizing interest rates and a booming job market in other industries, the tech workforce is feeling despondent and confused.

The U.S. economy added 353,000 jobs in January, a huge boost that was around twice what economists had expected. And yet, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Discord, Salesforce and eBay all made significant cuts in January, and the layoffs don’t seem to be abating. On Tuesday, PayPal said in a letter to workers it would cut another 2,500 employees or about 9 percent of its workforce.

The continued cuts come as companies are under pressure from investors to improve their bottom lines. Wall Street’s sell-off of tech stocks in 2022 pushed companies to win back investors by focusing on increasing profits, and firing some of the tens of thousands of workers hired to meet the pandemic boom in consumer tech spending. With many tech companies laying off workers, cutting employees no longer signaled weakness. Now, executives are looking for more places where they can squeeze more work out of fewer people.

    • Blackbeard@lemmy.worldM
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      9 months ago

      I have a friend who’s in exactly your same position, and a spouse who was randomly fired away from a team run by someone in exactly your same position. It’s eerie how consistent and systemic these problems are across the entire sector.

        • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Yeah it’s abundantly clear they don’t just chat with their subordinates or customers or even just have middle class hobbies.

          • Fades@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            it’s not that they don’t chat with them, they just feel they are above the rest and thus have insider knowledge/understanding.

            Ask any big company CEO, they will talk about it as if it’s proven fact when they talk out their ass about anything

      • dm_me_your_boobs@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        It’s the exact position I’m in as well. Short deadline high priority projects without the staff needed to actually get it done.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        My buddy was working in a well-known purveyor of fruit-named products. His boss and entire team was canned around him and he was a team of one reporting to his former skip.

        That didn’t last long. A few months of Herculean effort wasn’t enough to keep ahead of the arbitrary workload and he was done too.

    • Fades@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      So what ends up happening is I’m doing way more throw away work now than I ever have.

      so fucking true

      we need to move quickly, just do it and we’ll come back and refactor later

      let’s spend more time writing shit that will 100% change just so we can meet a fuckin date. Give me a fuckin break.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        refactor later

        And you know they mean “rewrite” because they haven’t nailed down a spec by hack time.

        This is why experienced (software) engineers are different from coders: they’ll balk at the waste if their job isn’t at stake. (If it is, you talk to your skip, right?)