http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/news/press/2014/jul14/07-17announcement2.aspx
The internal memo:
QuoteHello there,
Microsoft's strategy is focused on productivity and our desire to help people "do more." As the Microsoft Devices Group, our role is to light up this strategy for people. We are the team creating the hardware that showcases the finest of Microsoft's digital work and digital life experiences, and we will be the confluence of the best of Microsoft's applications, operating systems and cloud services.
To align with Microsoft's strategy, we plan to focus our efforts. Given the wide range of device experiences, we must concentrate on the areas where we can add the most value. The roots of this company and our future are in productivity and helping people get things done. Our fundamental focus – for phones, Surface, for meetings with devices like PPI, Xbox hardware and new areas of innovation -- is to build on that strength. While our direction in the majority of our teams is largely unchanging, we have had an opportunity to plan carefully about the alignment of phones within Microsoft as the transferring Nokia team continues with its integration process.
It is particularly important to recognize that the role of phones within Microsoft is different than it was within Nokia. Whereas the hardware business of phones within Nokia was an end unto itself, within Microsoft all our devices are intended to embody the finest of Microsoft's digital work and digital life experiences, while accruing value to Microsoft's overall strategy. Our device strategy must reflect Microsoft's strategy and must be accomplished within an appropriate financial envelope. Therefore, we plan to make some changes.
We will be particularly focused on making the market for Windows Phone. In the near term, we plan to drive Windows Phone volume by targeting the more affordable smartphone segments, which are the fastest growing segments of the market, with Lumia. In addition to the portfolio already planned, we plan to deliver additional lower-cost Lumia devices by shifting select future Nokia X designs and products to Windows Phone devices. We expect to make this shift immediately while continuing to sell and support existing Nokia X products.
To win in the higher price segments, we will focus on delivering great breakthrough products in alignment with major milestones ahead from both the Windows team and the Applications and Services Group. We will ensure that the very best experiences and scenarios from across the company will be showcased on our products. We plan to take advantage of innovation from the Windows team, like Universal Windows Apps, to continue to enrich the Windows application ecosystem. And in the very lowest price ranges, we plan to run our first phones business for maximum efficiency with a smaller team.
We expect these changes to have an impact to our team structure. With our focus, we plan to consolidate the former Smart Devices and Mobile Phones business units into one phone business unit that is responsible for all of our phone efforts. Under the plan, the phone business unit will be led by Jo Harlow with key members from both the Smart Devices and Mobile Phones teams in the management team. This team will be responsible for the success of our Lumia products, the transition of select future Nokia X products to Lumia and for the ongoing operation of the first phone business.
As part of the effort, we plan to select the appropriate business model approach for our sales markets while continuing to offer our products in all markets with a strong focus on maintaining business continuity. We will determine each market approach based on local market dynamics, our ability to profitably deliver local variants, current Lumia momentum and the strategic importance of the market to Microsoft. This will all be balanced with our overall capability to invest.
Our phone engineering efforts are expected to be concentrated in Salo, Finland (for future, high-end Lumia products) and Tampere, Finland (for more affordable devices). We plan to develop the supporting technologies in both locations. We plan to ramp down engineering work in Oulu. While we plan to reduce the engineering in Beijing and San Diego, both sites will continue to have supporting roles, including affordable devices in Beijing and supporting specific US requirements in San Diego. Espoo and Lund are planned to continue to be focused on application software development.
We plan to right-size our manufacturing operations to align to the new strategy and take advantage of integration opportunities. We expect to focus phone production mainly in Hanoi, with some production to continue in Beijing and Dongguan. We plan to shift other Microsoft manufacturing and repair operations to Manaus and Reynosa respectively, and start a phased exit from Komaron, Hungary.
In short, we will focus on driving Lumia volume in the areas where we are already successful today in order to make the market for Windows Phone. With more speed, we will build on our success in the affordable smartphone space with new products offering more differentiation. We'll focus on acquiring new customers in the markets where Microsoft's services and products are most concentrated. And, we'll continue building momentum around applications.
We plan that this would result in an estimated reduction of 12,500 factory direct and professional employees over the next year. These decisions are difficult for the team, and we plan to support departing team members with severance benefits.
More broadly across the Devices team, we will continue our efforts to bring iconic tablets to market in ways that complement our OEM partners, power the next generation of meetings & collaboration devices and thoughtfully expand Windows with new interaction models. With a set of changes already implemented earlier this year in these teams, this means there will be limited change for the Surface, Xbox hardware, PPI/meetings or next generation teams.
We recognize these planned changes are broad and have very difficult implications for many of our team members. We will work to provide as much clarity and information as possible. Today and over the coming weeks leaders across the organization will hold town halls, host information sharing sessions and provide more details on the intranet.
The team transferring from Nokia and the teams that have been part of Microsoft have each experienced a number of remarkable changes these last few years. We operate in a competitive industry that moves rapidly, and change is necessary. As difficult as some of our changes are today, this direction deliberately aligns our work with the cross company efforts that Satya has described in his recent emails. Collectively, the clarity, focus and alignment across the company, and the opportunity to deliver the results of that work into the hands of people, will allow us to increase our success in the future.
Regards,
Stephen
Breaks my heart.
Quote from: CountDeMoney on July 17, 2014, 12:23:33 PM
Breaks my heart.
Microsoft shareholders appreciate your support.
With their recent acquisition, not all that surprising. They dont need to keep all the employees from the organization they just acquired.
These new efficiencies will free up capital to invest in bleeding edge technology. Paradigm shift.
Still, way to bury the announcement in an email full of corporate jargon to the employees.
Quote from: Syt on July 17, 2014, 01:42:09 PM
Still, way to bury the announcement in an email full of corporate jargon to the employees.
Probably better than the story my mother tells me about how when she was at <insert a large medical device company> that there were people who learned they had been let go, when there was a meeting to discuss the new organizational chart and they were not on it.
Quote
Since the advance reports of layoffs at Microsoft started circulating this Sunday, the giant tech company has surged over 8%. This has raised the market cap of the behemoth by almost $28 Billion. Today we get the 'news' that Microsoft was laying off a record 18,000 employees (more than tripled the 2009 dump of 5,900 employees).That means - for all activist investors out there looking to raise MSFT share price - a $1.5 million market cap boost for each scalp, which, in other words, is the marginal "value added" of every currently employed Microsoft worker.
Quote from: garbon on July 17, 2014, 01:49:37 PM
Quote from: Syt on July 17, 2014, 01:42:09 PM
Still, way to bury the announcement in an email full of corporate jargon to the employees.
Probably better than the story my mother tells me about how when she was at <insert a large medical device company> that there were people who learned they had been let go, when there was a meeting to discuss the new organizational chart and they were not on it.
Ouch, that is harsh. :huh:
Media reports 18 000 MS employees laid off. 12 500 is only for the phone division, I think.
Quote from: viper37 on July 17, 2014, 02:06:43 PM
Media reports 18 000 MS employees laid off. 12 500 is only for the phone division, I think.
Yeah but there were something like 26,000 employed in the company they just acquired.
Quote from: citizen k on July 17, 2014, 01:53:01 PM
Quote
Since the advance reports of layoffs at Microsoft started circulating this Sunday, the giant tech company has surged over 8%. This has raised the market cap of the behemoth by almost $28 Billion. Today we get the 'news' that Microsoft was laying off a record 18,000 employees (more than tripled the 2009 dump of 5,900 employees).That means - for all activist investors out there looking to raise MSFT share price - a $1.5 million market cap boost for each scalp, which, in other words, is the marginal "value added" of every currently employed Microsoft worker.
Yay. It's like war profiteering, only not as humane.
Back when I used to audit, a company I was working on had layoffs, and in a personal letter to each employee telling them they were laid off said something like:
"As you know, there are exciting changes going on here. By merging with x, we will be well positioned to regain dominance in the marketplace, improve customer satisfaction, and make this the best place to work in the industry.
Unfortunately, as a part of these changes, your position is eliminated effective immediately. You will receive two weeks severance.
Thank you for all your contributions to the company,
[signed by dude who will still get a paycheck]"
Quote from: Valmy on July 17, 2014, 01:41:19 PM
These new efficiencies will free up capital to invest in bleeding edge technology. Paradigm shift.
And bleeding edge technology will create new jobs. It's a win-win.
Quote from: garbon on July 17, 2014, 01:49:37 PM
Quote from: Syt on July 17, 2014, 01:42:09 PM
Still, way to bury the announcement in an email full of corporate jargon to the employees.
Probably better than the story my mother tells me about how when she was at <insert a large medical device company> that there were people who learned they had been let go, when there was a meeting to discuss the new organizational chart and they were not on it.
What we would do for a RIF was once the personnel were identified, HR and Corporate Security would get together with the staff supervisors to coordinate the death march batting order, and the supervisors would bring them into the death room, one at a time; they'd get the spiel, sign the paperwork and then be taken back to his or her desk to collect their meager belongings and then escorted right out the door; meanwhile, we'd simultaneously be issuing a BOLO--complete with ID photo and vehicle description--to all employee entrances and security stations, stating that the employee was permanently barred from the property. Do not come back to go to lunch with your former coworkers, as you will be trespassing. Left a photo of your kid? We'll mail it. Shit left on your computer? The hard drive will be wiped by the time you get home, so don't worry about it.
We'd repeat this with every person, one at a time, all day long; and then, at the end of the day, we'd do the supervisors.
Of course, because the corporate fiscal year was the same as the calendar year, it all happens during the holidays, usually from the Monday after Thanksgiving up until December 15th. Gotta get them off the ledger by December 31st.
Quote from: CountDeMoney on July 17, 2014, 06:46:55 PM
What we would do for a RIF was once the personnel were identified, HR and Corporate Security would get together with the staff supervisors to coordinate the death march batting order, and the supervisors would bring them into the death room, one at a time; they'd get the spiel, sign the paperwork and then be taken back to his or her desk to collect their meager belongings and then escorted right out the door; meanwhile, we'd simultaneously be issuing a BOLO--complete with ID photo and vehicle description--to all employee entrances and security stations, stating that the employee was permanently barred from the property. Do not come back to go to lunch with your former coworkers, as you will be trespassing. Left a photo of your kid? We'll mail it. Shit left on your computer? The hard drive will be wiped by the time you get home, so don't worry about it.
We'd repeat this with every person, one at a time, all day long; and then, at the end of the day, we'd do the supervisors.
Of course, because the corporate fiscal year was the same as the calendar year, it all happens during the holidays, usually from the Monday after Thanksgiving up until December 15th. Gotta get them off the ledger by December 31st.
First they came for Accounts Payable, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not Accounts Payable.
Then they came for IT Support, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not IT Support.
Then they came for Customer Support Services, and I did not speak out—
Because I was not Customer Support Services.
Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.
I can see both sides of this argument. They acquired 25,000 employees with Nokia, they're cutting half because they already have engineers and workers to work on Windows phones. Apparently, most of the rest of the cuts are them trying to cut out a bad case of manager reporting to manager reporting to manager reporting to manager reporting to actual man in charge.
On the other hand, 18,000 cuts can put some serious ripples in the economy, especially considering their previous record was less than a third of that, and that was right at the peak of the recession. Part of me really wants to see some serious consequences for Microsoft for fucking things over on this kind of a scale.
Doubtful. Most of these employees are STEM-y types, and will find new work within the month.
Quote from: CountDeMoney on July 17, 2014, 09:29:33 PM
Doubtful. Most of these employees are STEM-y types, and will find new work within the month.
I wish I could be that confident about the prospects of STEM-y types. It would seriously lessen my stress about the fact that I'm taking myself out of the full-time workforce again to finish my STEM degree.
STEM is king. Why do they even sell liberal arts degrees? They don't sell cars without engines. Not for $30,000 anyway.
Quote from: DontSayBanana on July 17, 2014, 09:48:17 PM
Quote from: CountDeMoney on July 17, 2014, 09:29:33 PM
Doubtful. Most of these employees are STEM-y types, and will find new work within the month.
I wish I could be that confident about the prospects of STEM-y types. It would seriously lessen my stress about the fact that I'm taking myself out of the full-time workforce again to finish my STEM degree.
You'll be fine. Get your certs, and you're in like a veteran in the federal government.
Quote from: DontSayBanana on July 17, 2014, 09:17:30 PM
On the other hand, 18,000 cuts can put some serious ripples in the economy, especially considering their previous record was less than a third of that, and that was right at the peak of the recession. Part of me really wants to see some serious consequences for Microsoft for fucking things over on this kind of a scale.
Those cuts are worldwide ;)
Quote from: DontSayBanana on July 17, 2014, 09:48:17 PM
Quote from: CountDeMoney on July 17, 2014, 09:29:33 PM
Doubtful. Most of these employees are STEM-y types, and will find new work within the month.
I wish I could be that confident about the prospects of STEM-y types. It would seriously lessen my stress about the fact that I'm taking myself out of the full-time workforce again to finish my STEM degree.
"STEM" is a giant category. Some parts aren't that employable, some are. You should talk to recruiters and people in the profession about the outlook before you go back to school.
http://www.kfyrtv.com/story/26053296/fargo-microsoft-branch-doesnt-expect-lay-offs
:Canuck:
Wifey got caught in the ones in 2008 or 9. Dodged it this time. I have lots of shares though. That year we missed would take more shares to make up for though,