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Started By
Message

Layoffs
Posted on 5/30/24 at 8:57 am
Posted on 5/30/24 at 8:57 am
Having to cut 33% of Production staff today. Few things are as gut wrenching as both receiving this information and having to deliver it.
We are in the housing industry (private company) and it simple isn’t turning around fast enough. 50% volume increases in the future with contracts but losses from hanging on until things turn make this layoff a current necessity for now.
Haven’t slept in days.
We are in the housing industry (private company) and it simple isn’t turning around fast enough. 50% volume increases in the future with contracts but losses from hanging on until things turn make this layoff a current necessity for now.
Haven’t slept in days.
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:00 am to RealDawg
Directions to the Drink to Celebrate or Drink to Forget thread >>>>
How many people is 33%?
How many people is 33%?
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:03 am to RealDawg
That sucks man, but that's why they pay you the big bucks.
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:05 am to RealDawg
quote:
Having to cut 33% of Production staff today. Few things are as gut wrenching as both receiving this information and having to deliver it.
We are in the housing industry (private company) and it simple isn’t turning around fast enough. 50% volume increases in the future with contracts but losses from hanging on until things turn make this layoff a current necessity for now.
Haven’t slept in days.

Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:06 am to RealDawg
I'm sorry. The Biden economy is destroying lives, futures, everything. It's a disaster.
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:06 am to Classy Doge
People getting laid off left and right. Cost of food and housing is skyrocketing. The border is wide open. The American dream is dying right before our eyes folks.
This post was edited on 5/30/24 at 9:07 am
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:07 am to RealDawg
Worst time to be living in society today
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:09 am to canyon
quote:
Drink to Celebrate or Drink to Forget
Yes
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:16 am to Dauber Dybinsk
Life is still good but the outlook has never been worse. Our standard of living is much higher than our forefathers but the cost of maintaining it has become much harder and almost soul-crushing. Upward mobility and the stability of a white collar career are becoming a thing of the past.
This post was edited on 5/30/24 at 9:18 am
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:25 am to RealDawg
Firing someone is a lot easier than laying someone off. When someone gets fired it's typically 95% their fault. When you have have to lay someone off its typically not their fault, especially when you get into the 2nd and 3rd round of layoffs. At that point you are laying off your friends and people you've typically known for years, some that you have worked side by side with.
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:28 am to RealDawg
quote:
Having to cut 33% of Production staff today. Few things are as gut wrenching as both receiving this information and having to deliver it.
We are in the housing industry (private company) and it simple isn’t turning around fast enough. 50% volume increases in the future with contracts but losses from hanging on until things turn make this layoff a current necessity for now.
Haven’t slept in days.
Housing as in construction? If so what has happened in the industry over the last 20 years is nearly unprecedented....for the most part workers in the industry USED to be accustomed to layoffs. Many at a mid point in their career have never experienced it today because they have been employed 12 months a year their whole careers.
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:30 am to RealDawg
What is production staff for housing? I’m assuming not builders
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:30 am to conservativewifeymom
quote:
Biden economy
The central banking economy of which the statists like Biiiiiiden embrace
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:35 am to RealDawg
Sucks. Hope they all find work soon. They getting decent severance?
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:35 am to RealDawg
Are y'all subject to the Warn ACT?
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:35 am to yaboidarrell
quote:
Life is still good but the outlook has never been worse.
I think the outlook appears a little better now than it must have seemed in 1930.
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:38 am to RealDawg
Your bonus is probably still pretty fat though
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:40 am to yaboidarrell
quote:
Life is still good but the outlook has never been worse. Our standard of living is much higher than our forefathers but the cost of maintaining it has become much harder and almost soul-crushing. Upward mobility and the stability of a white collar career are becoming a thing of the past.
This is the rub. Our standard of living is ridiculously higher than it was just 20 years ago. Our first home, bought in 1987 and built in the 1950s, was just under 900 square feet. 2 BR, 1 BA. 1/10th of an acre lot on a septic tank (yeah, imagine THAT). When we bought it there had been 3 prior owners, all of whom were solidly middle class (it was a Lockheed Mill House where Lockheed employees lived in Cobb County Georgia). Those 3 families had at least 2 kids each before they moved out of that house. We bought a "starter" home 5 years after buying this one, outside of Athens Georgia. 3 BR, 2.5BA, 2100 square feet. We sold that one in 5 years and bought another starter home outside Augusta. 4 BR 3 BA, 3100 square feet. We then moved all over the world and the US and bought bigger and bigger "starter" houses each time...finally in our current home in a neighborhood of first time home owners where our house, at a little over 5000 square feet and 5 BRs and 4 BAs is on the smaller size. In 41 years a "starter" home has increased in size nearly 600%. Couple that with $60k automobiles, boats, campers, massive TVs in every room and on the porch....the standard of living in the US has far outpaced our needs and salaries. You could not GIVE a 23 year old couple in Georgia a 2 BR 2 BA 900 square foot house today without them selling it immediately and buying a 3000 square foot house. They also would not dream of driving a 10 year old car and changing their own oil. The cost of living is soul crushing because we make bad decisions like buying $60k automobiles and 5000 square foot houses.....not because of anything other than our own desires.
Posted on 5/30/24 at 9:44 am to Uncle Diddles
That is a wild statement to make, being on either end is not easy. I hope the people catching the lay offs have some financial security and a skill that is needed elsewhere.
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