REPORT:
IBM Has Started To Lay Off Thousands Of Workers Worldwide
IBM started laying off employees on Wednesday, Bloomberg's Sarah Frier reports.
12
June, 2013
IBM
said in April it plans to spend $1 billion on severance and other
costs to shrink its work force.
Laurence
Balter, an analyst at Oracle Investment Research who's quoted in the
Bloomberg story, said this would add up to between 6,000 and 8,000
jobs.
That
range of layoffs "sounds about right," IBM union organizer
Lee Conrad told us. Conrad has been sounding the alarm on smaller IBM
layoffs for months.
IBM
is cutting all kinds of employees, from "rank-and-file staff to
executives," according to Frier's sources.
The
tech and consulting company had 434,246 employees worldwide at the
end of 2012, so these cuts would amount to less than 2%.
IBM
in April missed Wall Street's estimates for the first time since
2005.
The
company's Research Triangle Park, N.C. location, where IBM does
engineering for many of its server and storage products, reported 200
jobs cuts today, one IBM insider told us.
Needless
to say, the mood there is grim.
"From
what I saw at work today, IBMers were pale, antsy, and stressed out.
It's not pretty," the IBM insider said.
IBM
also shopped its low-end server business to Lenovo, but those talks
fizzled last month.
In
a videotaped speech to IBM employees after April's earnings, CEO
Virginia Rometty urged them to step up their game.
"Where
we haven't transformed rapidly enough, we struggled. We have to step
up with that and deal with that, and that is on all levels," she
said in the video.
An
IBM spokesperson declined to comment on the reported layoff numbers
but sent us the following statement via email:
"Change
is constant in the technology industry and transformation is an
essential feature of our business model," the spokesperson said.
"Consequently, some level of workforce remix is a constant
requirement for our business."

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