(no title)
thom__ | 11 months ago
I see a lot of my colleagues resigned to the reality we live in and just hoping they get lucky enough to come out on the right side of the meat grinder by making a few bucks at a startup. I've worked in a couple industries, and tech workers seem to lack solidarity in a way I haven't seen elsewhere. I survived three rounds of layoffs at a startup, and every time the attitude among some of my colleagues was that we "trimmed the fat." I somewhat agreed and got caught up in that culture until I got picked up in the fourth round of layoffs at a time when I felt I was doing my best work. We need each other as workers to get through a future that looks gloomy for technology developers. As the saying goes: "united we bargain, divided we beg." A better world is possible!
bluefirebrand|11 months ago
Almost everything I have ever heard described as "good business" is pretty evil
You never hear "Oh we should give everyone a raise, that's just good business"
It's always stuff like "we put 10000 orphans through a meat grinder to make 10 cents, it wasn't personal it was just good business"
Edit: of course that is an exaggeration
But more realistic examples include things like "we laid off 200 people the week before Christmas so we hit our targets for the next year. Not personal, just good business"
Frankly, maybe if companies need to make such "good business" tradeoffs frequently, it shows that the people running them aren't actually good at business in the first place
SR2Z|11 months ago
Lots of big tech companies give people raises automatically when they think they're too underpaid.
> Frankly, maybe if companies need to make such "good business" tradeoffs frequently, it shows that the people running them aren't actually good at business in the first place
I really, really don't get this. Sometimes companies overhire. Sometimes it's even their own fault that they've overhired.
Either way, clearly IT HAPPENS and sometimes companies will need to lay off workers when it becomes clear they're not useful enough to justify their pay.
It's not inherently a reflection on the workers or the company; most of the time it's a reflection of interest rates and nothing more.
BriggyDwiggs42|11 months ago
Yes (often)
billy99k|11 months ago
Union heavy countries like Sweden have almost no startup scene and wages are normalized (ie: almost all the same across white collar industries).
snowAbstraction|11 months ago
According to this crunchbase data [1] it has a lot per capita.
[1] https://news.crunchbase.com/startups/countries-most-startup-...
try_the_bass|11 months ago
This doesn't generalize to all companies! After all, if you started a company, certainly you'd do things differently... Right?
paulcole|11 months ago
It’s only adversarial because you want to get as much pay as possible out of them for as little productivity as possible.
> I somewhat agreed and got caught up in that culture until I got picked up in the fourth round of layoffs at a time when I felt I was doing my best work.
Did everyone feel that way?
kortex|11 months ago
And the employer wants to pay the employee as little as possible for as much productivity as possible.
In a perfect world with perfect information and rational actors on a level playing field, this is great: we expect supply and demand to converge, this is econ 101.
But it's not a perfect playing field, one side is coercive, holds most/all the cards, calls all the shots, treats people with lives and experiences as "resources", and seeks profit over all other objective functions. This is class dynamics 101.
itsgrimetime|11 months ago
Or maybe pay that’s proportional to the value we provide
krainboltgreene|11 months ago