(no title)
StableAlkyne | 2 months ago
Each of these units were then given access to an internal "market" and directed to compete with each other for funding.
The idea was likely to try and improve efficiency... But what ended up happening is siloing increased, BUs started infighting for a dwindling set of resources (beyond normal politics you'd expect at an organization that size; actively trying to fuck each other over), and cohesion decreased.
It's often pointed to as one of the reasons for their decline, and worked out so badly that it's commonly believed their owner (who also owns the company holding their debt and stands to immensely profit if they go bankrupt) desired this outcome... to the point that he got sued a few years ago by investors over the conflict of interest and, let's say "creative" organizational decisions.
silisili|2 months ago
raw_anon_1111|2 months ago
Anecdote: Even before Amazon officially killed Chime, everyone at least on the AWS side was moving to officially supported Slack.
red-iron-pine|2 months ago
basically "coffee is for closers... and if you don't sell you're fired" as a large scale corporate policy.
_aavaa_|2 months ago
marcosdumay|2 months ago
The part about no overlaps already made it impossible for them to compete. The only "competition" they had was in the sense of TV gameshow competition where candidates do worthless tasks, judged by some arbitrary rules.
That has absolutely no similarity to how Samsung is organized.