Posted on 02/03/2013 10:31:05 AM PST by george76
HMV, the beleaguered British entertainment retailer, laid off 190 employees, in an effort to cut costs and right its balance sheet. The company apparently pulled a large group into human resources and gave them the bad news. While this was going on, one employee, Poppy Rose, who had been an HMV community manager and thus had access to the corporate Twitter account, started live tweeting about the layoffs.
Over a period of around 20 minutes, she sent out a series of notes expressing her rising sense of alarm to HMVs 61,500 followers (that number has since risen to 73,350). Rose admitted that it was unusual to use the company Twitter feed to express her views, but, she wrote, when the company you dearly love is being ruined, she felt it was justified. There are over 60 of us being fired at once! she wrote. Mass execution, of loyal employees who love the brand.
One of the most entertaining tweets that came through before HMV took back the account and deleted the offending tweets: Just overheard our marketing director (hes staying, folks) ask How do I shut down Twitter?
...
The rather obvious lesson for employers in all of this: Take control of your social media accounts, change the passwords, and restrict access before you let go of the employees who run those accounts.
(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
Once again the “new computing” has none of the disciplines of the “old computing.”
It amazes me they let these children do anything important. The lack of discipline, the loosey-goosey approach to Production, Change Management, Analytics and pretty much every aspect of computing amazes me.
Every time I do training on this stuff I keep asking “what about a) what about b) what about c) how do you know d)?” I get “umm... we never thought about that” or WORSE, “what do you mean?”
sheesh we had “consultants” at our church and their ideas were totally lame, angered people and were a huge waste of money
The more domesticated a beast is, the dumber it can afford to be.
At least these people were told to their face that they were being let go. Used to be if you came to work on Monday and there was no phone on your desk you knew that you were laid off.
The kicker?
The professionally printed brochures which captured "our" decisions arrived by US mail the next day.
I never went back.
...Which is worse than being fired separately, or something. Or maybe she thought jobs were for life.
Live and learn. But she probably won't.
I hate being manipulated like I am stupid or something.
/johnny
“The professionally printed brochures which captured “our” decisions arrived by US mail the next day.”
Only related due to manipulation/misleading church pastor: Many years ago we had a church festival where the pastor made a big deal of proposing to his girlfriend publicly in front of everyone present. She accepted and the pastor ate up all the congrats and platitudes of “that was so special”, etc.
A few weeks later I signed the marriage license after the wedding as a witness and saw that it had been issued three days before the festival.
But was the pastor a good tipper?
LOL, this type of stuff happened to past companies I worked for. When you lay off someone, you call them into the office, IT guys were already dismantling the passwords, desktop, security codes and were prepping the last paycheck the same moment they head into the manager’s office.
There was one guy I worked for that he had nothing on his desk, not even a picture or personal effect as he was fired so many times, he wanted the dignity to just walk out of the office with nothing but his check like it was nothing.
LOL, true!
I think you should have went back and warned your fellow church-goers of what was going down. You could have been like an apostle writing letters to besieged infant churches.
Maybe that’s how (lack of rigor) we get overcharged Boeing 787 batteries.
“the times i was laid off(twice from two places) i was not allowed back in my office(they emptied my desk and i picked up my stuff later) and was escorted out of the building by the head of security... they took my ID/Security badges etc and my accounts were all terminated while i was being out processed”
With technology today there is no other safe way for a company to do it (though the security escort is a shame because there is almost an implication of theft or other misconduct).
That’s how they do it at many law firms, as well.
that is about right
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