Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses The Almighty Buck

Tesla Employees Detail How They Were Fired, Claim Dismissals Were Not Performance Related (cnbc.com) 250

New submitter joshtops shares a CNBC report: Tesla is trying to disguise layoffs by calling the widespread terminations performance related, allege several current and former employees. On Friday, the San Jose Mercury News first reported that Tesla had dismissed an estimated 400 to 700 employees. That number represents between 1 and 2 percent of its entire workforce. But one former employee, citing internal information shared by a manager, said the total number fired is higher than 700 at this point. Most of the people let go from Tesla so far have been from its motors business, said people familiar with the matter. They were not from other initiatives like Tesla Powerwall, which is helping restore electricity to the residents of Puerto Rico now. The mass firings, which affected Tesla employees across the U.S., had begun by the weekend of Oct. 7 and continued even after the initial news report, sources said. Among those whose jobs were terminated in this phase, some were given severance packages quickly while others are still waiting on separation agreements. Some terminated employees told CNBC they were informed via email or a phone call "without warning," and told not to come into work the next day. The company also dismissed other employees without specifying a given performance issue, according to these people. "Seems like performance has nothing to do with it," one Tesla employee told CNBC under the condition of anonymity. "Those terminated were generally the highest paid in their position," this person said, suggesting that the firings were driven by cost-cutting. That assessment was echoed by several others, including three employees fired from Tesla during this latest wave.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Tesla Employees Detail How They Were Fired, Claim Dismissals Were Not Performance Related

Comments Filter:
  • Bummer (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Greyfox ( 87712 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:18PM (#55384473) Homepage Journal
    Unlike traditional automakers, Tesla does not have a union. Yet.
    • Re:Bummer (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Mr D from 63 ( 3395377 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:22PM (#55384511)
      I've yet to meet an underperformer who admitted that was why they were terminated. Not saying these people were, just something that I keep in mind.
      • Re:Bummer (Score:5, Insightful)

        by hey! ( 33014 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:27PM (#55384555) Homepage Journal

        Well, if 2% of Tesla's workforce was so bad it needed firing all at once, I'd say it's the management that was underperforming.

        • Re:Bummer (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:56PM (#55384815) Homepage

          Meanwhile, Tesla has 2484 open jobs on its website [tesla.com]. A rather curious strategy if they're trying to "disguise a layoff". Let's lay off "up to 700 people" and then hire 2484 new people to.... cut back on the workforce?

          • by hey! ( 33014 )

            Well if you read the summary, the people they laid off were allegedly the highest paid people in their job categories.

            • Re:Bummer (Score:5, Insightful)

              by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @03:10PM (#55384939) Homepage

              I'd personally take a report from people who were fired about how they weren't deserving of being fired with a grain of salt.

              • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

                by Anonymous Coward

                But that's not the point of the comment you are replying to. It is a well-known cost cutting strategy to fire senior employees and hire junior ones for no other reason than that itself. Nominally this is idiotic because, especially in hourly jobs, a junior employee is usually much less productive (makes more mistakes, doesn't coordinate with other departments, etc) than a senior one. But if you're measuring productivity by hours worked instead of quality of work or other metrics, then that difference doe

                • Or that Tesla is "over-valued" and the "correction" is kicking in, possibly (just possibly...) having something to do with a changing political climate.

                  • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

                    More likely the paid for attacks by the fossil fuellers and the other automotive manufacturers, will continue, especially the fossil fuellers ones. It doesn't seem to be working but they keep on doing it, American main stream media, the global bull puckey channel, any lie you can pay for will be told, just buy the right amount of ad space. This fits in the category of oh noes Stalin and the KGB used Pokemon GO to hack the planet (undead douche baggery). You just don't know what to believe coming out of US m

              • The quote in the article is from a "Tesla employee", without qualification as "former Tesla employee" as used elsewhere in the article. Also, I'd take a report from the people doing the firing that it was merit-based and not a cost-cutting measure with a grain of salt as well.

                Of course, it's all highly speculative at this point and in some sense I don't even see how it really matters, apart from as an indicator of Tesla's short-term economics.

          • Re:Bummer (Score:5, Insightful)

            by WrongMonkey ( 1027334 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @05:08PM (#55385823)
            There is a big difference between 2484 open job listings on a website and 2484 actual new hires.
          • Just because they're advertising doesn't mean they're actually filling them.

          • Putting on my cynical hat here... although the laws vary by state, it looks really bad if you as an employer were to fire employees for reasons like "low performance" and then neglect to attempt to fill those positions. The former employees would then have a really strong case for unemployment benefits (which they might not otherwise be entitled to if fired with cause, but again, that varies by location), or maybe even wrongful termination if they can make a convincing case that their former employer used b
        • If you are in a business where you don't have cyclical layoffs to purge the trash, then you need some kind of policy to weed out the poor performers. Maybe doing it in a giant wave like this is not a great idea, but it's better than not doing it. And frankly, it probably does make a lot of sense to do it in a wave. Performance reviews (or whatever metric is being done) are usually all finished at around the same time, so you'd know who your bad performers are all at once. Why wait? I wish the public schools

        • Well, if 2% of Tesla's workforce was so bad it needed firing all at once, I'd say it's the management that was underperforming.

          Perhaps Management took their hands off the wheel, the autopilot nagged them about it, and they finally put down the coffee and morning paper and started paying attention again - before they entered an intersection with a crossing semi-truck.

        • by Rakarra ( 112805 )

          2%? Is this supposed to be some enormous number that other companies don't hit? The only large layoffs I see from the company were in 2008, then last year when they bought Solar City.

          I saw predictions 4 months ago that this would happen soon when Tesla released poor Q2 numbers. At that point, with inventory problems, it seemed inevitable that there would be a bit of turnover. What I've also found is that when a company has to cut costs, it often doubles as a way of cutting dead wood. That can be people wh

        • Well, if 2% of Tesla's workforce was so bad it needed firing all at once, I'd say it's the management that was underperforming.

          Exactly! When I saw that it said many of them were the highest paid for their positions, I instantly thought "team leads/managers." Exactly what you'd hope to see at this stage in the process when they were hiring so fast for so long; a culling of lame middle managers from every department. You can't cull the dud workers until after you cull the dud managers, or the dud managers will end up firing all the good workers to cover their own asses. This is a sign of good governance.

          The whole concept of a "layoff

        • Maybe they started using the old GE strategy of firing th bottom x% of the workforce as a matter of preventative maintenance?

          "Stack ranking, also referred to as forced ranking, where managers across a company are required to rank all of their employees on a bell curve, has been a controversial management technique since then GE CEO Jack Welch popularized it in the 1980s.

          "Only a small percentage of employees, typically about 10%, can be designated as top performers. Meanwhile, a set number must be labeled as

        • 2% of the workforce is not that large.

          Also, look at the bright side. If the company routinely lets go of under-performers, it makes everyone else work harder to keep from being the next person let go.

      • I've yet to meet an underperformer who admitted that was why they were terminated. Not saying these people were, just something that I keep in mind.

        I've also yet to meet an asshole fired for misbehavior who understands that being an asshole is poor performance. They almost invariably believe their performance was so divine that they have a Special Right of Asshole.

        I'm guessing a lot of the people who claim that "no performance reason was given" were in fact told a performance reason related to behavior and they just can't comprehend that anything other than widgets per hour is a performance metric.

    • Yes and apparently we're witnessing how it happens.
    • Re:Bummer (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:52PM (#55384773)

      I highly doubt they'll ever have one. People have been totally brainwashed against unions. Companies tout over and over again how everyone needs to come together and be buddies. Prima donna rockstar IT guys and developers loudly proclaim that they would never stoop to the level of their peers. And people wonder why there's no job security.

      Things are going to have to get REALLY bad for unions to make a comeback. Bad enough for the average people to tune out the propaganda, like 50% unemployment bad. I personally have zero issues with seniority-based job security as long as the person is performing at an acceptable level. Too many people I know are getting thrown out of the IT field in their 40s and 50s, and it's nearly impossible to get rehired due to age discrimination. I think my next career move is going to have to be "cashing in my chips" and taking a lower-paying stable job.

      • I personally have zero issues with seniority-based job security as long as the person is performing at an acceptable level.

        The issue here is that "acceptable level" is highly subjective depending on the company and the industry. If you're looking for job security, don't work for a volatile company that could succeed or fail in a matter of a few short years. Tesla is that company. Your "acceptable level" threshold is much higher there. For folks looking for job security and a lower acceptable level of work, look for a government job or work for a utility.

    • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

      Unlike traditional automakers, Tesla does not have a union. Yet.

      Unlike traditional *American* automakers. There isn't a single unionized foreign-owned assembly plant in the US.

    • actually, none of the car makers here have REAL unions, except the original American car makers. Some of the rest have weak unions here , but most do not.
  • by Gregory Eschbacher ( 2878609 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:24PM (#55384533)

    Illusory superiority is something we probably all have mentally: We all think we're above average employees, when obviously that's impossible.

    One thing I've noticed working at a few major companies is that nobody ever really gets bad performance reviews: Instead, they all range from satisfactory to excellent. But in reality, those who get satisfactory are getting bad reviews, it's just more polite to NOT say "you stink".

    • So if they were below average, how did they get hired as the "highest paid in their position" ? At the very least, it is HR incompetence.
      • by HornWumpus ( 783565 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:40PM (#55384671)

        That's one newly fired employee's claim. Huge grain of salt required.

        Do they even know what other employees make? Not most places. Sure you know what they project (car etc), but that's usually high interest financed bullshit.

      • So if they were below average, how did they get hired as the "highest paid in their position" ? At the very least, it is HR incompetence.

        The probably weren't hired as the highest paid, but worked their way into it. Perhaps they then became under-performing, or perhaps Tesla is simply greening their workforce -- the latter is usually unlawful and almost always short-sighted.

    • I consider the equivalent of "unsatisfactory" to be termination of employment.

      "Satisfactory" can (unfortunately) mean anything from "it isn't yet worth the trouble of replacing you, so we're going to try and get you to improve before we fire you" to "you're a great employee but not particularly special".

      It'd be lovely to have a more exact scale, but people told they're heading to the chopping block sometimes choose to sabotage the company instead of either finding a way to satisfy the company's expectations

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Performance is PRETEXT used to fire undesirables before stock vestment. Especially if they're let go all at the same time!

      Your opinion is being played for a fool.

      This is systemic bullshit in our industry.

    • Your comment makes me think scale is a part of the problem. The largest organization I've ever worked for was maybe 50 people, and generally speaking, when someone's underperforming, they've usually been let go before too long.
    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      One thing I've noticed working at a few major companies is that nobody ever really gets bad performance reviews

      Here's the thing... people *DO* get bad performance reviews, but those people don't generally stick around for very long afterwards, if they aren't actually fired for not doing their job correctly, or at all.

  • Key line (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Colin Castro ( 2881349 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:39PM (#55384663)
    "Those terminated were generally the highest paid in their position," this person said, suggesting that the firings were driven by cost-cutting.
    • Well if they're the highest paid, and their performance is only average, then by definition they're under-performing. Being highly paid doesn't exclude a person from under-performing. Unless a person is some kind of all-star, having a higher pay is almost certainly going to push them into the under-performing category eventually. Maybe they were great at some point in the past and over-performing, which is why they got such a pay bump to start with. However, management doesn't really care how many home runs
      • So why would they hire average people at a higher salary? That's mismanagement at the least. If a person doesn't have anything special coming into the company, then don't pay them more. It's that simple.
        • Re:Key line (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Immerman ( 2627577 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @03:08PM (#55384917)

          Who says they did? They could easily have been hired at a lower salary and received raises in response to over-performing, until such time as they stopped delivering in line with their higher salary. Maybe they burned out, maybe they got complacent, maybe they started a family and stopped putting in 100-hour weeks, maybe they got promoted into a position outside their area of excellence. Lots of reasons someone might stop being as valuable as they used to be. And for better and worse pay cuts in excess of those automatically applied by inflation are generally considered to be ill-advised.

          • So by that argument the message being sent is to try to avoid over-performing and getting raises as that will eventually get you fired once you are paid too much. Workers should strive for mediocrity and never perform more than they have to in order to avoid getting pay raises and eventual termination... Slow and steady wins the race I guess...

            As soon as I saw the headline the other day the first thing that came to mind is that they are cleaning house of all the union seekers, perhaps lumping them in with a

            • For job security, reliable and otherwise uninteresting middle-of-the-pack performance does seem to be the safe path. Alternately you might excel, but turn down raises, promotions, etc. that would push you out of the relatively secure "worth more than they're paying me" niche.

              None of that will help your bottom line of course - but it seems to be an unfortunate reality that "climbing the ladder" is a risky game, especially within larger corporations where top executives are largely unaware of the individuals

    • I'd love to know how this random anonymous fired person could say this with any certainty. You have to be *very* careful about taking the word of recently-fired employees as gospel. Obviously, they're not going to be feeling very happy about Telsa at the moment. Even those who knew they were slacking off at work or not getting along with peers won't admit that to anyone else. In fact, those types of people are probably the most likely to slander your company after they're fired.

      Granted, it's not like we

    • Reading between the lines that means that one or more people who hadn't worked in the job as long as him were not fired.

  • Underperforming? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by bobbied ( 2522392 )

    Yes, underperforming on a work to cost ratio... The higher you get paid, the more profit you have to make..

    Tesla has how much profit? Um... Can we say nearly nothing?

  • by Dracolytch ( 714699 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:43PM (#55384695) Homepage

    ... especially in an at-will state, it's always legally in your best interest to not state a reason for the termination. For an at-will state, you are often not required to provide a reason, and if you do provide one it can come back to bite you in a lawsuit if they can show evidence otherwise.

    • Tesla has publicly stated that these were for-cause firings. If they told the employees that it was not for-cause in their severance notice, now they've got a different kind of problem.

    • To contrary, having performance reviews and putting employees on notice when they are under-performing is the best defense. More documentation is always better, especially if the employee might be part of a protected class.
  • by ErichTheRed ( 39327 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @02:44PM (#55384697)

    Maybe I'm lucky, but I've generally worked in places where they've never fired anyone for poor performance. Like the summary suggests, firings are usually based on salary and it's just a dumb HR thing. Are performance-based firings really a thing?

    Just to be clear, I don't work exclusively with rockstars either. There are plenty of mediocre performers. But I've never experienced having someone get so bad at their job that they had to be removed.

    There's no easy fix either...you basically have to not be the top guy on the salary spreadsheet when they decide to cut.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Krishnoid ( 984597 )

      A person is fired for performance reasons. 2% of the workforce, fired and not laid off, with zero notice -- there's another underlying reason.

    • Lucky? I'd expect a place that never fired for performance to be a 100% dysfunctional hellhole.

    • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @03:37PM (#55385181) Journal

      I worked at a company that had a policy of firing the bottom 5% on a regular basis.

      This wasn't actually done in any consistent manner and often the bottom 5% were merely unliked by management, while their performance was actually OK. All kinds of things can lead to a single bad performance review, few of them related to the person's actual capability.

      The idea originates with Jack Welsh at GE (he proposed firing the bottom 10% in any year).

    • Yes, at GE (Score:5, Interesting)

      by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @03:40PM (#55385211)

      I used to work at GE, they did occasionally try to fire someone for poor performance. It was always a major hassle documenting the reasons, discussing the problem with the employee, etc. But it did happen once in a while when the person was truly a non-performer and sometimes resulted in a lawsuit against the company.

      Much more common was a RIF - Reduction In Force. Those involved a large number of people (like this one at Tesla) and usually effected older employees, poor performers, and people with the misfortune to be in a poor performing business group. Yea, it's illegal to layoff older employees in order to cut salaries so they always threw in a few younger employees to make it look like a mix.

      There were usually a few really poor performers around before a RIF. We called them "canaries", because like a canary in a coal mine, as long as they were around you knew you were safe.

    • Are performance-based firings really a thing?

      Yes. Sometimes by policy e.g. Stack-Ranking firing the bottom x%: See GE, Honeywell, Oracle.
      Sometimes by value performance: e.g. Fire everyone without x billable hours: See every consultant every.
      Usually though it's just used as a way to get rid of really poor people: e.g. consistent fuckups who shouldn't have been hired in the first place.

      There are a few companies (usually some of the larger monsters) that take the view of a failing employee is a failing in management and they move their dead weight from d

  • you have to pay unemployment for any reason. And yes, that means some people who don't desperately need it will get it. It also means your wages won't get depressed by them competing with you in the job market.
  • Some terminated employees told CNBC they were informed via email or a phone call "without warning," and told not to come into work the next day.

    I'm fairly certain they didn't throw their belongings in the trash. But otherwise, yes, that's generally how it happens.

  • Some co's fire the bottom of the stack, others fire the top. This suggests a madness to the method.

  • by Gabest ( 852807 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @04:56PM (#55385743)
    If it does, it is only for the shareholders.
  • by Brockmire ( 4931623 ) on Tuesday October 17, 2017 @05:35PM (#55385969)
    Apple hires 700 new engineers.

THEGODDESSOFTHENETHASTWISTINGFINGERSANDHERVOICEISLIKEAJAVELININTHENIGHTDUDE

Working...