Monday, January 21, 2008

demotivation

After a Holiday season filled with indecision over staying at my employer, I got motivated again last week. I decided that there was interesting work to be done, and that I really like everyone I'm working with.

Then, the bombshell Wednesday. Lay offs. Because while we're profitable, we're not growing fast enough for our parent company. Why not outsource all our content production? All our competitors are doing it, so it must work! Quick, outsource everything in a month and a half!

Out of my group of 10 (including my manager), I'm one of 4 software developers left. The content production team was hit much worse, only 2 left out of over 20.

Now we're looking at an avalanche of legacy code maintenance work for at least the next few months as we train outsourced software developers to maintain our convoluted production system that has grown into a horrible mess over the last 10-15 years. There are a ton of services and applications that interact in odd and poorly documented ways. As if that wasn't bad enough, anything over 5 years old frequently isn't in source control.

We have an experienced set of users who know how to push the data through the tangle of applications. We'll lose that in a little over a month.

Fun times ahead.

4 comments:

Bartski said...

Wow. I feel for you, man. It's no fun to be working in that environment.

At least you have marketable skills. A new (and better) job shouldn't be too hard to find. The problem I came across was compensation. It's hard to find a company that's willing to pay you for your experience, so paycuts are nearly unavoidable.

Which thid-world country are the replacement drones being outsourced to?

neeber said...

The off shoring from this layoff will be done via a company in the Philippines, as well as a second company in India.

I'm not that shocked the off shoring is happening. Given the business realities it's inevitable, and done right, it isn't necessarily horrible.

However, given the sorry state of our productions system they need to allow much more transition time for it to be successful.

Mark N. said...

I am already warming up a seat for you again (just don't ask how). This time just don't tell us no. It will shorten your commute by more than 20 minutes too. Anyway, sorry to hear about the layoff, as you know I know exactly what it feels like to be on the surviving side of a layoff more times than I would like to admit. I will let you know when something more solid solidifies.

neeber said...

Let me know. If it doesn't work out for me, I've got a couple great people you guys should snap up if no one else does first.

I hope the seat warming is done w/ a basket of puppies, rather than chili.