Layoffs
2023-01-23 19:10:24.393822+01 by Dan Lyke 0 comments
Hard to find a good pull quote from this one, because by the time it gets down into the meat of things there are so many good citations about long-term negative impacts on companies doing layoffs that narrowing it down to a paragraph is difficult: HBR: What companies still get wrong about layoffs.
The findings of two decades of profitability studies are equivocal: The majority of firms that conduct layoffs do not see improved profitability, whether measured by return on assets, return on equity, or return on sales. Layoffs are especially hard on the performance of companies with a high reliance on R&D, low capital intensity, and high growth. Market response to layoffs was also less positive than might be expected, with three-day share prices of firms conducting layoffs generally neutral. Higher valuations were given for layoffs perceived as helping firms in financial distress return to profitability as well as those that were strategic and forward-looking. Layoffs undertaken only for the purpose of reducing costs tended to lead to drops in share price.
Why are there so many tech layoffs, and why should we be worried? Stanford scholar explains
As layoffs in the tech sector mount, Stanford Graduate School of Business Professor Jeffrey Pfeffer is worried. Research – by him, and others – has shown that the stress layoffs create takes a devastating toll on behavioral and physical health and increases mortality and morbidity substantially. Layoffs literally kill people, he said.