i got laid off this round, i was wondering if anybody knows when they will pay out the severance
I left in 2023. I am regretting it a bit but it's not that bad in my new company. I hope the severance is still healthy. I am hearing that now they are giving 3 weeks per year of service, not sure if they are capping it. This probably explains reports where people are reporting 6 or 9 months of severane. I'd think they are capping it at nine months. Walmart is pretty generious about this, other companies not so much. I hope all of you who are laid off land on your feet and that this is not as traumatic as it can be. Godspeed.
... read moreHome Office InfoSec director, two team members, & others from the InfoSec group were let go this morning. Directors are booked with a series of short meetings throughout the day. No exact count yet, but multiple people were affected.
It’s confirmed that all remote InfoSec associates have been cut.
... read morei used to think the talk about H1B visas was overblown but then i started watching who left the office and who stayed. One by one the guys who’d been training the new associates were gone, some without even goodbye emails. the rest of us just kept our heads down, hoping not to be noticed, hoping our badge would still work monday...
They say it's not about us, not about the people, only business. but every time someone leaves, their desk is filled the next week with someone quieter, someone faster, someone who isn't going to ask what happened to the promotion they were promised. you stop making jokes in the breakroom, stop checking the time, stop planning vacations... same thing just happened at walmart — layoffs in the morning, approvals for thousands of new visas by lunch.
tech used to feel bigger, messier, like something made by strange people with strange dreams. now it's meetings, checklists, sprints no one sprints through. even the errors feel designed. one morning you realize you’ve started spelling recieve wrong again and it hits you — you’re tired, really tired...
... read more++++++++ 💼 Corporate Restructuring & Cost-Cutting A major theme throughout the discussion is that Walmart's decision to lay off 1,500 corporate employees is part of a strategic corporate restructuring focused on cost reduction and operational efficiency.
The layoffs are portrayed less as a surprise and more as part of a longer-term strategy to automate, restructure, and shift towards AI-driven operations.
++++++++ 📉 Economic Volatility, Tariffs & External Pressures Many users connect the layoffs to broader economic forces, including tariffs and global trade instability. The Trump-era tariff policies are cited repeatedly.
This theme suggests that economic nationalism has had unintended downstream consequences for U.S.-based workers.
++++++++ 🧑💼 Worker Displacement Amid Automation & Strategic Pivots There's consistent commentary on the shift away from human labor, particularly in middle management and tech, in favor of automation.
Some view this not as innovation, but as a calculated sacrifice of human workers to preserve bottom lines.
++++++++ 🤖 H1B Visas & Labor Prioritization Concerns A small but sharp pocket of criticism questions Walmart's simultaneous acceptance of foreign labor visas while laying off U.S. workers.
This comment taps into a broader debate about corporate loyalty, globalization, and domestic job protection.
++++++++ 🛒 Impact on Customers & Prices There is awareness that layoffs at the corporate level may cascade into changes for customers, especially in pricing and service.
This theme reflects concern about whether operational streamlining may ultimately be passed onto consumers.
++++++++ 🤡 Satirical & Darkly Comic Reactions Some users take a cynical or sarcastic tone in reacting to the news, mocking either the process or the larger context.
These responses often reflect deep frustration with corporate practices dressed in vague or performative language.
++++++++ 🌍 Global Tourism Concerns
++++++++ 📦 Supply Chain & Sourcing Strategy
++++++++ 📊 Market Impacts
Walmart’s decision to lay off 1,500 corporate employees has sparked strong reactions centered on themes of cost-cutting, economic pressure from tariffs, and a pivot toward automation. While many frame the layoffs as a cold but calculated business strategy, others see them as part of a broader erosion of labor security in favor of efficiency and shareholder value. Concerns about outsourcing, price hikes, and conflicting labor priorities (like H1B hiring) also surface, alongside sarcasm that underscores public skepticism toward corporate messaging.
... read moreLet me walk you through how this little “reorg” actually played out. First, you get a calendar invite for a 3-minute Zoom with some director you’ve never seen before-someone who couldn’t pick you out of a breakroom lineup if their Group Director title depended on it. They read from a script like it’s a hostage video, ask for your personal email, then just sit there blinking while you process that your entire career just got turned into a bullet point on a PowerPoint. I asked one question-got told to “wait to hear from HR.” Two days later? No HR contact. No email. Just a locked laptop and a delightful little sense of corporate abandonment.
severance? lol. anywhere from 3 to 40 weeks, apparently. No one can explain the formula, because there isn’t one. Or maybe there is, and it’s just a dartboard in Bentonville with “3 weeks,” “10 weeks,” and “sorry, you get nothing” scattered around it. You know what I got? Confusion. You know what I didn’t get? Transparency, support, or even a PDF. I’ve been with this company for years. Gave it nights, weekends, holidays. But when they were done with me, they were done. Like I was a browser tab they forgot they had open.
the cherry on top? The people making these decisions are still here. The bloat didn’t get cut-it just changed outfits. They’ve got all these new Amazon imports playing corporate musical chairs, while the people who actually knew how the place worked got booted. Oh and let’s not pretend this is just about performance or strategy shifts or “removing layers.” Please. The layers are still here, they just speak in buzzwords and get stock options.
Then I got cut. Cold. Walked out.
No, I’m not bitter. I’m informed. I’ve seen how this company operates in moments that count. And when it mattered most, they showed exactly who they are. So to everyone still pretending this was “inevitable” or “strategic” or whatever, enjoy the script-just remember, they don’t care who’s reading it next...
... read morei was told to transition my projects. I did. Two hours later, I got remote-wiped like a defective device. No access. No goodbye. No handoff. Just silence. It’s not just cold-it’s insulting. Like we were never people, just line items with pulse rates. And they wonder why morale is lower than their share of domestic sourcing... Many got hit and it's brutal, i cannot explain how bad it feels
... read moreHello, I started at Walmart a year ago, and I’m currently freaking out. I’m terrified about the layoffs happening all over the country. I’m currently not looking for another job, but what I’m hearing from my friends is NOT good. They are saying it’s terrible out there. Everybody is letting go of he people they have, let alone hiring them. Now I’m thinking what’s gonna happen to me if they get rid of me too. I don’t want to be on the job market for months looking for a job.
... read more