Sharp Overwhelmed By Volunteers For Early Retirement 103
jfruh writes "Sharp, the Japanese LCD supplier in dire financial straits, is trying to cut staffing by offering an early retirement package. Unfortunately, it seems Sharp employees are eager to abandon a sinking ship. The company was planning on cutting its headcount by about 2,000 employees with the move; instead, it had to cut short the program after getting nearly 3,000 applicants."
this is a bad sign (Score:1)
Re:this is a bad sign (Score:5, Interesting)
...pretty smart for the employees who applied, though.
Japan's demographics (older than most other countries as an average) do tend to skew things upward a bit on their own, but think about it - instead of getting laid off or cut off, you get a steady income and go work somewhere else at the same time (and even while searching for another job, it's at least something to subsist from).
Beats the hell out of getting a pink slip and nothing from the deal.
Re:this is a bad sign (Score:5, Funny)
Beats the hell out of getting a pink slip and nothing from the deal.
So you're saying that Sharp has...sharp employees?
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Your definition of socialism and the dictionary's definitions differ significantly in their breadth:
Merriam webster's definition:
1: any of various economic and political theories advocating collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods
2
a : a system of society or group living in which there is no private property
b : a system or condition of society in which the means of production are owned and controlled by the state
3: a stage of society in Marx
Re:this is a bad sign (Score:4, Funny)
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Be quiet!!! I order you to BE QUIET!!!
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He died in 1883. If cars existed at all back then they would have been steam-powered monstrosities that would have required a crew of 17 and a great deal of experience to operate. It would have been all but impossible to steal one at all.
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(*) Actual socialism, of course, is worker control of the means of production, and has nothing to do with what Americans call "socialism" at all.
Actual socialism is workers having the illusion of having control of the means of production with the state having the actual control and screwing the workers whenever possible.
Actual capitalism is workers having the illusion of choice and freedom with the owners having the actual control and screwing the workers whenever possible.
lol witty one liners lol. Also capitalism failed at the beginning of C20, long before the Soviet experiment, but good luck trying to convince yourself otherwise while America continues creeping to the right and China's managed economy smoothly takes over.
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What doesn't work is crony capitalism which is what US capitalism is becoming.
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China isn't anything of the sort. It carefully regulates its industry in the interests of the nation, and you're not going to get anywhere in business there if you don't grease the right palms. Its stock market is still a joke.
(of course, "authoritarian capitalism" is such a misnomer it's not even funny)
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And no, authoritarian capitalism is not a misnomer, authoritarianism and free-market ca
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That definition of conservatism is limited to the American conservatives; in Europe, where the term originated, conservatives were far from fans of capitalism, much less of laissez-fair, and supported a controlling state with strong ties to the dominant religion (Catholic Church here in Latin countries), like in the "God, Homeland and Family" motto that was used here in Portugal.
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So Maggie Thatcher wasn't a Conservative?
Even by your standards that's dumb.
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Thanks darling, but I claim no such thing. Like many people, she didn't fit the labels cleanly, but she was still much more a New- or American-style Conservative than a traditional European conservative.
the thing that people do not recognise is that Margaret Thatcher is not in terms of belief a Tory. She is a nineteenth-century Liberal.
-- Milton Friedman
The kind of Conservatism which he and I...favoured would be best described as âliberalâ(TM), in the old-fashioned sense.
-- Keith Joseph
She was much more a New- or American-style Conservative than a traditional European conservative.
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I made a mistake, the last quote is actually Thatcher's, in the memorial lecture of Keith Joseph.
But I don't deny she was a conservative, I'm saying she was a New- or American-style conservative, not a traditional European conservative.
And 'conservationist' is someone who advocates conservation of natural resources. You mean 'conservative'.
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Actual capitalism is workers having the illusion of choice and freedom with the owners having the actual control and screwing the workers whenever possible.
I don't think that capitalism is about workers at all. They are a side issue in it. What was your point again?
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Maybe it's good for them. Kodak's retirees are getting the short end of the stick in the form of reduced payments so creditors get more money...
Re:this is a bad sign (Score:5, Interesting)
This is Japan. Their CEOs are known to take paycuts when the company tanks. This is a different culture. The retirees probably live with the children and raise the grandchildren. Sharp probably just has an aging workforce like every other developed country and the retirement package was good enough.
Re:this is a bad sign (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is this a bad sign?
Why should people in their mid 50's or older not be perfectly happy to stop working while still being paid? The company I work with is closing down the IBM mainframes and a lot of people are leaving rather than re-training. That comment about a "sinking ship" is totally missing the point, the ship may or may not be sinking but people who have 30 years of working no longer feel they have something to prove. Of course the retirement package on offer has to be adequate but this one certainly seems to be that!
Re:this is a bad sign (Score:5, Insightful)
Early retirement is one way to cut the work force – however, if done poorly it can lead to a brain drain. The more oversubscribed it is the more likely this will happen.
Also, you want to downsize as efficiently / cheaply as possible. The oversubscription suggests that the HR people could have gotten the size reduction they needed with less generous terms.
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Early retirement is one way to cut the work force – however, if done poorly it can lead to a brain drain.
I'd say it almost always does, because the people most likely to volunteer are the ones most likely to find another job quickly.
One company I worked for decided to lay off about a third of the staff, and half of the staff volunteered to go. They got rid of the third they thought they needed the least, which pissed off the remaining volunteers enough that most of us just found new jobs and quit.
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I hereby dub this "Ark B inversion syndrome [wikia.com]"
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They should use an auction model where everyone gets the same benefit irrespective of when they sign up for early retirement.
The company offers a package, tells people the package will get better every day. Individuals can sign up for the early retirement and everyone who signes up will get the package offered at the
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Dutch auction IIRC. Also, more or less, how power pools auction load to generators.
Good luck patenting that.
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The Quebec Government did this in 1997 in the healthcare sector (since healthcare is public) granting retirement 10 years early to 4000 nurses and 1500 doctors, which became an *immediate* problem. We are *still* recovering from this. An entire industry was built around this catch-up knowledge transfer required to fill the gap. It will take another 10-15 years to fill the gap and massive healthcare issues it has created, and will have cost more than the money saved.
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Japanese companies exist firstly to provide employment and look after their workforce. Sounds strange I know. Because of that the workforce feels they are part of a family and it isn't uncommon for them to work unpaid when things get really bad.
I remember when the Nova language school chain collapsed. All the foreign teachers expected to be paid right up until the end, even though the most of the Japanese staff had not been receiving wages for a couple of months at that point. Similarly when Nissan was havi
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Early retirement is one way to cut the work force â" however, if done poorly it can lead to a brain drain. The more oversubscribed it is the more likely this will happen.
Only if they granted early retirement on a first-come, first-served basis. They may well have done it on a poorest-reviews, first-served basis. In fact, if you have less applicants than you were looking for, and you let them all go, that is far more likely to eliminate desired talent than even FIFO.
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The severance package at the place I work is a lot better than "2 weeks pay per year of service". I believe Japan has fairly strong employees' protection so Sharp had to make the package attractive.
They did.
I don't live in the US (either) but if I did, walking the Appalachian Trail while still being young enough to make it would be very attractive. A few weeks around the Grand Canyon, there are a lot of things to do if you aren't tied down to going in to work to get paid.
More than a year or two. (Score:2)
Sharp wants to get rid of it’s employees voluntary, so the severance package has to be sweet. This is particularly true in Japan, where the chance of a older worker finding new, full time employment is slimmer than in other countries.
And it’s early retirement – which implies their pensions kick in. Maybe not at 100% - but it should be kicking out income for the rest of their lives.
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Why is this a bad sign? Why should people in their mid 50's or older not be perfectly happy to stop working while still being paid?
They can be happy of course. I'm sure it's great for them. I would take that option in a heartbeat, just so I could continue doing the stuff I'm interested in.
But for the company, it means the veterans would rather be doing something else. And it implies that it's not a great place to work.
Worse then you may think Sony did the same (Score:5, Interesting)
A lot has been written about Sony, especially in Japan where it was THEIR giant taking on the world. Sony USED to be a tech company run by techs. Googles 20% work on your own project sound nice? Pah! At Sony entire teams could work 100% on stuff that nobody knew could ever work. Then around the millennium a new guy was put in charge and he did not come up through the company as a tech but was strictly management. He too wanted to streamline the business and get rid of dead wood old engineers. It worked BRILLIANTLY. Not only was the package VERY attractive so all who could, took it but new jobs were waiting with little upstart companies like Samsung but I don't suppose you ever heard of them. Oh wait, isn't that the dingy Korean company that makes cheap Japanese knock-offs. Well, they can never compete because Japan has all the know-how locked up in job contracts... OOOOPS!
It was an epic brain drain and one Sony never really recovered from. It wasn't their only mistake but it was a hell of a nail in the coffin. Sharp did better, Sharp still has a reputation for Japanese made (and for the very old and very young, there was a time when Japanese made meant quality of an insane degree even the swiss found hard to beat. A Sony TV just worked, yes it was expensive but it just worked. And then management took over, streamlined the business and that stopped. Samsung quality is catching up but only because Japanese quality is going down.
Note that the asian giants on the rise are NOT streamlining their business and all the western ex-giants have streamlined themselves to dead. The simple fact is that pure managers can't see the next hit, the Walkman and the PS were things no manager could have seen. For sony to enter the console industry against the giants in that sector was considered insane.
When the techs left and management took over, Sony lost its edge. In the west people only know Sony the electronics giant same as say Nintendo. Did you know Nintendo once made a vacuum cleaner? Post WW2 Japan grew a tradition of little workplaces were people were busy trying to come up with anything to produce and export. Because with no natural resources and a devastated economy, that was the only way Japan was going to make money. Building thingies, firs cheap and crap, then cheap and okay and finally expensive and bloody good. And they did this at the cost of western companies that were to busy stream lining their businesses.
If your young, name a WESTERN TV maker. That actually still makes TV's. Every western household has a TV but who supplies them? The asians. Yeah, that worked out well, for the asians but the likes of Philips? Shadows of their former self as they focussed on their core compentency in existing shareholder meetings. PIty that it turned out loosing money is their core compentency.
You can see it with Hostess. I said it before, as a EU person I can't see the big deal, their snacks just ain't that good. When was the last time they extended their product range in a significant way? And I don't mean a chocolate twinkie but as a TV company, making a walkman, producing a game console. Look at how much flack MS is getting for daring to go into hardware. Streamlining your business is just another way of saying "we are closing down". In tech, the next big thing needs to be researched yesterday if you want to launch it tomorrow. Except the real time line is measured in decades and you will have many failed research projects in the mean time. But you got to do that if you want that massive hit.
Another reason that racing to the bottom never works is because there is always someone at the bottom waiting to take your place. Sharp can't keep in the display race, that just means the next iPad's displays will be all Samsung, now boosted by the free to hire Sharp engineers.
Surely Sharp knows the history of its major rival. Things must be dire indeed to follow the path of certain doom.
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Re:Worse then you may think Sony did the same (Score:5, Funny)
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If your young, name a WESTERN TV maker. That actually still makes TV's.
Element Electronics
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Googles 20% work on your own project sound nice? Pah! At Sony entire teams could work 100% on stuff that nobody knew could ever work.
I think this is the norm in any innovative company. I don't know anyone who does science and doesn't spend a third or a half of his or her time developing personal projects.
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and for the very old and very young, there was a time when Japanese made meant quality of an insane degree even the swiss found hard to beat.
My grandfather has told me on a number of occasions how Made in Japan indicated that products were complete and total junk prior to 1980 or so. Essentially the same stigma that "Made in China" bears today. So I'm not sure which era for the "very old" you're talking about - perhaps prior to WW2 or something?
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I can testify that the 1970 Honda 600n was (and is) a fine automobile.
Air cooled converted motorcycle 600cc two banger with a four speed shifter in the dash.. No car ever improved my driving as much. You have to drive like Schumacher to keep up with traffic. Learn how to drive it, then learn again with 3 friends in it with you. I should get another, they float by on craigslist every once in a while, some times for way too much.
Maybe get a shell and stick a mouse under it.
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Every western household has a TV but who supplies them? The asians. Yeah, that worked out well, for the asians but the likes of Philips?
Overrated. Most Philips consumer electronics like TVs or VCRs two decades ago had labels saying: manufactured in Japan by Matsushita. Most Philips devices were in fact manufactured by Asian brands. Other times it was Blaupunkt or Grundig doing the manufacturing in Germany. Philips did manufacture lightbulbs and shaving machines but little else. Most was relabeled.
I bou
Re:Worse then you may think Sony did the same (Score:4, Interesting)
This is a fascinating post. Thank you for posting it. Not enough is written about the fall of Sony.
Incidentally, from a previous post I wrote [slashdot.org]:
The history of Sony's management is quite fascinating. I've lost the link, but I recall there being an article about Sony's decision over who to replace their then-CEO around 1999 (Norio Ohga), who had been CEO for ages and brought Sony to new economic heights. The choice of his successor was either the head of Sony Entertainment (i.e. the copyright/media side of Sony) or the head of Sony Computer (i.e. the head of the electronics side). They ended up choosing the head of the copyright/media side of Sony, Nobuyuki Idei.
Anecdotally, since that decision, I've noticed that Sony's technology shine has dropped completely off my radar (i.e. I don't even turn to them to find out what the latest and greatest tech is, whereas at one point they were certainly a contender for something that I'd consider cool), while their foray into rent-seeking for their copyright has also gone off the deep end.
I might be wrong about the details of the history - I'd be interested in finding the article again, or having the background.
If it's true, I believe the change in the "personality" or "culture" of Sony reflects the decision that they made to make the head of their copyright/media division the head of the company. I believe their shareholders have been paying for that decision ever since.
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That was his name: Nobuyuki Idei, wasn't sure and to lazy to google.
Pure management who basically payed his knowledge workers to give their knowledge to his competitors.
To me it remains funny every time MS or Google is blasted for having to many side projects. I hate MS with a passion too but their attempts with the Zune were bad BUT necessary. Sure, it is fun to laugh at their failures but that they tried shows they still got the right idea, just the wrong execution.
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But that happened AFTER management took over (Score:2)
Your right, Sony SHOULD have created the iPod. In fact, during the Samsung/Apple trial it became clear BOTH had been looking at work Sony was doing for inspiration. So... where did these Sony phones that inspired the iPhone end up?
Sony had done their own tech before the management take over but they did because they thought they had the superior system. Afterwards they did it for pure lockin reasons, like the mini-disc fiasco. It should have just supported MP3, I had one that I purely used with selfmade dis
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Thing is Sharp's problems are all financial. The high value of the Yen makes their products expensive to export so it is hard to compete with Korean and Chinese companies. It is hard to understate just how bad it is. In 2006-2007 you get about 230 Yen to the Pound, now it is about 130 Yen to the Pound. Back then I was rich when I visited Japan, now everything costs twice as much and I have to be frugal.
They also invested a lot of money in developing their business right before the Yen went up, so while they
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You had me until you brought up Microsoft going into hardware. They're not "going into hardware", they have been into hardware for as long as I can remember. Partly that's because I'm younger than some around here and I come from the PC era, but that only drives home my point; really old PCs were outfitted with Microsoft mice, often bus mice. Much much later Microsoft put out game controllers and they've even made two game consoles! Microsoft is not "go[ing] into hardware". They're competing directly with t
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so there is not enough info in the summary to make that statement.
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A suggestion: RTFA. The second link provides the answer.
Aww (Score:4, Funny)
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It is a calculated plan to keep on the cutting edge of technology
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That's not a sharp way to cut (Score:2)
your workforce...
Not sure I understand (Score:1)
Is this article trying to point out that the company having to offer retirement packages is going to hurt them financially or talent wise?
Re:Not sure I understand (Score:5, Insightful)
When you offer an early retirement package and there's a mad scramble of people trying to take you up on it, the real danger is that you lose your best and brighttest. While it does get rid of headcount, it runs a real risk of losing people that you can't actually afford to lose.
Plus if the employees all want out, it doesn't say good things about their faith in the future of the company.
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It's not that simple. The company is still alive and selling/developping new products. You can't just stop and start over. What you want is a cleanup.
I have a feeling this article doesn't include enough information to understand the actual issue at hand. Getting 3000 applications doesn't mean they actually qualify. Then again, we don't know what qualifies a person for early retirement at Sharp. If there's a union is gets even trickier.
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While it does get rid of headcount, it runs a real risk of losing people that you can't actually afford to lose.
Other the CEO and their highly-paid cronies, who exactly can't a company afford to lose? As near as I can tell the modern "I can manage anything without knowing anything about it" manager thinks only THEY are indispensable. Everyone else--you know, the people who actually know stuff about the industry and technology the company depends on--is just a replaceable cog in the machine.
So while the point you make is obviously true there is ample evidence that CEOs are heavily selected to be the kind of person w
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But it is a devil's bargain, as long as this system continues, it is yoking so many people to the jobs they hate.
You seem to think that's an unintended consequence of the health insurance laws.
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But what galls me is that the employees are the most strident defenders of this system. Oftentimes it is the same employees who shout vociferously about freedom and liberty. They talk till cows come home about how the entrepreneur is the essence of America and how great it would be if everyone and their br
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/8474611.stm [bbc.co.uk]
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The debate with Bush is a great example of the problem.
"Now, the difference in our plans is I want that 2,000 to go to you, and the vice president would like to be spending the 2,000 on your behalf."
And it is, of course, a completely accurate statement - Bush wants the $2,000 to go to the voter, because he knows that more of it will end up in the pockets of his campaign contributors. What it doesn't cover is the value for that money.
I'm mystified why the USA is not familiar in general with these numbers (it probably has something to do with media ownership). Here we go ( taken from 2006 WHO data [who.int]) :
The USA spent $6,719 per capita on healthcare.
The U
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The problem is that in Cuba, being a doctor is one of the few professions where you both get respect, and, against the relative levels of poverty in Cuba, an acceptable standard of living. The problem is that Cuba does not allow doctors to emigrate out of the country. I sympathise with why they do this - if they spend the time and money training these people to get them a better lifestyle than the average Cuban then why should the state then let them use that additional income they gain in that profession t
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I fail to see why this is a problem from the POV of the USA - they have no problems with contracts that enforce similar arrangements, or enjoin the contracted party to never use the skills he gained working for one employer for the benefit of another.
In Cuba, you get your education from the state, giving you a skillset that you then employ for the benefit of the state. If they want to be able to practice medicine elsewhere for higher gains, they should make the investment and pay for their own training, lik
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The guy working for $1 owns a large chunk of the company. He's paid in either new or pre-existing stock options.
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Then they haven't saved enough for retirement.
de-linking will also stop some of the hours games (Score:2)
de-linking will also stop some of the hours games / temping that some companies do to get out of needed to give people health insurance through the job.
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The founder is a smart dude. Keeping an eye on his investment.
Insurance is a separate issue. How does the CFO make his copay with a $1 salary? reach into his pocket? Does he have 'special' insurance? Can you get his coverage?
There are non-employer based health groups. IEEE after a year. Join anyhow, having a non-employer insurance group at hand is always an ace in your pocket.
Early Retirement? Yes please! (Score:2)
1) People actually close to retirement
2) People who are not close to retirement, but know they have the skills to get another job
The person who is barely scraping by at their job? Not going to jump ship (unless they are planning on changing careers). I see this as a fine way to lose some of the best and brightest really quickly.
Hell, every time our management talks about reductions or outsourcing my hand goes up. A nice pac
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Or companies offer buy outs. I've seen it a lot lately in the US and it's usually the smarter ones who take the packages because after the offers for early retirement or buy-outs close, then you're left with the folks Couldn't find a job because of multiple factors (too lazy, no ambition, no skills etc.) or are not financially secure in doing a job transition. Then eventually, layoffs occur and you start to get into "survivor syndrome" [appelbaumconsultants.com] where the rest of the people left start to resemble something out of
Obligatory Dilbert (Score:2)
Ernie the unpackageable
http://search.dilbert.com/search?w=unpackageable&x=0&y=0 [dilbert.com]
George Takei says... (Score:2)
Oh My!! [youtube.com]
I have two Sharp TVs, both less than 3 years old.. Oh well, I shoulda bought a Zenith! ;-)