December Layoffs to be much larger than expected !!!!

Discussion in 'Pfizer' started by Anonymous, Oct 30, 2013 at 11:14 AM.

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  1. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Amen Brother! Another year closer to retirement and at this point in time (54) I will "Try" and hang on for as long as I can. Medical, Pension and Great Medical benefits are all I need to convince me too tolerate the big blue for a few more years.
     

  2. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    The pension is the reason to stay. I'm assuming anyone nearing 55 probably has some decent tenure and is eligible for a pension once they hit 55. It doesn't say "quit" when you hit 55!! As far as health insurance in retirement, is anyone really safe anymore (in any industry)? Never-the-less, Obamacare is making it more affordable for all us all…right? The underlying theme of this message is to get out if you can. If you're 55 and can retire(if you're laid off), your pension can supplement a lower paying job if you unfortunately get laid off (and have to continue to work). Hopefully, you have built up some good tenure (20-30 years) and will get a good payout (lump sum or annuity).
     
  3. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Good luck! I know how you feel. I sweated out the last 5 years and made it. Its a beautiful thing once you get there. We are the lucky ones.
     
  4. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    All true. I'm one of the very lucky ones at age 59 with 30+ years of service. Now I'm hanging on as long as possible but a layoff package would be OK too. Sadly, most people here aren't that lucky.

    Pfizer leadership will dump the retirees onto the new public healthcare exchanges as soon as they can. That might end up being a good thing for the retirees as well as the company.
     
  5. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Ian Reed is being honest, and if you knew anything about the numbers, you would see that.

    In the doom-day scenario, say 1000 reps are laid off, at an average cost of $200k per rep, that is $200 million in costs.

    Pfizer's revenue is estimated to be over $50 BILLION in 2013, so that rep cost savings is really less than 1/2 of 1% of revenues.

    In the grand scheme of things, you and your rep buddies are a "minimal disruption" when you are dealing with numbers this large.

    Your opinion of your value and your strong sense of entitlement are laughable. The fact of the matter is, you are less than a rounding error.
     
  6. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    No sympathy. You've dogged bullets for years. eventually you're going to get caught. If you are still a rep and haven't moved up the corporate ladder, you're an idiot if a lay-off cathes you by surprise. Get promoted or get out. idiots
     
  7. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Getting promoted diesn't save you. I have friends who moved on a promotion only to get let go 3 months later. Never move your family for this co. You are a number and nobody cares when the axe goes down. Pfe has mo products and too many employees. Period!
     
  8. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Remember, interest rates are at all time lows. If you are eligible for a lump sum you will NEVER get a better payout. Working a few more years with rising rates may mean a smaller lump sum (and therefore working for nothing). Severance is your golden parachute. Good luck.
     
  9. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    Interest rates are not at an all time low, they were about 9 months ago.
     
  10. Anonymous

    Anonymous Guest

    True-but do you think they will go lower or higher in the next few years???? The key to the message is that interest rates will be rising and your payout will more than likely be lower 2/3/4/5 years from now than they are now. Hence-working for nothing with the lower payout. It may not be the all time low (I guess that was around March-April-May), but they are still low. It was just some friendly advice. If you are near retirement age and have been checking the calculator (and talking to people who know how it works) you know what I mean.