Most of the news thus far has been about a pause in hiring (at least at the core company, as YouTube and others have already initiated layoffs). The reports here indicate a shift towards preparing for broad layoffs by implementing the new metrics system, GRAD. That's new information, at least for mainstream media.
The GRAD system has been in the works for a LONG time. Verily and X (and possibly Waymo and others) have been using a similar system since before the pandemic. I don't think it's an excuse for stealth layoffs, it's just a mess. Everybody hated the perf / promo system which took tons of time for everyone, and Sundar and co have wanted to build a streamlined system for ages.
The rollout of GRAD has been badly mishandled - universally, every manager I've talked to, including directors and VPs, had no idea what was going on, no clue what to do. There was basically no training, the tools were slow buggy third garbage, and they've been making last minute changes all thru the process. The tools are so bad that they're going to start building in-house ones like we used to use under the old Perf system. The new system is much quicker for non-managers but a giant burden for managers, which means that lots of folks will probably slip thru the cracks and not get rated as well as they may have with the old system where you were responsible for much more of your packet, and feedback from peers was a much larger component. Now they've replaced the peer feedback with nonsensical surveys and a single short answer to a question that usually doesn't make sense.
Agreed! I have lots of complaints about grad (as well as some things I think are improvements, at least hypothetically), but "it'll be used to do more layoffs" and the wilder "it was designed to make it easier to lay people off" are both nonsense.
Hmm, I must have missed those. GRAD seems like the type of system that consultants implement to provide an excuse for layoffs?
Looks like the YouTube layoffs were technically contractors:
>Project cancellations and reorganizations have stoked nervousness. In September, Google’s YouTube shut down a project based in the Farmington Hills office with nearly 80 workers, laying off some staff members who did not find new roles at the company, four people familiar with the decision said. YouTube had hired them as contract workers to moderate content on the video platform. Google said 14 workers had lost their jobs.
If GRAD were actually designed to make layoffs easier, they would have put in a stack ranking feature. As it is, it puts more people in "safe" buckets than would be there in the old system, so I'm really struggling to see how this is layoff-related at all. They very clumsily instituted last-minute "support checkins" for people who were struggling, because they forgot to deal with the scenario as the entire process was rolled out exceptionally badly.
Laying off contract employees is extremely expected; that's a major reason why they hire these roles in the first place. I know that in the past when projects have been cancelled, the contractors have been let go almost instantaneously (like the next business day), but "real" employees have been kept on and helped to find new roles.
This depends on who you talk to and what you consider "safe". I don't believe that GRAD has anything to do with layoffs, but I've absolutely talked with managers (including some who used to be managers at companies with stack ranking) who say that the wider lowest bucket adds pressure for managers to put at least some of their folks in it (before with the tiny lowest bucket it was more statistically justifiable if no one got that rating), which feels (to them and to me) like stack ranking.
I think a lot of this comes down to explicitness. Just-barely-cme was always a thing, and people knew about it. Making it more explicit and forcing managers to justify it to reports and to other managers is actually good in a lot of ways.
The new larger bucket could be bad, but as far as I have seen getting it is a signal that you're at risk of being at risk, not that you're gone. And there's enough people who have survived PIPs and gotten NI without getting pipped or fired that I have some level of trust for management here.