I used to work as a typesetter, which was considered a skilled trade. I was happy knowing that I could provide for my children, was looking forward to buying a house and giving them everything I didn’t have. Then, BAM, desktop publishing. I never recovered. Considering the pace of technology, people need to have some kind of plan B in place. Learn from those of us who didn’t.
milton117 on
“animal welfare” but the job losses re in their hundreds – wtf?
Alexwhynot on
TL;DR: Many careers people assume are stable have seen significant layoffs due to automation, industry shifts, consolidation, and cost-cutting.
Examples mentioned:
• Aerospace
• Telecom / Network Engineering
• Media & Entertainment Production
• Automotive Engineering
• Federal Civil Service
• Pharma & Biotech
• Logistics & Supply Chain
• Sales & Marketing
• Animal Health
• Accounting
——————————
Not part of the TL;DR: Jobs that tend to show lower layoff risk usually involve work that’s hard to automate and always needed locally.
Examples:
• Nurses
• Doctors
• Electricians
• Plumbers
• Teachers
• Public-sector administrative roles
throwaway0134hdj on
From the article:
1. Aerospace
2. Telecom & Network Engineering
3. Media & Entertainment Production
4. Automotive Engineering
5. Federal Civil Service
6. Pharma & Biotech
7. Logistics & Supply Chain
8. Sales & Marketing
9. Animal Health
10. Accounting
EnterpriseT on
The list of jobs seems obviously at risk. Who thought they’d be safe?
Glad_Pea_4871 on
this is why people need a social safety net from the volatility of the marketplace
wizzard419 on
Even trades are suffering, a position conservatives often have held is that young adults should learn a trade instead of going to a university. The problem is, they come out of those programs and are facing the exact same problems that university students are: no jobs. They have education but not enough experience to get anything.
While you can’t outsource your electrician, there is a finite demand.
Atrox270 on
Anyone who has worked in Aerospace for a while has never really considered it truly stable, it’s a highly cyclical industry where layoffs have always been fairly commonplace
freckled888 on
I’m curious if the programmers started to become defensive at some point. Or did they all feel the pressure to ‘be the first.’ It seems like they are literally programming themselves out of a career.
BooooHissss on
As someone who works in Pharma and Biotech, this article isn’t very… good. There may be a slowdown, but that’s pretty much the whole economy.
But I have never heard of the companies listed, they’re certainly not the big players, and 15k jobs lost from 2.3m is hardly noteworthy.
Draoken on
This is a repost of an obviously AI-generated slop article.
It’s about time to unsubscribe I guess from this sub.
calmwhiteguy on
This is because the american economy is collapsing in live view.
Loans, credit, P&Es, debt to income, none of the economy works for 99% of Americans anymore.
We shipped every job we could to China because billionaires paid politicians to let them. We privatized our social services and let those companies lay off as much as possible.
The American economy just doesnt pencil anymore. It’s just so much more evident after the free stimulus money ran out and these awful Frankenstein companies with terrible products and terrible services couldn’t keep raising the rates to justify low sales.
CrushyOfTheSeas on
This article is pretty shit. Aerospace has always been considered a cyclical industry that is very much tied to who is writing contracts in Washington. The commercial side fluctuates with the economy. Similarly there is a long history of layoffs in the automotive sector as well. The biggest recently being in 2008 when the economy cratered.
TyRocken on
Phew. Gonna be a while before a bot can flip chicken on a charcoal pit
judeluo on
I think stability is relative. In reality, no job is completely secure.
Fewthp on
“Sales and marketing have long been viewed as essential revenue drivers, roles that companies cut only as a last resort during downturns”
Yeah right, marketing is usually a post they cut first. Horse shit. The entire article reads like AI.
16 Comments
I used to work as a typesetter, which was considered a skilled trade. I was happy knowing that I could provide for my children, was looking forward to buying a house and giving them everything I didn’t have. Then, BAM, desktop publishing. I never recovered. Considering the pace of technology, people need to have some kind of plan B in place. Learn from those of us who didn’t.
“animal welfare” but the job losses re in their hundreds – wtf?
TL;DR: Many careers people assume are stable have seen significant layoffs due to automation, industry shifts, consolidation, and cost-cutting.
Examples mentioned:
• Aerospace
• Telecom / Network Engineering
• Media & Entertainment Production
• Automotive Engineering
• Federal Civil Service
• Pharma & Biotech
• Logistics & Supply Chain
• Sales & Marketing
• Animal Health
• Accounting
——————————
Not part of the TL;DR: Jobs that tend to show lower layoff risk usually involve work that’s hard to automate and always needed locally.
Examples:
• Nurses
• Doctors
• Electricians
• Plumbers
• Teachers
• Public-sector administrative roles
From the article:
1. Aerospace
2. Telecom & Network Engineering
3. Media & Entertainment Production
4. Automotive Engineering
5. Federal Civil Service
6. Pharma & Biotech
7. Logistics & Supply Chain
8. Sales & Marketing
9. Animal Health
10. Accounting
The list of jobs seems obviously at risk. Who thought they’d be safe?
this is why people need a social safety net from the volatility of the marketplace
Even trades are suffering, a position conservatives often have held is that young adults should learn a trade instead of going to a university. The problem is, they come out of those programs and are facing the exact same problems that university students are: no jobs. They have education but not enough experience to get anything.
While you can’t outsource your electrician, there is a finite demand.
Anyone who has worked in Aerospace for a while has never really considered it truly stable, it’s a highly cyclical industry where layoffs have always been fairly commonplace
I’m curious if the programmers started to become defensive at some point. Or did they all feel the pressure to ‘be the first.’ It seems like they are literally programming themselves out of a career.
As someone who works in Pharma and Biotech, this article isn’t very… good. There may be a slowdown, but that’s pretty much the whole economy.
But I have never heard of the companies listed, they’re certainly not the big players, and 15k jobs lost from 2.3m is hardly noteworthy.
This is a repost of an obviously AI-generated slop article.
It’s about time to unsubscribe I guess from this sub.
This is because the american economy is collapsing in live view.
Loans, credit, P&Es, debt to income, none of the economy works for 99% of Americans anymore.
We shipped every job we could to China because billionaires paid politicians to let them. We privatized our social services and let those companies lay off as much as possible.
The American economy just doesnt pencil anymore. It’s just so much more evident after the free stimulus money ran out and these awful Frankenstein companies with terrible products and terrible services couldn’t keep raising the rates to justify low sales.
This article is pretty shit. Aerospace has always been considered a cyclical industry that is very much tied to who is writing contracts in Washington. The commercial side fluctuates with the economy. Similarly there is a long history of layoffs in the automotive sector as well. The biggest recently being in 2008 when the economy cratered.
Phew. Gonna be a while before a bot can flip chicken on a charcoal pit
I think stability is relative. In reality, no job is completely secure.
“Sales and marketing have long been viewed as essential revenue drivers, roles that companies cut only as a last resort during downturns”
Yeah right, marketing is usually a post they cut first. Horse shit. The entire article reads like AI.