When Circuit City announced that it was closing all of its stores it showed the true signs of the economy. Circuit City was a massive corporation employing over 30,000 employees which would all be without work within a few weeks time. Have you ever wondered what its like to be on the inside and try to work a liquidation sale? Its not an opportunity (an unfortunate one at that) many get to experience; in this case the complete downfall of Circuit City.
The entire write up can be read here but copied below are some of the better excerpts that show the true face of the corporate technology world as well as humanity at its finest.
"Being an active member of the Circuit City Associate Forum community, an online message board which Circuit City associates could post to using their employee logins, I constantly read through the things which get posted within the forums. On January 9th I remember hitting that F5 button to refresh the page and reading the news that announced the company's intention to sell itself. I was the first to find out at my location and broke the news to the managers and supervisors, we stood in silence for a moment around our firedog counter in shock and then began to wonder what to do. Our future was an uncertainty.
On January 16th we all woke up and went to work. We didn't expect the speed of the judgment, at about 10:22am a TV in the break room had been tuned to CNBC and were reporting their breaking news about Circuit City beginning the liquidation process and closing its stores nationwide. Four of us watched the announcement; thirty-four thousand associates were now going to become a part of the unemployment statistic. Corporate made an official announcement to our associates 20 minutes after that news segment.
On the day the liquidation was announced a few employees spent most of the day crying, these were mostly people who had worked there for most of their adult life."
"But these past 2/3 weeks have been CRAZY. We lost our manager a few weeks ago because he needed to be closer to home because of his kid on the way. We then got a new manager who JUST left a few days ago. We've since got some new guy who I've only met once....couldn't even tell you his name. Keeping track of who's in charge has been hell."
"While we all try to make the best of a terrible situation, some customers are there to send us back to careless land. 90% of all customers that walk into the store approach me and ask when they'll be having "all the good deals" to which I always say "I HAVE NO FRIGGIN IDEA". Circuit City did not exist anymore. The liquidators were in control of the prices and we had no control of anything. We don't even know when they were going to lower the prices. It's for this reason most of us have hid some type of item we've been eying throughout the store so we can buy them later when the prices are lower (haha). We've already had the cops over a few times and I expect them to keep visiting due to the continuation of violent shoppers with nasty attitudes."
"There was a lot of stolen stuff from the store. Mostly empty game cases and the biggest section with loss was..... Spanish music. I would find tons of CD cases just open with nothing in them."
"I looked in a shelving unit to see if anyone had stashed anything for the final days ( we searched the entire store and found tons of stuff. Lucky for the people who came the next morning to find GTA IV for $2). I had found an entire stash of acc. such as remotes and instructions for iPod docks and various stereos, including an Apple product with the remote and every dock adapter made. So logically I ask my manager what do do with all this stuff. "Trash it." Well can I have the iPod thing? "No, trash it." Awesome. So i proceed to throw away all this stuff."
















AMEN!!
The bottom lines workers are the ones who suffer due to the bad decisions of the management teams!
The bottom line workers are the ones who suffer due to the bad decisions of the management teams!
exactely and this, sadly, happens at most major american companies. take wally world for example, the largest retailer in the world. They hire butt-kissers straight out of college and put them in management training, meanwhile they have thousands of qualified individuals who could run circles around them already working for the company. They make it near impossible to get promoted above department manager, and they make it near impossible to get there to start with. But Jack Smith fresh out of college with an MBA gets sent straight to the front of the line with a 45,000 a year salary and company issued khaki pants. His whole career at the company consists of having underlings move stuff from one place to another, telling them to work faster, work harder, take their breaks but get the job done, and then firing them for some stupid reason because theyve been there for too long and they make too much. Meanwhile Jack gets promoted higher and higher.
It's like 2 pyramids side by side, one upside down, the more you get paid "input" the less you have to do "output".
These big companies pay their management 10x what their worth and when they do something wrong they go to another company and the process starts all over again.
Yeah, well I say 'good riddance'.
+1, esp with the "in context"
...People losing a LOUSY job.
So it is not too bad after all. It is not the same to be fired from the NASA.
So it is not too bad after all. It is not the same to be fired from the NASA.
well i'm sorry people can't have that dream job at the White House or working at the Louvre, but sometimes people have to take what they can get, maybe show a little more sympathy to the employees.
I miss the circuitcity. they actually didnt have a fake intranet with higher prices like best buy does
I just got 40% off the last cassette deck they had here, Sunday.
I know, how many people use those still? LOL
Really sucks so many people out of work, just like that!
Been there, done that, twice!!
This just means less competition for Best Buy, who can jack up already jacked up prices.
Not like I care since I get everything from Newegg or eBay, but there are still people out there who go to stores for electronic goods, and less competition isn't going to help them
Let's take my example. Right now, I have been shopping for a new computer. I looked around. Dell? Nah. HP? Meh, nope. Gateway? ROFL!
After, I went to my little computer shop here that's been open for about 10 years. They have a professionnal staff and don't scam people off. They have a good warranty and love helping people.
I think in this recession I'll start leaning towards helping small businesses thrive
sorry my company isn't folding any time soon, if my CEO was a dumbass then my wife would tell me that every evening when he came home.
I am sorry that you and other good people are losing their jobs, but CCity did stupid things and now they have to pay the price, sadly you are going to pay more than the CEO though, i'm sure he is getting a nice severance package out of the deal, while you'll be lucky to get a W2 on time next January.
Firstly, we were unable to get our Sony KDL-52 inch XBR LCD TV because Sony "could not provide the warehouse enough". We bought it as a special including a Blu-Ray player, Sony S550, Monster Power Surge (actually works and it came cheaper since it was a New Year Special), Monster Screen Cleaner, and finally since I wasn't there, my parents were conned about $300 extra to "calibrate the skin tones and adjust the color" + "we were forced to get the lousy Monster HDMI cable shorter than an iPod USB cable for $80 or it wouldn't work". I raised hell since it was a long time store supervisor and sadly we had to downgrade the TV to a V series (still good for price). We also got refunded for the incompetent decisions of my parents to get their TV setup through a "computer". Plain BS I fixed it better than what they haven't seen. Plus a friendly 25 year customer service rep refunded the cable. I do feel bad for the ACTUAL workers, not the corporate puppets. I wish them good luck.
Your CEO lives with you? That's friggin weird. Dude, make sense with your posts or we'll just dismiss you as another wingnut.
assuming you're joking.
maybe the people working there were part of the problem. Not just the higher ups......just a thought.
kinda funny that. I used to sell cars for a living. They always wanted us to sell them insurance. Insurance, insurance, insurance. I didn't like the idea of having to push something down someones throat that didn't want or need it. You know what I did? I quit. Yea, hard to believe you can actually quit a job and go find a new one.
Where did you end up?
thats great that you can just up and quit when ever you like. unlike the times nowadays you cannot find an decent paying part time job.
That may be un-American but it's also a way to afford grossly overpriced tech merchandise. An example was a 500Gb WD internal HD. Just the standard, routine HD. The Circuit City going out of business sale price was over $90 plus TAX! The first online store I checked, (which shall remain nameless), had the same, exact HD for $55, free shipping and NO TAX. This is egg-zactly what I was talking about.
Most of the sales guys do not know the products they are selling. The prices they quote are ridiculously high. I eill give just one example.
I was in New Jersey recently. I had to configure and reactivate a dual processor HP work station for my daughter. It was an old version with 2 USB 1 sockets on board. She had a LG USB2/Firewire external DVD re-writer and also needed a wireless Ethernet capability. My best option was to ad a USB2 PCI adapter and use it with a USB dongle. The best price anyone quoted was US$ 49/= plus NJ taxes. Here in India, in spite of high import duty an local taxes the same card retails for just around US$ 5/= with all necessary drivers and 1 year warranty. Both ere Chinese products with VIA chipsets. I had it brought over by my sister returning from a trip to India and the whole job was finished in under 15 minutes flat.
I can accept higher prices due to higher minimum wage (although undeserved from the sales person's intelligence) but this kind of difference in my opinion is day light robbery.
As as a result, since Ccity announced liquidation, every customer that I did work for in the past has called me and still want "MY" services. Ccity's liquidation is only a minor setback for associates who are self-driven.
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