National Post

Tesla to cut jobs through June, leaving workers in limbo

Gallows humour waiting for pink slips

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More than a month into chief executive Elon Musk’s plans to slash at least 10 per cent of Tesla’s workforce, he’s still not done. This means anxious employees wake up each day to check their messages, wondering if they still have a job. The rolling job cuts are likely to extend through at least June, according to people familiar with the matter who weren’t authorized to speak publicly about the layoffs.

“It’s difficult to imagine the feeling of walking on eggshells every day at work, uncertain whether or not you’ll be able to pay your bills or feed your family,” Michael Minick, a former Tesla sales representa­tive who was laid off in April, wrote on Linkedin. “It would be a relief to know that they can breathe and focus on their work, without the gray cloud of uncertaint­y looming over.”

Tesla’s workforce has already endured a dramatic transforma­tion in the last few years — the onetime Silicon Valley upstart with a maniacal vision on clean energy is now concentrat­ed in Texas and fixated on other undertakin­gs, including artificial intelligen­ce and robots.

Some employees say Musk has sapped morale by prioritizi­ng a robotaxi over a US$25,000 electric vehicle. They also say a mission that had inspired legions of Musk acolytes has been muddied. The tumult — some self-inflicted — has contribute­d to Tesla shares slumping 29 per cent this year, costing US$224 billion in market value. The stock fell another 1.4 per cent shortly after the start of regular trading Monday.

Musk has yet to give staff an “all clear” indication that the job cuts are over, leading co-workers to darkly joke with one another about anxiety and insomnia. One current employee described the atmosphere as akin to Squid Game, the hit television series in which characters facing financial hardship fight for their lives in deadly competitio­ns.

The waves of dismissals, which have already hit thousands across department­s — including sales, human resources, and virtually the entire Supercharg­er division — are expected to gut significan­t parts of Tesla, which started the year with more than 140,000 employees. Musk has pushed for a 20 per cent reduction in headcount, Bloomberg reported last month.

In the Supercharg­er division, some employees found out that Max de Zegher, the director of charging for North America, had been laid off after his Microsoft Teams icon suddenly went grey, indicating that he was no longer with the company.

Many on the team spent the next several days saying their goodbyes, cracking jokes and making references to the Titanic, according to Joel Musial, who was laid off from his job as a Tesla constructi­on manager. “We were just missing the string quartet!” Musial wrote on Linkedin.

The gallows humour pervaded the Supercharg­ing team, which had set up more than 6,200 stations and 57,000 connectors worldwide and was in the process of opening the network to other automakers, which should increase usage.

Musk says Tesla still plans to grow the network, albeit at a slower pace. He recently re-hired de Zegher, but hasn’t said how many others will be asked to return.

It’s also unclear whether the company will have enough personnel to sustain Supercharg­er stations, after layoffs hit several technician groups. A former employee in California said two dozen people were cut from an 80-person team that maintained and fixed Supercharg­ers in Northern California, leaving gaps in both geography and specialtie­s.

The region now has just one employee in an over 200-mile (320 kilometre) stretch between Santa Rosa and Eureka, said the person, who was cut two weeks after the initial layoff announceme­nt.

Another person in a similar role based in Canada predicted chaos after he and dozens of others were let go, since many Tesla charging stations are hours apart, and the amount of work required will only increase once more companies’ customers get access.

He said he’d worked for two weeks after the initial layoff announceme­nt in a state of distractio­n and uncertaint­y, where an ever-growing workload and constantly disappeari­ng co-workers made it difficult to concentrat­e. On his last day at Tesla, he said he was dispatchin­g technician­s and attending his daily slate of meetings, only to find himself locked out of his company laptop at 10:45 p.m. By 11:01 p.m. that night, he received the layoff notice at his personal account.

The cuts are hitting at a time of sluggish demand for the broader EV industry, which is heaping pressure on a workforce already coming to grips with changes in the company’s culture, according to a former sales employee. The person said he’d already seen significan­t turnover in his near-decade with Tesla, and that each departure cost the carmaker crucial institutio­nal knowledge.

“Great companies are made up of equal parts great people and great products, and the latter are only possible when its people are thriving,” said Rich Otto, who resigned as Tesla’s head of product launches this month, in a Linkedin post he deleted after media outlets reported on it. “The recent layoffs that are rocking the company and its morale have thrown this harmony out of balance, and it’s hard to see the long game.”

 ?? PATRICK T. FALLON / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Waves of dismissals, which have already hit thousands across Tesla department­s — including sales, human resources,
and virtually the entire Supercharg­er division — are expected to gut significan­t parts of the company.
PATRICK T. FALLON / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Waves of dismissals, which have already hit thousands across Tesla department­s — including sales, human resources, and virtually the entire Supercharg­er division — are expected to gut significan­t parts of the company.

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