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Telecom Giant Ignores Elite Team’s Warnings And Dissolves Them, Losing Millions In Contracts And Triggering Layoffs

by Jeffrey Stone
December 3, 2025
in Social Issues

A Redditor unleashed a corporate shocker that’ll freeze your latte: one exec’s “brilliant” scheme gutted an elite overnight tech crew, sending multimillion contracts poof like donuts at a meeting. This powerhouse squad of 11 – FBI, NASA, White House on retainer – got axed so a leaving VP could spotlight his shiny new call center. Result? Total meltdown, dumped calls, and cash hemorrhaging like a slasher flick.

Our poster thrived on rare systems, warp-speed fixes, and buddy chats with global night-shift geniuses. But pride crushed pros, vanishing the dream team.

A VP’s botched call center merger axed an elite team, costing millions and causing mass layoffs.

Telecom Giant Ignores Elite Team's Warnings And Dissolves Them, Losing Millions In Contracts And Triggering Layoffs
Not the actual photo.

Cut my job? Say goodbye to millions of dollars!

I worked for a major (U.S.) telecommunications company for over 10 years.

One of the jobs I had there was as emergency overnight tech support for our major accounts.

I'm talking about accounts like emergency services, traffic lights, the FBI, NASA,

and the White House (I personally fixed the White House Chief of Staff's phone twice).

All of this was handled by 11 people in a call center that was one of two in the country that were open all night

(mainly for customers who were overseas). Because we were such a small team,

and the people we dealt with were the overnight I.T. people at their various companies, we were on a first-name basis with many of the techs who called us.

Then, one day, the VP of our company decides to step down as VP and take a job as the head of another call center.

His brilliant idea is to make HIS call center the ONLY call center for all business and government accounts in the country,

including the ones my team handled overnight. Naturally, this meant dissolving my team.

We were all very upset. We liked out job. Only the absolute best techs got to be on our team, and for good reason.

When something we handled went down, it had to be taken care of FAST, and some of the systems we dealt with were so obscure or old,

that no one at the company except us and our daytime colleagues even knew they existed.

This also meant that we had to be ready to answer at a moment's notice, so we spent most of the night doing nothing, just waiting for a call.

The companies and government entities paid extra for this quick response.

Even so, over the years, my team kept getting assigned more and more little jobs to do "between calls,"

which we handled easily because, well, we were the best. It was almost my dream job.

So when we get word that our jobs are going to this other call center that, until now, wasn't even open overnight, we were upset,

yet most of my team was still pretty supportive. We offered to train the new techs at the other call center,

some of us even offered to travel there for a week or so to do it, but we were all turned down.

Our last week on the job comes, and we're there mainly as backup for the new team in the other call center.

We're not being routed calls, but we're ready on chat if the new guys have any questions.

The questions start coming in, and they're NOT what we expected. Instead of asking about obscure, outdated systems that no one but us even knew about,

the new team is asking us about things like how to fill out a time sheet for a shift that starts before midnight and ends after. And this was their...

We end up answering really basic questions that anyone at our call center, much less anyone on our team, would have known, and we all got a bit worried.

Then the supervisor who asked me about the time sheets asks how many calls we typically get in a night,

and I say "oh, between two and five per person, usually." Then he asks how many people were on my team. "Eleven," I say, "Eight to ten on any given...

"Oh," the supervisor says. "We have thirty-three. I wondered why we were getting so few calls."

They didn't have to do the little tasks my team did between calls, either - they couldn't, they weren't even trained for the calls they were getting.

The next week, my team was transferred into the normal overnight call queue,

handling boring calls from people who didn't read or listen to the directions we gave them about how to make their phones work while overseas. Sigh.

A week after that, other regular overnight reps start asking me and the other former elite reps questions about systems that only we would know about. Suspicious.

A few days later, I get a call transferred to me, and it's one of the overnight I.T. guys from the major accounts.

I ask how he got hold of me, and he says that the first guy he talked to transferred him to me.

Turns out, of course, that the untrained reps at the new call center were still untrained,

so they were just dumping the calls into my call center's general queue and hoping that out of the 60 or so techs working there,

the one who'd pick up would be from the former major accounts team.

Since three of our eleven people had quit when our team was dissolved, the odds of that were pretty damn low, which meant it took multiple transfers,

which meant they weren't getting the help they needed in the time frame my company was contractually obligated to provide.

I went to the director of my call center to let him know about this, hoping it would mean that

since the new team was failing THAT hard, the company would see reason and reinstate my team again. Nope.

My director informed me that the team would not, under any circumstances, be reinstated at our call center.

I could tell he was not happy about this at all. So then came the malicious compliance.

My director told me and every other overnight tech at my center that if we were transferred a call for a major account, we were not to touch it,

as we were not authorized to handle those accounts. The next night, the accounts wouldn't even open for us,

because our "security clearance" had suddenly been revoked. We were to transfer all such calls back to the correct queue.

We were also instructed to forward any correspondence sent to us from the new major accounts team to our supervisors, whether chat or email.

In a few days, the transfers to our center stopped.

Now, I wish I could say that the company saw the error of its ways, my team was reinstated, and everything went back to the way it was, but it...

Instead, the company hemorrhaged major accounts like crazy. We lost accounts whose MONTHLY bills were in the millions of dollars

due to our failure to keep the terms of our contracts. Barely a month after it was created,

the overnight team at the other call center was disbanded, and the jobs outsourced.

Then the outsourcers started transferring the calls to my center. Again, I went to our director, hoping against hope my team would be reinstated.

Nope. But the transfers stopped. Again. And the company lost even more multi-million-dollar accounts.

Last year, the company announced the layoff of tens of thousands of employees.

I wonder why... I saw the writing on the wall, and got the hell out with the best severance package I could.

So did my call center director. He was no fool, either. All because some idiot executive had a "bright idea" and not even the slightest clue how to execute it.

Edit: Thanks for the votes and awards!

I especially love how people have listed basically every major telecom in the U.S. as a possible example of this level of idiocy.

Just goes to show that it's a systemic problem. I was afraid people might find this story too boring or depressing.

It has a happy-ish ending, though, because thanks to my generous severance package,

I am now able to pursue my actual dream job of being a professional writer.

One VP’s bright idea to consolidate overnight support for VIP clients – emergency services, traffic systems, even federal bigwigs – sounded efficient on a PowerPoint slide. In reality? It was like swapping a Formula 1 pit crew for rookies on training wheels.

The core clash of this whole corporate shake-up is simple: specialized skill versus cost-cutting bravado. The original 11-person team mastered arcane, legacy systems no one else touched, delivering fixes in minutes for premium fees. On the other hand, the new center, staffed with 33 unprepared reps, couldn’t even navigate time-sheet math.

When calls started slipping through crack, —transferred blindly to a general queue of 60, the contractual clock ticked past deadlines. Clients bailed, hemorrhaging millions monthly.

The Redditor’s director enforced “malicious compliance,” revoking access and bouncing calls back, accelerating the exodus.

Flip the lens: the VP likely saw overhead bloat: 11 elite salaries versus 33 entry-level ones. But he ignored the hidden sauce: downtime expertise, institutional memory, and trust built on first names.

Outsourcing followed, repeating the farce until mass layoffs hit. It’s a satirical tragedy of misplaced metrics.

This mirrors a broader plague: corporate short-termism. A 2023 McKinsey report found 70% of large-scale transformations fail due to underestimating employee impact and over-relying on untested restructuring. Here, skipping knowledge transfer was folly.

Leadership coach Herminia Ibarra, in her Harvard Business Review article “The Leader as Coach”, emphasizes the power of inquiry over instruction: “An effective manager-as-coach asks questions instead of providing answers, supports employees instead of judging them, and facilitates their development instead of dictating what has to be done.”

The VP’s refusal to tap the elite team’s offer to train successors ignored this wisdom, dooming the pivot before it started. After all, dismissing hands-on expertise in favor of top-down decrees is like trying to fix a rocket with a rubber band, ignoring the engineers who built it.

This coaching mindset isn’t just feel-good fluff, it’s a proven antidote to the isolation that creeps in at higher levels, where leaders often trade street-level savvy for corner-office spreadsheets.

Ibarra, drawing from real-world turnarounds like Microsoft’s cultural reboot under Satya Nadella, argues that true leaders create space for their teams to unearth solutions themselves. Think less “I know best” and more “What do you see from the trenches?”

In the Redditor’s saga, that could’ve meant embracing the training offers as a bridge, not a threat, turning potential rivals into allies and preserving those million-dollar contracts. Instead, the exec’s solo sprint left everyone stumbling in the dark, a classic case of command-and-control crashing into reality’s guardrail.

Neutral fix? Mandate cross-center shadowing, phased rollouts, and client feedback loops before slashing teams. Companies craving agility must protect tribal knowledge like crown jewels.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Some suspect the VP’s decision was a scheme to redirect contracts to a new venture.

The-True-Kehlder − Sounds to me like someone was planning to start a new business handling these accounts

and needed to k__l the contracts so his new company could get them.

[Reddit User] − All part of the plan, right? The new management team was brought in specifically to k__l that company

so that the CEO and board cold "retire" and liquidate with massive bonuses.

Some mock private industry’s inefficiency compared to government.

SnarkHuntr − It's stories like this one that always make me laugh when someone says "Private industry is always more efficient than government,

because when people's money is on the line performance is always rewarded and this leads to greater efficiency and less waste"

Any idea what happened to the VP with the bright idea?

It's been my experience that they usually manage to fail up - blaming any consequences

of their bad decisions on someone lower down in the food chain than they are.

Juggale − Ah I see you worked for that company! The one where change is supposed to energize us right?

Some satirize executives’ flawed decision-making processes.

AussieBirb − I think the following sums up what happens when someone high up gets a bright idea:

"I just had a great idea! (Going to make me look so great in the reviews)

Should I sanity check it with the people who know how things work? (The idea is simply perfect)

No ? (I don't need the help)

Fire the people who know how to do things and replace them with untrained staff to save a few dollars? (Saving money makes me look good)

Well that looks good on paper but what about the people who pay for the services who are no longer getting the service they pay for?

Where are they going to go anyway? They are leaving ? (Don't need them)

Great idea person looking into a mirror: "So hard to find good employees these days" (Clearly not my fault)".

Some criticize executives’ refusal to admit errors.

Shojo_Tombo − Said exec also lacked the testicular/breasticular fortitude to admit they were wrong.

That is a fatal flaw that I wish companies would recognize and eliminate those employees, even when they are near the top of the chain.

Mexatt − "I went to the director of my call center to let him know about this, hoping it would mean that

since the new team was failing THAT hard, the company would see reason and reinstate my team again. Nope."

Having worked for probably the same company:

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA Bureaucratic dysfunction and pig-headed doubling down on mistakes is baked into the RBOC cake.

Some share similar stories of corporate mismanagement.

Transientmind − Had a job similar to this once. Centre manager ran it into the ground.

I bailed before it got bad, but I distinctly remember being expected to train my better-paid, less-experiences/qualified replacement.

I could write a book about the incompetence and criminality in that place from management...

I felt very vindicated when I heard, a couple years later, that the center had been shut down.

tcinternet − This has to be a trend these days. Most of the tier 2 support teams I rely on for my job are being replaced

with call center techs who are clearly reading out of a binder. Thanks to you and your team for everything you did to stay the best.

I hope the trend starts swinging back the other way.

Some express sympathy and appreciate the story.

Dayvuni − These are stories I'm here for! I'm sorry you had to go through it, they did it to themselves and don't deserve the clients.

One exec’s ego trip torched a telecom titan, turning elite tech heroes into severance millionaires chasing writing dreams.

The Redditor dodged the sinking ship, smart move or sheer luck? Do you think the VP’s “consolidation” was doomed from slide one, or could humble pie have saved the day?

How would you safeguard irreplaceable know-how when suits start swinging the budget axe? Drop your hottest takes!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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