Last Wednesday—a week ago yesterday—I read two stories that had nothing to do with each other, except they somehow breathed the same air. In a funny but uncanny way they echoed each other.
Amazon lays off 16,000 employees
One story was widely reported. On that day, Amazon laid off 16,000 workers ... and notified them by accident. You can find the basic story multiple places around the Internet—for example, here. Discussion on LinkedIn (for example here and here) fleshed out some of the details. In principle it is no surprise these days when a tech giant announces layoffs. What was surprising in this case was precisely that Amazon failed to announce them! The layoffs just kind of happened all by themselves, or so it seemed, and then were referenced off-handedly in other, subsequent emails. Finally there was an official announcement (you can read it here), but only after the damage had been done. Amazon employees shared their experience on Reddit. [Quotes are mostly as-is, and not edited for grammar or spelling.]
I work in SLU. I went to check on my baby at 2am and got and email at 230 that I've been let go. What a great day....
i got a txt saying check your personal email before coming to work; work email was disabled. so yeah, break up over txt.
I didn't know until I got to Blackfoot at 0530 this morning, and my badge didn't work. Tried to slack my boss, and no slack access. Went to email, no email access. After being escorted out of the lobby, got the email in my personal account that my position was eliminated.
Dam I’m at Blackfoot and had to pack up my coworkers stuff.
Again, what's remarkable about this story is not that thousands of people were laid off, but that the communications were handled so ineptly.
Dorx Communications shuts off one account
The second story was a lot smaller. A blogger I follow was moving from Rhode Island to Maryland, and tried to cancel the Internet service at his old lodgings. John Michael Greer tells the story as follows:
In the process of getting all my Rhode Island utilities shut down and all my Maryland ones switched on, I contacted my former [Internet] provider―to keep the lawyers at bay, let’s call the firm Dorx Communications, shall we? You can get almost any other imaginable service from the Dorx website with a few clicks, but shutting off service is a different matter entirely. You have to go to chat, put up with the maunderings of their clueless robot, and get transferred to a supposedly live agent, who then does everything possible to keep you from doing what you’ve come there to do. I slogged patiently through the process, and finally got the allegedly live person to agree that my service would be shut off on January 30.
The moment the chat ended, my phone and internet access shut down. When I walked three blocks to the local public library to get online and contacted Dorx to inform them politely that they’d made a mistake, I found that my shutoff order had been redated to that day, January 18. What’s more, once I was in my account, I was unable to access the chat function at all. It was a pretty obvious middle finger from the dorks at Dorx.
What do these stories have in common?
Both stories involve companies doing something unpleasant. In each case, the company behaves in ways that look to be at best careless and callous; and in each case it is easy to slide from that (admittedly generous) perspective towards one that evaluates the company's actions as "a pretty obvious middle finger." But I have to disagree with Greer. When he reads Dorx's behavior as hostile, he is forgetting an important principle that the Internet calls Hanlon's Razor.
"Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity."
Stupidity is always a risk. It is especially a risk in the actions of corporations, and even more especially in the actions of large corporations.
But why?
At the most basic level, stupidity is always a risk because we are all human beings, and human beings make mistakes. That's why there is such a discipline as Quality in the first place—to protect against the inevitability of human failure.
Stupidity is a risk in the actions of corporations because many of the "actions" that corporations take aren't based on the decision of any single individual. Multiple people have to work together, often through business processes, and nobody sees the whole picture. Outcomes are the result of the processes themselves rather than of a concrete decision. And if a process is not very well-designed, it can misfire. This is why John Seddon says that his first step working with a new client is to send top management to the front office to watch a single order come in, and then to track that order through its life-cycle. Invariably they learn that the company's systems actually work very differently from how they are supposed to work! (I discuss the point at greater length in this post here.)
And stupidity is especially a risk in the actions of large corporations because those organizations have disporportionately many employees on the inside, where their only contact is with other employees and they are insulated from customers. This means that they are (overall) more likely to trust their business processes than the employees of small companies, because they have fewer opportunities for disconfirmation or falsification.* If unhappy customers can walk into your store and disrupt your day, you are more likely** to take care to keep them happy regardless what the process tells you to do.
Constant vigilance
Of course, at some level everyone knows all this. As noted, the only reason we have a Quality discipline in the first place is that everyone knows people are fallible. But it is important to understand that the most any Quality system can ever do is to help. No system can ever eliminate the risk of human stupidity.
And even the best system can grow flabby and ineffective over time. In earlier posts, I have cited Amazon as a company that strove to avoid bureaucratization. Back in November 2019, Franklin Foer wrote in The Atlantic that "In contrast to the dysfunction and cynicism that define the times, Amazon is the embodiment of competence, the rare institution that routinely works."*** And yet here was Amazon, just one week ago, laying off 16,000 employees without remembering to let them know!"The embodiment of competence"? Well, times change. (For other examples, search this blog site for "Boeing.")
Ultimately the only way to avoid stupid mistakes is through constant vigilance. Quality systems can help. Caring about your work makes a huge difference. Paying attention, following through ... all these things are pretty basic. But they are also frighteningly easy to lose track of.
Constant vigilance.
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* In the sense made famous by Sir Karl Popper. See also, for example, this discussion of bureaucracy, which highlights the connection to size.
** Of course this is no guarantee. Small companies fail too.
*** Franklin Foer, "Jeff Bezos's Master Plan," The Atlantic, November 2019, p. 58.










