Boeing to layoff 10% workforce to boost efficiency but risks losing top talent: Report
Boeing Co. will begin issuing layoff notices on Wednesday to employees impacted by its latest round of job cuts, a move that reflects the company's effort to boost efficiency while striving to retain a skilled workforce critical for future growth, Bloomberg reported.
The 10% workforce reduction, announced last month, will affect approximately 17,000 employees as Boeing attempts to regain its competitive edge after several challenges, including production setbacks following a serious accident in January and a seven-week strike that stalled much of its operations.
However, Boeing’s strategy carries risks. Overly deep or misdirected cuts could hinder its long-term recovery from recent struggles.
Traditionally, manufacturers like Boeing could rely on furloughed workers returning to their roles, but Covid-era layoffs led to a significant permanent loss of highly skilled workers, including top engineers and mechanics.
Today's labour market offers more opportunities for aerospace workers, with Seattle’s unemployment rate at around 4%, and demand high in the region's growing space sector.
Competitors such as SpaceX, Blue Origin LLC, and Amazon’s Project Kuiper are all seeking talent to support expanding operations in Seattle, where Boeing produces most of its commercial planes, according to Stan Shull, a space industry analyst and consultant at Alliance Velocity LLC, according to the Bloomberg report.
These roles span projects from Starlink satellites at Musk’s company to rockets, space stations, and lunar landers at Bezos’s firm.
Shull notes that over 1,350 positions are open across more than 50 space companies in the Puget Sound area. While engineers are in high demand, employers also need machinists, administrative support, sales, marketing staff, and other roles.
Boeing experienced a loss of top talent when it struggled to scale up production of the 737 Max, as executives admitted they underestimated the training required to get new hires up to speed.
Despite the risks, Boeing remains overstaffed for its current production demands, especially after the recent 53-day strike that halted operations across the west coast.
The company began this year with 171,000 employees, a 12% increase from five years ago, when production was at its pre-crisis peak.
Worker relations reached a low point during the strike, which ended only after Boeing made significant concessions, including a 38% wage increase. Still, many employees feel Boeing has underpaid them for years, and tensions remain.
Kelly Ortberg, hired in August as Boeing's new CEO, has stated that the 10% workforce cut is part of a broader initiative to eliminate inefficiencies, said the Bloomberg report.
"We need to reset priorities and create a leaner, more focused organization," Ortberg said during the Oct. 23 earnings call, adding that the cuts aim to "consolidate areas where we're not efficient" and reduce "non-essential activity."
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