Blizzard are willing to treat many of their staff like shit. The bigwigs being held to account is a very, very good thing. If they don’t change, then they deserve all the brain drain they’ll get. I mean, its fine for the staff who get to be in the old boys club, so to speak.https://twitter.com/jasonschreier/status/1291112294026555392 …
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Replying to @BellularGaming
Richard Hoeg Retweeted Richard Hoeg
It is certainly more nuanced than Jason portrays. https://twitter.com/hoeglaw/status/1290703891638738951?s=21 …https://twitter.com/HoegLaw/status/1290703891638738951 …
Richard Hoeg added,
Richard Hoeg @HoegLawBloomberg (and reporter Jason Schreier) have reported on a Wage "Revolt" at Blizzard Entertainment. But is it really less than meets the eye?#VirtualLegality: "No One’s Forced To Work For Blizzard: The Hard Truth About Salaries (VL277)" https://youtu.be/N45GQjGi5qs pic.twitter.com/aEXnEaCitE1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @HoegLaw
Oh I agree there. People have the foot vote, and if Blizzard can get away with it, then it is sensible enough. I’d say though that it is short sighted - Blizz brain drain will erode their long term prospects.
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Replying to @BellularGaming
I tend to agree. They appear to have cut too close to the bone on a generalized level (50%+ unhappy is a bad sign), but it’s definitely a complex issue.
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I’d overall say it’s a symptom of blind self justifying internal burocracy wielded bluntly from the top. Plus the standard Cali company cult angle worming its way in. I don’t think many would believe Blizzard have been anywhere close to reaching their potential as of late.
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