AM I NEXT? NO LOVE AT JULEP

Am I Next? Mass layoff at Julep - Seattle, Washington.

Online cosmetics and personal care products marketer Seattle,Washington-based Julep has hit the skids and will be laying off 102 employees as they move their headquarters to New York City, New York and close their local stores.

This is a classic entrepreneurial tale where the story sells the concept, attracts significant venture capital, and then fails to scale or the parent company simply runs out of cash.

Julep, founded in 2007 by former Starbucks and Boston Consulting Group executive Jane Park, hit a rough spot when it was accused of using deceptive ‘negative option’ marketing tactics in their subscription box sales of beauty and personal care items and was ordered to pay a hefty fine.

The company was acquired shortly after the settlement by the New York City-based Glansaol in December 2016 with the intent to supplement the company’s portfolio of synergistic beauty companies. Glansaol (meaning pure life’ in Irish) was founded by former Revlon President and CEO Alan Ennis, an Irishman, and financed by the private equity firm Warburg Pincus to market beauty and personal care products and has filed for Chapter 11 pending the sale of certain assets to AS Beauty including beauty brands like Julep, Laura Geller,and Clark’s Botanicals.

According to a statement by Glansaol CEO Nancy Bernardini, “The board and management team have thoroughly assessed all of our strategic options and are confident that the proposed sale process represents the best path forward for the company. We are pleased to have entered into an asset sale agreement with AS Beauty and are excited for the company’s future.”

Just because something bad hasn't happened yet, doesn't mean it won't. It can happen to anyone, anytime, anywhere ... are you now wondering, Am I Next?

AM I NEXT? BROADCOM - CA TECHNOLOGIES

Am I Next> Broadcom lays off 2,000 employees after acquisition of CA technologies.

It should come as no surprise that San Jose, California-based Broadcom, the semiconductor chip manufacturer that acquired New York City, New York-based commercial software developer CA technologies on November 5, 2018, immediately announced the layoff of up to 2,000 CA employees days after the completion of the $18.9 billion acquisition. The layoffs mainly occurred in Islandia, New York and New York City.

Spouting the usual corporate platitudes, a Broadcom spokesperson noted, “As with any acquisition, we seek to align skills and resources to most effectively pursue today’s market opportunities. This inevitably requires reductions in select areas of the company. These are difficult but necessary decisions.”

My life in the IBM mainframe world was made immeasurably better with CA products, especially those involved with security, tape library management, and ad hoc reporting.

It can happen to anyone, anytime, anywhere ... are you wondering, Am I Next?