Juul just laid off 650 workers after federal investigations rocked the company. Workers who were affected describe how it was handled and what they saw leading up to it.
simply click here to claim your deal and get access to all exclusive Business Insider PRIME content.
The e-cigarette company said it was adding an average of 300 employees a month, including upward of 30 new employees a week in some offices around the US, several former employees told Business Insider.last year after an investment from the tobacco giant Altria, which was bracing itself for a future in which adult smokers were increasingly seeking alternatives to cigarettes.
The email went on to say that it was compliant with the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, which requires employers with 100 or more employees to provide 60 days' notice ahead of mass layoffs, and that Juul was paying severance that exceeded the law's requirements. Crosthwaite and Fahlbusch's email was one of the few official forms of communication from the company about the layoffs, though, several former employees told Business Insider.
"If you got a calendar invite, that was the sign that you were on the way out," a former San Francisco-based employee said.
France Dernières Nouvelles, France Actualités
Similar News:Vous pouvez également lire des articles d'actualité similaires à celui-ci que nous avons collectés auprès d'autres sources d'information.
NY Attorney General announces lawsuit against Juul for e-cigarette marketingNew York Attorney General Letitia James announced a lawsuit against Juul, the e-cigarette company, because of its marketing practices.
Lire la suite »
Juul wanted to revolutionize vaping. It took a page from Big Tobacco's chemical formulasJuul wanted to distance itself from a toxic past. But new evidence depicts a Silicon Valley start-up that harvested the tobacco industry’s technical savvy to launch a 21st-century nicotine arms race.
Lire la suite »
Juul wanted to revolutionize vaping. It took a page from Big Tobacco's chemical formulasDocuments reviewed by The Times reveal that the chemical formula that makes Juul so palatable and addictive dates back more than four decades — to Reynolds' tobacco laboratories.
Lire la suite »