White
Dog and The White Dog Army
Wonderful
World Wednesday
White Dog hates when the headlines scream of
another corporate downsizing costing thousands their jobs or when a plant that
has sustained an entire community for generations shuts its doors turning out
hundreds of loyal workers without other job options. We hate when executives
make million dollar bonuses at the same time workers take paycuts just to keep
their jobs. Like many, the White Dog Army assumes corporate activities are
always self-serving and without compassion.
It made us stop and take notice when we read
the story below. It is the story of a corporation that cared about its employees
and went the extra mile to share a surge in good fortune. It is about a
business that understands that it was built and maintained by loyal employees...humans
with families who deserved respect and loyalty in return. It is about sharing
success at every level. If only more companies had this same sense of doing
what is right, the world would indeed be more wonderful.
Before
OMGPOP Sold For $210 Million,
the CEO Hired Back Everyone He Laid Off and Made
Sure They Cashed In
Carlson Business Insider, April 9, 2012
Carlson Business Insider, April 9, 2012
A few months ago, OMGPOP was about to go bust. Its Facebook games
weren’t performing and prospects were so bleak, CEO Dan Porter was forced to
lay off several of the startup's flash developers.
Then OMGPOP
launched a mobile game called Draw Something, and everything changed. Days
after its launch, Draw Something was an obvious hit. Within weeks, it became
the most popular iPhone/Facebook game out there. 35 million people downloaded
it in six weeks.
Social games
biggie Zynga came calling with a ton of cash, and bought OMGPOP for $210
million.
So what
happened to those people Porter laid off? The answer to that question is a
pretty dramatic story with a happy ending.
We first
heard it from an industry source in New York. Then we checked around. Here's a
lightly edited telling of the tale from someone else – an unimpeachable,
first-hand source with knowledge of the situation (This source asked us not to
use his or her name out of respect to Zynga's quiet period.):
OMGPOP was
not getting traction on Facebook, but it still had a bunch of flash developers.
Porter could
have moved them around to mobile or other projects but money was running tight.
To extend the company's runway, he had to let them go.
This move
bought OMGPOP another month or two of runway. It was purely a financial
decision and a really tough one. The company tried to find jobs for the people
who were fired.
Once Draw
Something took off and it looked like we might do a deal, CEO Dan Porter hired
the fired workers back ASAP. He was literally negotiating the deal and jamming
the re-hires back into payroll to make sure they were covered with hours
remaining in the close. Their options kept vesting and they benefitted from the
sale.
Porter
didn't have to do it. It was just the mensch thing to do.
There was
one guy who used to work for OMGPOP who was facing a deadline on whether or not
to exercises his options. He couldn't decide, and Porter didn't want him to
lose out, so he hired him as a contractor to extend his vesting as well. He
made money too.
Every single
employee got something from the deal, even new employees who hadn't reached
their cliff. Porter made sure it happened.
Reminder: Tomorrow, MAY 3,
join us in celebrating YoYoMa's very First Gotcha Day. For every comment left
we will donate $1.00 to the Blind
Dog Rescue Alliance. Please help make our boy's day as super special
as he is.
3 comments:
What a great story! I'll defiantly come by to help celebrate such an important day!
Dachshund Nola
EXCELLENT story!!! So tired of hearing bad news all the time! Very glad that all those people are back working!! We will pop over tomorrow for the special day!! xoxo Chloe and LadyBug
We are sick on the many rich companys too- who don't care about their employees
love
tweedles
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