How Pixar Bosses Saved Their Employees from Layoffs

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How Pixar Bosses Saved Their Employees from Layoffs
by Robert Quigley | 10:07 am, January 11th, 2011


Today, Pixar may be a multibillion dollar company seemingly capable of doing no wrong in the box office, but in its early days as Lucasfilm’s computer animation division, its future was far from certain. Indeed, in the mid-’80s, some at Lucasfilm doubted the value of computer animation, and the division faced deep layoffs. Then, its two heads, Alvy Ray Smith and Ed Catmull, saved it in a positively Pixaresque way.

The Harvard Business Review recently spoke to 25+ year Pixar vet Craig Good, who recounted the remarkable story:

[Lucasfilm president Doug] Norby was pressing Catmull and Smith to do some fairly deep layoffs. The two couldn’t bring themselves to do it. Instead, Catmull tried to make a financial case for keeping his group intact, arguing that layoffs would only reduce the value of a unit that Lucasfilm could profitably sell … But Norby was unmoved. As Craig tells it: “He was pestering Ed and Alvy for a list of names from the Computer Division to lay off, and Ed and Alvy kept blowing him off. Finally came the order: You will be in my office tomorrow morning at 9:00 with a list of names.”

So what did these two bosses do? “They showed up in his office at 9:00 and plunked down a list,” Craig told me. “It had two names on it: Ed Catmull and Alvy Ray Smith.”

The gutsy move worked, and not a single employee of what would soon become Pixar was fired. Not long afterwards, Lucasfilm spun Pixar off as its own company under Catmull’s and Smith’s leadership, selling it to Steve Jobs for $5 million; two decades later, Disney would buy it for $7.4 billion.




I love this story. http://www.geekosystem.com/how-pixar-bosses-saved-their-employees-from-layoffs/
 
Wouldn't it be nice to be so critical to the future of an enterprise, to essentially dicate terms to your employer?
 
I read a very interesting book about the entire Pixar story a few months ago. I think it was either titled Pixar or The Pixar Touch . I got it from my library and really enjoyed it. They did a lot of gutsy and risky moves to get to where they are now! It also tells about how they came to be with Disney and how Eisner really was a problem with that deal.
 

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