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64 jobs to go at Dyson in Malmesbury

5:21pm Friday 10th October 2008

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By Jill Crooks »

Staff at the Dyson factory in Malmesbury were this afternoon told that a third of all jobs in the research and development department are under review and up to 64 people could lose their jobs.

The bombshell was delivered by Dyson bosses Martin McCourt and Shaun Robinson to the staff in the research and development department.

Staff had no idea of the cuts until they received a letter this morning at work asking them to attend a meeting at the factory at 2.30pm. They were told 113 jobs in the department, which at present has more than 300 staff, are under review. If the proposals are carried out 64 jobs will be axed.

A Dyson employee in the research and development department told the Gazette: "We were told that 64 are going to be made redundant. We were told it was not about money or the current economic climate but about 'putting resources more effectively in more appropriate areas'.

"The mood among the staff was very sombre, people were stood there in shock. Grown men were so close to breaking down in tears.

"I am devastated. We are all worried about our families and our mortgages.

"I personally think this is due to the global economic crisis and I think the job losses here will result in work being outsourced to Malaysia and China.

"But Dyson is still making huge amounts of profits. Last year we had record profits and our profit margins now are the same or slightly higher."

The employee said that earlier this year 18 members of staff at the research and development department in Malmesbury were made redundant.

Dyson have told the staff that a 30 day consultation on the latest round of job losses will start on October 30.

The employee said: "It means that half of us will have lost our jobs by Christmas. We were looking forward to our Christmas bonuses, last year it was £1,000."

The research and development department works mainly on Dyson's vacuum cleaners.

The department has been divided into different areas for the purposes of making the redundancies - these are administration, technicians, electronics and support services.

A Dyson spokesman said this evening: “We’re ceasing a number of projects currently under way in China.

"Regrettably this means the loss of 78 roles in China and has the possible knock-on effect of 64 support role redundancies in the UK. Malmesbury continues to be our global headquarters and invention base, where we employ 1,200 people.”


Your Say YourGazette

frisbee2, Corsham says...
10:36am Sat 11 Oct 08

I am sure Mr Dyson is sincere about his support for British engineering and encouraging students into engineering and design (he uses the two terms interchangeably), but this proposal, (which is a business decision not an engineering decision), does nothing to portray engineering in the UK as a secure and worthwhile career path.

Both electronics and software engineering disciplines are affected by this proposal. However these disciplines do not figure highly, if at all in Mr Dyson's 'engineering spectrum'. Which is skewed toward industrial design.

spikyone, Chippenham says...
12:37pm Sun 12 Oct 08

It seems rather crass of a company who are likely to again make £100m+ of profit this year, to lay off staff in the current economic situation, particularly with redundancies likely to happen before Christmas.

Conspiracy theories that it will also avoid payment of £64,000 of Christmas bonuses (not that these should ever be expected) can only add to bitterness at what appears to be moving jobs to where they can be done cheaper, rather than better.

johnboy100, Melksham says...
11:42am Mon 13 Oct 08

I am afraid the research boys added little value to the process with very few new products coming out...we were told about new kitchen products but where are they ? and also Made in China ? might as well get the woolworths hoover for £20 !!

Current, Sydney, Australia says...
4:15am Wed 15 Oct 08

For a response from Dyson Australia see: http://www.current.c
om.au/2008/10/15/art
icle/KNDJQTOCSF.html


an_engineer, Chippenham says...
6:27am Sat 18 Oct 08

A business cannot survive on denial. The reality is that if Dyson had continued with it’s China operations and with its current head count in the UK the business would not have been sustainable. It is always sad when people have to be made redundant but unfortunately it has to happen to protect the business and its other employees. It is reassuring that a company like Dyson has a management team strong enough to make difficult decisions when required.
The real villains in all this are the UK government that has systematically made it impossible for UK engineering to exist and be competitive. I have read else where that James Dyson has had several discussions with government regarding their actions and how it affects industry but they still fail to act to support UK engineering.


A real engineer, Chippenham says...
2:06pm Sat 18 Oct 08

an_engineer wrote:
A business cannot survive on denial. The reality is that if Dyson had continued with it’s China operations and with its current head count in the UK the business would not have been sustainable. It is always sad when people have to be made redundant but unfortunately it has to happen to protect the business and its other employees. It is reassuring that a company like Dyson has a management team strong enough to make difficult decisions when required. The real villains in all this are the UK government that has systematically made it impossible for UK engineering to exist and be competitive. I have read else where that James Dyson has had several discussions with government regarding their actions and how it affects industry but they still fail to act to support UK engineering.
Is that really true? The article, and quotes talk of record profits, which would suggest 'UK engineering' is competitive. And are the 64 roles as a result of the China projects ceasing? From what I've heard that's not the case...

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Fears are growing for the future of James Dyson's Malmesbury factory James Dayson

Dyson's headquarters in Malmesbury

James Dayson



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