I went to work for BearCom by way of an acquisition. I can honestly say, no one was let go...but some positions simply ceased to exist due to them now being redundant. We were the last acquisition to be completely re-branded and we went from being an established MSS to BearCom within a week and it cost us 30% of our public safety work due to local agencies who had tried BearCom before and were not happy no longer wanting to do business with us (cost us some non-public safety customers as well).
BearCom made some pretty large changes to our sales team that thinned them out (due to overlapping territories now sales reps on our side had to expand to areas that kept them from home). On the technical services side, we really felt like the red-headed step children...getting permission to get training was like pulling teeth (but was required to qualify for specific contracts), we couldn't get approvals to get equipment calibrated etc.
Then Bearcom acquired Staley and Advanced Electronics and wouldn't you know it, they got to keep their names and simply became "A BearCom Company"...maybe they learned something from that one but it was above my position. We also went from being partnered with an engineering firm (which gave me a PE to work under for my EIT) to not having any PE's on staff until Staley was acquired (didn't do me any good since my stuff was with the Texas board of Engineers).
Anyway, my wife got a good job offer that allowed me to transfer to the corporate office where I worked under a GM I absolutely loved who also had a lot more pull being a longtime manager at BearCom, so if I came to him with a justification of why I needed something (training, equipment, etc) he saw to it that it got approved. However, I also went from being a system specialist to essentially an installer with some troubleshooting work occasionally and I wasn't overly excited about the jobs I was doing simply because they did not meet my quality standards to a point where I was comfortable putting my name on them.
Anyway, after 34 months at BearCom and the last remaining service employee of that MSS, I resigned and basically walked out on the industry. Honestly right now, the three options are BearCom, MCA/Crosspointe or a small mom-n-pop and what has become acceptable over the last 3 or 5 years has really gotten me questioning whether or not I want to attempt to get back into the industry which is very sad as RF is my passion.
Perhaps I'll have a better perspective in another year or so.