Photo by Tina Bosse on Unsplash
This isn't the first round of tech layoffs since the end of the pandemic, but this time the cuts aren't sector-specific. Everyone's getting slammed, said Roger Lee, founder of Layoffs.fyi, a site that tracks the cutbacks.
"Earlier in the year, layoffs in tech were concentrated within food, transportation, and finance startups — but at this point it's hitting every sector within tech," he told Yahoo Finance.
CompTIA Chief Research Officer Tim Herbert said the cuts are related to the broader macroeconomic climate, which has taken a turn for the worse as the Fed continues to hike rates in an attempt to fight inflation.
"The Federal Reserve remains intent on slowing the economy, so some corresponding degree of slowing in the labor market is inevitable," he said.
Yahoo Finance has compiled an ongoing list of recent tech layoffs — one that's likely to keep growing, Lee said, noting: "The pain won't end until the Fed's able to get a handle on inflation."
DoorDash (DASH) said on Nov. 30 that it's cutting 6% of its workforce, which comes out to 1,250 jobs. The company had staffed up to support its pandemic growth and is now cutting back to cope with the slowdown in demand, CEO Tony Xu told employees.
HP (HP) is planning to lay off between 4,000 and 6,000 employees over the next three years as computer sales have lagged. This news comes about a year after HP announced it would be cutting as many as 9,000 jobs.
Roku (ROKU) said it would cut 200 jobs in a Nov. 17 SEC filing. The company cited "economic conditions" in a statement, as it cut about 5% of its workforce.
Amazon (AMZN) recently laid off 10,000 employees, about 3% of its corporate workforces. The e-commerce giant had previously put a hold on "new incremental hires in [its] corporate workforce," the company said in a statement on Nov. 3. In October, the e-commerce giant put a hold on hiring in for its retail business.
Amazon experienced explosive growth during the pandemic as shoppers flocked to the online retailer for everything from toilet paper to video games. But the company over-expanded, and CEO Andy Jassy is looking for ways to cut costs, including subletting parts of its warehouses.
Ride sharing service Lyft (LYFT) is laying off 683 employees, or 13% of its workforce, the company said in a Nov. 3 Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing. This is the second time in less than a year that Lyft has passed out pink slips. In July, the firm laid off 60 employees from its rental division. According to Lyft, the latest move will cost the company $27 million to $32 million in restructuring and charges for employee severance and benefits.
Meta (META) laid off 11,000 workers in November, as CEO Mark Zuckerberg said that he'd grossly miscalculated the macroeconomic climate.
Meta's stock has been in free fall for months, as a drop in advertiser spending and Apple's iOS privacy changes bite into the company's revenue. In Q3, the company reported its second ever year-over-year revenue decline. The company's shares have only started to pop recently, in the aftermath of the layoffs that came down last week.
Simultaneously, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is attempting to pivot his social media empire into a metaverse-first company. The transition, however, is costing the firm billions, and the price, he says, will only increase in 2023.
Opendoor (OPEN) laid off about 550 people, or 18% of the company's employees, CEO Eric Wu announced in a blog post on Nov. 2. The real–estate tech company went public via SPAC in December 2020; Opendoor's shares are down about 84% year-to-date.
While not laying off employees, chip giant Qualcomm (QCOM) has announced a hiring freeze in response to the slowdown in smartphone sales. Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon announced the freeze during the company’s Q4 earnings report, during which the company revealed lower-than-expected guidance for Q1.
While Amon didn’t mention job cuts, he did say that the chip designer is prepared to further reduce operating expenses if need be.
Snap (SNAP) cut roughly 20% of its workforce in August as it continues to struggle with slowing ad sales. The company saw revenue growth of just 6% in Q3, its slowest ever. Still, daily active users increased by 19%, to 363 million.
Advertisers are pulling back on ad sales as interest rates, inflation, and currency fluctuations hit corporate budgets. And that, in turn, is hitting Snap’s bottom line. It’s not just ad sales, though. Apple’s iOS privacy changes are also still impacting the company and other social media sites, making it more difficult for advertisers to specifically target potential customers.
In a Nov. 3 email to employees, Stripe CEO Patrick Collison announced that the company is laying off 14% of its total workforce. In the message, Collison explained that the payment processing company hired too many employees and blamed the broader macroeconomic environment for the decision.
The company said it will provide impacted workers with two weeks of severance pay, 2022 bonuses, pay out paid time-off, and pay the cash equivalent of six months of health care premiums.
Just a week after taking the reins at Twitter in October, Elon Musk halved the company’s workforce, laying off roughly 3,800 employees. After the announcement, Musk said that he needed to make the move because Twitter is losing $4 million per day.
After the layoffs, Twitter reportedly asked a number of employees to return to the company because they were too important to certain operations.
Read the full report here