SAN FRANCISCO (BLOOMBERG) – With recession fears mounting – as well as inflation, the war in Ukraine and the lingering pandemic taking a toll – many technology companies are rethinking their staffing needs, with some of them instituting hiring freezes, rescinding offers and even starting layoffs.
TechCrunch reported earlier in July that more than 30,000 tech workers have been laid off in the last two months.
Microsoft, Google and Lyft are some of the latest companies to pull back. Microsoft said on Wednesday (July 20) it was eliminating many job openings. Google is pausing hiring for the next two weeks, while Lyft is shutting down a division and trimming jobs.
Here’s a look at the companies that are tapping the brakes:
Google’s parent company has been decelerating its recruiting efforts. Chief executive officer Sundar Pichai told staff this month that although the business added 10,000 employees in the second quarter, it will be slowing the pace of hiring for the rest of the year and prioritising engineering and technical talent. Alphabet had nearly 164,000 employees at end-March.
The e-commerce giant said in April that it was overstaffed after ramping up during the pandemic and needed to cut back. Amazon is subleasing some warehouse space and has paused development of facilities meant for office workers, saying it needs more time to figure out how much space employees will require for hybrid work. The company had 1.6 million workers as at March, making it the biggest employer in the tech world.
The company is planning to slow hiring and spending at some divisions next year to cope with a potential economic slump, according to sources. But this is not a companywide policy, and the iPhone maker is still moving forward with an aggressive product release schedule. Apple had 154,000 employees in September last year.
The ride-hailing firm told employees it was reining in hiring in May after its stock dropped precipitously. The company went further this week, announcing plans to shutter its car rental business and cut about 60 jobs. Lyft had about 4,500 employees in 2021.
The parent of Facebook has slashed plans to hire engineers by at least 30 per cent. CEO Mark Zuckerberg told employees that he was anticipating one of the worst downturns in recent history. The company had more than 77,800 employees at the end of March.
The company told workers in May that it was slowing down hiring in the Windows, Office and Teams groups as it braces for economic volatility. It had 181,000 employees in 2021. More recently, the software maker cut some jobs – less than 1 per cent of its total – as part of a reorganisation. This week, the company said it began eliminating many job openings – a freeze that will last indefinitely.
The streaming giant has had several rounds of highly publicised layoffs since it reported the loss of 200,000 subscribers in the first quarter. It cut 150 employees in May and 300 in June. Last quarter, it reported US$70 million (S$97.5 million) in expenses from severance and shed an additional 970,000 subscribers. Netflix had 11,300 employees in 2021.
The maker of the Pokemon Go video game fired 8 per cent of its team in June. It was an effort to streamline operations and position the company to weather economic storms, CEO John Hanke told staff in an e-mail. Niantic had around 800 employees at the end of last year.
The music-streaming service is cutting employee growth by about 25 per cent to adjust for macroeconomic factors, CEO Daniel Ek said in a note to staff in June. The company has more than 6,500 employees, according to its website.
In June, the electric-vehicle maker cut 200 workers as it closed a facility in California. CEO Elon Musk said about 10 per cent of salaried employees would lose their jobs over the next three months, though the overall headcount could be higher in a year. The company had 100,000 employees globally at the end of last year.
It started a hiring freeze and began rescinding job offers in May, amid uncertainty surrounding Mr Musk’s potential acquisition of the company. The company had 7,500 employees in 2021.
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MCI (P) 031/10/2021, MCI (P) 032/10/2021. Published by SPH Media Limited, Co. Regn. No. 202120748H. Copyright © 2021 SPH Media Limited. All rights reserved.