For more than two decades, the U.S. tech industry has been a reliable source of booming stocks and cushy, high-paid jobs. In the span of weeks, the sheen has faded and the ax has fallen.
More than 24,000 tech workers across 72 companies have been laid off this month, adding to a total of 120,000 tech jobs lost this year, , which tracks job cuts in the tech industry. It's safe to say a reckoning is underway, even as each company is grappling with its own challenges. (See: .)
Many of the companies making public statements have cited at least one of two primary causes:
First, they hired a lot of employees during the pandemic, when people were extremely online. Now, the internet boom has faded, offline life has picked up, and those new employees seem too expensive.
Second, broader economic wobbles have made brands more reluctant to spend on digital ads–a source of revenue for many tech companies. High interest rates have put an end to the cheap-money era of venture capital.
Here are some of the companies that have announced the biggest job cuts.
Amazon: a reported 10,000 jobs
The online retail and cloud computing behemoth plans to lay off some 10,000 employees in corporate and technology jobs, on Monday. Amazon did not reply to an NPR request for confirmation of the report.
As of this fall, Amazon employed more than 1.5 million full- and part-time workers around the world, many in warehouses. The 10,000 expected layoffs would comprise about 3% of Amazon's corporate employees, according to the Times, and a significantly smaller share of its overall workforce.
The cuts reportedly will focus on Amazon's devices division, including Alexa, the company's virtual assistant technology, as well as its retail and human resources divisions.
Earlier this month, the company on corporate jobs. "We're facing an unusual macro-economic environment, and want to balance our hiring and investments with being thoughtful about this economy," wrote Beth Galetti, Amazon's senior vice president of people experience and technology.
Meta: 11,000 jobs
Facebook and Instagram's parent company, Meta, laid off 11,000 people last week – about 13% of its staff.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg attributed the cuts to overhiring during the pandemic. In a letter to staff, he cited a decline in e-commerce, the wider economic downturn, increased competition, and a decline in ad sales–the primary way the company makes money.
"I got this wrong, and I take responsibility for that," he wrote.
The layoffs come as the company has invested billions in the so-called metaverse, pitched as a virtual-reality future in which people will work, mingle, exercise and go to concerts. But it's an unproven bet on the future, and not all everyone is convinced it should be the social media company's focus.
Zuckerberg said the workforce cuts would affect the whole organization, with recruiting staff disproportionately affected due to fewer hires anticipated in the coming year. A hiring freeze through the first quarter of 2023 will continue.
Twitter: about 3,700 jobs
Billionaire Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk bought the social media platform at the end of October and wasted no time slashing its workforce. He the company's leadership, including its CEO, CFO, and top lawyer. on November 4, with about 50% of the staff cut.
"Regarding Twitter's reduction in force, unfortunately there is no choice when the company is losing over $4M/day,".
Co-founder and former CEO Jack Dorsey that he accepted blame for hiring too many workers in recent years.
"I own the responsibility for why everyone is in this situation: I grew the company size too quickly. I apologize for that," he wrote.
Musk's $44 billion purchase of Twitter – which he tried to get out of for several months – has saddled the company with $13 billion of new debt.
His short tenure at the top of Twitter has been marked by hasty changes quickly halted, including his plan for a revamped Twitter Blue verification service, which charged $8 a month to get a blue checkmark on one's account. Accounts impersonating celebrities, major corporations, and Musk himself proliferated immediately, spurring Twitter to halt Twitter Blue signups.
Key executives who were not fired, including Twitter's head of content moderation and safety on the platform, and the company's chief privacy officer and compliance officer,.
Stripe: about 1,000 jobs
Payment processing platform Stripe that it was cutting 14% of its workforce.
Stripe CEO Patrick Collison wrote in an email to employees that the pandemic pushed the world toward e-commerce, spurring the company's growth.
The CEO said he and his brother and co-founder John Collison had made "two very consequential mistakes": being too optimistic about the internet economy's near-term growth, and growing Stripe's operating costs too quickly.
"We are facing stubborn inflation, energy shocks, higher interest rates, reduced investment budgets, and sparser startup funding. ... [M]any parts of the developed world appear to be headed for recession. We think that 2022 represents the beginning of a different economic climate," Collison wrote.
Salesforce: hundreds of jobs
Salesforce, which makes cloud-based business software, laid off some of its employees last week,.
Salesforce said in a statement to NPR: "Our sales performance process drives accountability. Unfortunately, that can lead to some leaving the business, and we support them through their transition."
A source familiar with the cuts said they affected hundreds of employees in the sales organization.
Microsoft: fewer than 1,000 jobs
The software company made cuts across its divisions last month, . Fewer than 1,000 jobs were cut, a source told Axios.
A request for confirmation of the layoffs was not immediately returned.
Zillow, Snap and Robinhood
Zillow, the online real estate marketplace, laid off 300 of its employees late last month, TechCrunch . The company a year ago as it shuttered its instant buying service.
Snap, the company behind Snapchat, said at the end of August that it was . The layoffs affected some 1,200 employees, with the company's full-time workforce about 6,400 as of June.
Robinhood, the brokerage app company, in August. That amounted to 780 employees, . The company had already reduced its staff by 9% in April. "This did not go far enough," wrote Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev.
NPR's Alina Selyukh contributed to this story.
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