Yahoo lay off 1,520 employees
Posted: December 13th, 2008 | Author: dubaidude | Filed under: By Location, USA | No Comments »
Yahoo is issuing pink slips to 1,520 layed off employees. Most of the affected employees, part of 10 percent job cut at Yahoo! Inc., are at Yahoo’s U.S.-based locations and come from a number of areas within the company, the company said.
“There was an across-the-board review (for potential cuts) and no one area received a pass,” said Brad Williams, a Yahoo spokesman, who noted Yahoo engaged in a strategic review of where it would make most sense to cut the positions.
Williams, however, declined to elaborate which areas of Yahoo’s business took the greatest hits with the layoffs.
Some employees could be seen leaving Yahoo’s Sunnyvale campus with duffel bags with their belongings, or large bags, others with backpacks stuffed tight with their items.
One four-year employee noted that the atmosphere this morning was extremely quiet, whereas on other days its common to find people milling about in the morning and chatting in groups. She noted her working group, or team, was intact as of noon but that layoffs would be occurring through the rest of the day.
Another employee who was recently hired indicated he felt vulnerable to the layoffs, given he had little seniority.
Yahoo is continuing to evaluate which of its operations are no longer a priority and can be shut down and which of its businesses should be placed in a maintenance mode with no further investments, Williams said.
Those decisions are anticipated to come in the following weeks and months, he added.
This latest round of layoffs is part of Yahoo’s previously announced plan to reduce its annualized expenses by $400 million by the end of the year, which the company outlined in its third-quarter earnings announcement in October.
For Yahoo, this marks the second time this year it’s initiated layoffs. In February, the company cut 1,000 jobs after its fourth-quarter profit took a hit.
And with some economists expecting the recession to continue through 2009, it remains to be seen whether more layoffs will be seen at the Internet search pioneer.
From CNET News
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